Legal – Page 128

  • Comment

    What do you mean, ‘as far as possible’?

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    The Supreme Court has been looking at how to interpret words. It favours looking at commercial intention rather than literal meaning – but are intentions any easier to fathom?

  • Simon Lewis
    Comment

    Bribery Bill: Greasing the wheels of commerce

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Bribery is endemic in many parts of the world where British firms do business, but any that succumb to it will soon face fairly horrific penalties

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Collatoral contracts: The unkindness of strangers

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Collateral contracts are supposed to protect those not party to a contractual set-up. They work, but they also introduce flint-hearted button counters into the equation

  • News

    Faulty cladding hits Amec for £2.5m

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Amec is forking out £2.5m to repair cladding at a Liverpool hotel three years after it opened.

  • Scales of justice
    News

    Grainger pays out over 'green views' redundancy claim

    2010-04-20T18:12:00Z

    Former head of sustainability at Grainger wins £42,200 after claim climate change views led to loss of job

  • Coins
    News

    Demolition contractor fined £6,000 for health and safety breach

    2010-04-20T13:33:00Z

    Ivan Pope pleaded guilty in court after two men were spotted dismantling a pub roof in Lincolnshire using an upturned bucket as scaffolding

  • News

    Firms seek legal advice as Bribery Act rushed into law

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    New law signals ‘zero tolerance’ of corruption and widens liability to include third parties

  • News

    Vinci and Luton in £4m legal row

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    A legal row has broke out between Vinci and Luton council over a £52m guided busway scheme that was awarded to Bam Nuttall, writes Andrea Klettner

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    Match of the day: Mott MacDonald vs Multiplex

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Mott MacDonald vs Multiplex is a game of two halves – first there’s the disputing, then there’s coughing up the legal costs. Alas, these are so high, neither wants to call it a draw

  • Comment

    Feeling the squeeze

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Be careful how you go about recovering money that is owed you – you might fall foul of the Protection from Harassment Act and end up paying them

  • Rudi Klein
    Comment

    Scheming minds

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    The government has released a consultation on the Scheme for Construction Contracts that proposes big changes in the industry’s rules. Here’s what I think of them …

  • News

    Labour cagey over gangmaster laws

    2010-04-15T17:27:00Z

    Party denies it will extend the rules to the construction industry despite manifesto suggesting it would do so

  • Scales of justice
    News

    Tolent clauses examined

    2010-04-14T15:11:00Z

    In a landmark judgment yesterday, the Technology and Construction Court held that clauses that require a contractor to pay the employer’s legal costs, win or lose, do not comply with the Construction Act

  • Comment

    Off half-cock

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    You’d think that getting the contract right before beginning work was just common sense. Especially since, if you don’t, the only people likely to win are the lawyers …

  • Comment

    Going nuclear: contracts for decommissioning work

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Everything you wanted to know about the nuclear decommissioning sector but were afraid to ask – explained to you in a three-part series starting with this overview

  • News

    Morrison settles Norwich council row over contract award

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Morrison has settled a dispute with Norwich council over the award of housing repairs and maintenance work to rival Connaught.The deal allows Connaught to begin work on the £125m contract it won in December to provide services that include waste and recycling, council house repairs, maintenance and M&E servicing.The award ...

  • News

    Aukett boss: Halabi bankruptcy will not affect £1m claim

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Nicholas Thompson, chief executive of architect Aukett Fitzroy Robinson, has said the bankruptcy of developer Simon Halabi will not affect an outstanding debt to the practice of more than £1m in legal costs and fees

  • Tony Bingham
    Comment

    MJ coulson’s model answer

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Judging construction disputes can be like sitting exams, but at least we can all learn from the results – as in this case where a builder flunked everything

  • Comment

    Commitment issues

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Helen Garthwaite and Brad Fearn The carbon trading scheme was launched last week, and you need to know what the new rules could mean for you – including who will pay for it all

  • ambulance
    News

    Regentford fined £250k after worker dies on site

    2010-04-07T09:48:00Z

    HSE secures conviction of London-based firm with help of BBC footage showing scaffolding in 'poor condition'