Legal views – Page 60

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Architects Registration Board: Know your place

    2013-05-10T06:00:00Z

    An architect has been struck off for getting into debt. But is this really ‘professional misconduct’ to anyone other than the Lord Snootys of the profession?

  • Bill Bidder and Kate Egan-Martin
    Comment

    SSIs: Beware the newts

    2013-05-10T06:00:00Z

    Sites of special scientific interest can be a major barrier to development - even if you have planning permission. Here’s what to look out for

  • Ruth Sunaway
    Comment

    Legal brief: Do architects certificates operate as contracts?

    2013-05-03T18:50:00Z

    A decision by Mr Justice Akenhead in a recent case provides some clarity

  • Digby Hebbard
    Comment

    Willmott Dixon vs Newlon: A case in points

    2013-05-03T06:00:00Z

    Tony Bingham’s column on the recent Willmott Dixon vs Newlon Housing dispute focused on procedural objections - but there’s an awful lot more to the case than that

  • lindy patterson
    Comment

    Wind farms: Second generation

    2013-05-03T06:00:00Z

    A lot of lessons have been learned about the technical side of building wind farms. But what about contracts? Lindy Patterson looks at how things have changed in the last decade

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Professional negligence dispute: On the rocks

    2013-04-29T12:00:00Z

    When a judge blocked a £3m award to whisky maker Whyte Mackay, he questioned whether a professional negligence dispute should have come to adjudication at all

  • Raid Abu-Manneh
    Comment

    Doing business in Iraq: Tread carefully

    2013-04-26T06:00:00Z

    A decade after the invasion of Iraq there are opportunities for UK firms in the country’s infrastructure sector. But they must be aware of the legal framework they will be working in

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Stop kicking up a fuss

    2013-04-26T06:00:00Z

    The lawyers in this case raised a number of clever, interesting technical objections. Which were quite rightly dismissed. Let’s just stick to the facts, eh?

  • Alison Oldfield
    Comment

    Legal brief: Changes to judicial review process

    2013-04-24T10:30:00Z

    What do proposed changes to the judicial review system mean for planning and procurement decisions?

  • John Redmond
    Comment

    Life on the high fees

    2013-04-22T11:16:00Z

    Adjudicators were meant to deal with construction disputes ‘expeditiously and relatively inexpensively’. But the amount they charge is becoming increasingly hard to justify

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    NEC3 contracts: The hole truth and nothing but

    2013-04-19T06:00:00Z

    If only lawyers would get around to filling up the holes in the NEC3 contract

  • Keith Picakavance
    Comment

    CPC2013: Top form

    2013-04-19T06:00:00Z

    We need a new form of contract for complex projects that encourages a more scientific approach to risk management. Step forward CPC2013 …

  • lindy patterson
    Comment

    Legal brief: Human rights vs adjudication

    2013-04-16T12:35:00Z

    A decision by the Scottish Courts on Whyte MacKay Ltd vs Blyth and Blyth Consulting Engineers sets an interesting precedent

  • Digby Hebbard
    Comment

    Legal brief: Multiple disputes?

    2013-04-16T12:17:00Z

    Willmott Dixon Housing Limited vs Newlon Housing Trust leads to an interesting development in adjudication law

  • Ann Minogue
    Comment

    Leap of faith

    2013-04-16T10:10:00Z

    Despite what the Court of Appeal decided recently, isn’t a doctrine of good faith what the industry desperately needs?

  • ian yule
    Comment

    Direct payment clauses: Caught in the middle

    2013-04-12T00:00:00Z

    An employer that gives itself the power to pay subcontractors direct if the main contractor does not, may find itself acting as a referee between two warring parties

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Doing without lawyers

    2013-04-12T00:00:00Z

    More people than ever are choosing to conduct their own construction case without using a lawyer. Fine, but it calls for a more hands-on approach from the referee

  • Jill Carey
    Comment

    Beware restrictive covenants

    2013-04-12T00:00:00Z

    Restrictive covenants can deal a fatal blow to a developer’s plans. So make sure you understand what effect a convenant will have on the development before you take the plunge

  • rachel barnes
    Comment

    O ye of little faith

    2013-04-05T00:00:00Z

    A recent Court of Appeal case confirms the traditional English hostility to a general doctrine of good faith in the performance of contracts

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Making a drama out of a crisis

    2013-04-05T00:00:00Z

    ºÚ¶´ÉçÇøs and contents insurance is big business. But what happens when an insurer’s contractor’s subcontractor tries to get money from homeowners? In short, a bit of a mess