Articles
When you discover that a business has breached your patent, what should you do?
The answer to this question has two elements. The first is based ...
Costs orders are the exception, rather than the rule, in Employment Tribunal (ET) proceedings. However, where a claimant acts unreasonably in pursuing a claim, the ...
In December 2010, new limits were announced for the levels of protection available for different investments underwritten by the Financial Services Compensation ...
Following a recent case in which a dispute regarding a property owner’s right to light was unexpectedly dealt with by the granting of an injunction against a ...
You cannot incorporate a company using any name you like. Some names are prohibited (for example, those which suggest a connection with the Government or the ...
Most business people know that for family businesses there are generous Inheritance Tax (IHT) reliefs, which generally operate to make assets used in the business ...
On 1 October 2011, changes to the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (normally called the Construction Act) came into force. These apply to all ...
The Supreme Court has ruled (Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust) that a consultant surgeon who suffered a loss as a result of findings of ...
Employers should be aware of the potentially serious financial consequences of failing to consult when making collective redundancies.
If an ...
The Default Retirement Age (DRA) has now been abolished and it is no longer permissible for an employer to dismiss an older worker on the ground of retirement ...
The Information Commissioner's best practice guide for landlords - written to to assist them in complying with the Data Protection Act can be downloaded from the ...
The long-running series of disputes between employers in the hospitality industry and HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) concerning the taxation of employees’ ...
A handbook produced by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) outlines the responsibilities of both the contractor and the client in situations in which work ...
You may have come across advertisements which make forming a company sound very easy, but before you go ahead there are some serious issues to think through. If ...
The Companies (Trading Disclosures) Regulations 2008 set out the the requirements as to where and when company trading names, names of directors etc. need to be ...
Since the Companies Act 2006 came into effect, the incorporation of a company has been straightforward as the Act provides an easy to use set of model ...
These days more and more processes are being outsourced (run by external contractors under a service agreement) by more and more businesses. It is particularly ...
With businesses becoming insolvent in large numbers, opportunities abound to acquire assets from their administrators. However, the low prices sought for the ...
A compromise agreement is an agreement made between an employer and an employee who is having their contract of employment terminated. It sets out the terms under ...
As a general rule, ‘out of court settlements’ of employment disputes are not legally binding in that they cannot exclude an employee's right to take ...
The Government provides guidance for businesses on complying with the Bribery Act 2010, which came into force on 1 July 2011. The Act was originally scheduled to ...
Many businesses regard the Data Protection Act 1998 as something that merely requires a lot of form filling and the payment of fees, but there is a lot more to it ...
One common area of dispute between companies and the HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is that of deductibility of expenses. One of the hottest areas of dispute is ...
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has issued guidance for organisations that lose personal data, having reported that it has been notified of nearly 100 ...
The Companies Act 2006 became fully effective from October 1st 2009.
Here are some useful sources of information on the Act. For more information and ...