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03 February 2011 / Karen Widdicombe
Issue: 7451 / Categories: Features , In Court
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Taking the centre court by storm

Karen Widdicombe celebrates 75 years of the All England Law Reports

Seventy-five years ago, in February 1936, the first of a series of general law reports in a startling new form was published. Accurate, authoritative reports of cases had long been available; the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting (ICLR) had started reporting cases in 1865 and the jumble of the “nominate” reports had come to an end. But the authoritative reports were being published slowly. Stanley Bond, the chairman of Butterworths, had a radical idea—a series that published weekly.

Trend setter

The series was named the All England Law Reports; company lore has it that Mr Bond was keen on tennis and took the idea of the series’ name from the pre-eminent All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. Weekly publication proved such a popular and successful idea that the ICLR started its own weekly series, the Weekly Law Reports, in 1953. The trend for faster publication of judgments was set.

By judicial appointment

Reports of judgments in All ER

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NEWS
The government will aim to pass legislation banning leasehold for new flats and capping ground rent, introducing non-compulsory digital ID and creating a ‘duty of candour’ for public servants (also known as the Hillsborough law) in the next Parliament

An Italian financier has lost his bid to block his Australian wife from filing divorce papers in England on the basis it was no longer her domicile of choice

Reforms to the disclosure regime in the business and property courts have not achieved their objectives, lawyers have warned
The Law Society has urged ministers to hold a public consultation on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the justice system as a whole
Ministers have proposed bringing inquest work under a single fee scheme for legal help and advocacy legal aid work
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