All Legal articles – Page 112
-
Comment
The new Construction Act: The daft draft
A lot of people say a clause in the new Construction Act approves the pre-dispute allocation of legal costs - the opposite of what was intended. Let’s get it sorted
-
Comment
Unhealthy competition: Commercial property agreements and the Competition Act
New restrictions for the property market came into play last month meaning that housebuilders, developers and even owners will have to watch out
-
Comment
Working 9 to 5: The Agency Workers Regulations 2010
The Agency Workers Regulations 2010 come into effect in October this year, improving working conditions for temporary workers. So what does this mean for you?
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
HMRC targets construction tax abuses
Extra 100 officers to tackle false self-employment and labour providers who avoid tax
-
Comment
TeCSA rules! OK?
With a new Construction Act on the way, adjudicators are going to have to up their game. Luckily, one nominating body has updated its rules in anticipation
-
Comment
The Defective Premises Act: What hole?
Hole? What hole? Ben Worthington, who acted for the project manager on Jenson vs Faux, discussed by Tony Bingham, says the Defective Premises Act has been properly restricted to new dwellings
-
Comment
The Defective Premises Act: The hole truth
The lovely new home you just bought is covered by the Defective Premises Act if it’s a new dwelling. But if it’s a massive refurb job, you might find yourself in need of a spade
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Enterprise does insurance 'u-turn'
The firm has apparently changed its stance on a controversial insurance initiative
-
Comment
Damn the expense
The relationship between housebuilders and the NHBC generally works well. But sometimes the home warranty provider can be a bit gung-ho - and go way over the top on costs
-
Comment
Going for broke
Adjudication can help companies’ cashflow, but what happens in cases of insolvency when there is no cash to flow?
-
Comment
Up, up and away
In tough times, adjudication is increasingly seen as too costly. An escalation dispute procedure offers a quick, cheap alternative that preserves the business relationship
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Lawyers claim loophole in new Construction Act
Lawyers claim the act will allow the use of a much-maligned clause
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Keltbray welcomes planning for demolition
Demolition specialist says landmark ruling could help firm
-
Comment
No more privileges
The Supreme Court has stripped expert witnesses of their immunity from prosecution. But could the fear of being sued make them less likely to admit their mistakes?
-
Comment
Hold it right there
A recent case shows that fraud is not the only ground upon which a call on an on-demand performance bond can be restrained by an injunction
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Insurance deal offers hope of no retentions to subcontractors
NFRC said the warranty could replace the need for clients to demand retentions on jobs
-
Comment
If the cap fits
A couple who tried to cap the costs in an oral ’cost plus’ contract have received short shrift from the Court of Appeal. Here’s why …
-
ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Firms fined £61,000 after building collapses
Around 150 tonnes of concrete came down after the failure of falsework