Not rocket science: maximising prospects of cash collection
Wagathon … and on
Banks v Cadwalladr: some thoughts
The importance of tone in litigation
The tone of much litigation correspondence is often one of outraged offence: your client is the repository of all virtue and the “other side” is guilty of extreme bad faith. This can sometimes be hidden in mild language: the description “unhelpful” often covers a multitude of sins in its passive-aggressive use and can easily be understood to mean that the recipient party is guilty of egregious misconduct.
Not so class actions: a dampener from the Supreme Court
Private Investigations - the modern law of privacy: what it is and how to leverage it
The way in which English law protects personal privacy is founded on a prohibition of misuse of private information. Recent developments have expanded this to cover intrusion or harassment. This is so even if some information has reached the public domain so there is some loss of absolute confidentiality.