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Entries from September 2008

Applications to set aside costs agreements

September 24th, 2008 · No Comments

This post has been sitting around as a draft waiting to be finished.  There is little chance of that for a long time.  So here is my incomplete annotation to s. 103 of the Legal Practice Act, 1996.  That is the provision which gives VCAT (formerly the Legal Profession Tribunal) jurisdiction to set aside costs [...]

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Tags: Legal Practice Act · Professional fees and disbursements · Retainers · costs disclosure defaults · setting aside costs agreements

Nicholson v B&S — the first important Victorian decision about setting aside costs agreements

September 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

Nicholson v B&S [2000] VLPT 28 was the first decision to deal in detail with the principles which govern the extremely wide discretions granted by s. 103 of the old Legal Practice Act, 1996. Registrar Howell cancelled a costs agreement, and ordered that one of the bills the client challenged — the only one she [...]

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Tags: Professional fees and disbursements · costs disclosure defaults · setting aside costs agreements

Some law on the Commissioner's powers to delegate

September 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

The nature of a delegation was described in B (A Solicitor) v Victorian Lawyers RPA Ltd (2002) 6 VR 642 by counsel and repeated without disapproval by Justices of Appeal Charles and Batt:
'a delegate acting is not an agent who exercises the [delegator's] powers but rather, as the new repository of the powers, exercises his [...]

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Tags: Legal Profession Act · Legal Services Commissioner · regulators' duties

Lawyers and the criminal law

September 16th, 2008 · 2 Comments

Reproduced below is a blog post about 'bill padding' from the US site, Legal Blog Watch. That is where lawyers say work took them longer than it really did, and so charge commensurately more, or even make up the fact that they did work, and charge for it. Sometimes I read articles like this and [...]

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Tags: "disgraceful and dishonourable" · Criminal liability · Discipline · Law Blogs · Misconduct · Professional fees and disbursements · Solicitor client bills of costs · Taxations · conflicts · duty and interest · gross overcharging

Shortest Supreme Court proceeding in history?

September 16th, 2008 · No Comments

Yesterday, 'after 5 p.m.' as he put it in his letter of capitulation, a solicitor was served with originating process out of the Supreme Court of Victoria.  At 5.18 p.m., a letter agreeing to give the relief sought, without condition (including in relation to costs) was received. Tomorrow, the proceeding will be disposed of by [...]

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Tags: Uncategorized

Hope springs eternal in the debtor's breast

September 2nd, 2008 · 1 Comment

Professor Reinhardt educated me about litigation, twice, once at law school and then in my Masters.  He had a fondness for the ingenuity of debtors and used to say 'Hope springs eternal in the debtor's breast', a corruption of an Alexander Pope poem, very often. (His second most favourite phrase was 'sticks out like a [...]

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Tags: Uncategorized