Should you need to manage the affairs of someone else, including managing their bank account, be it through illness or for any other reason that they are unable to do it for themselves then we are here to help. As a member of the Law Society can offer expert advice on all aspects of achieving this aim.
A comprehensive framework for people who need to manage a bank or
building society account on behalf of someone else has been produced by
Law Society, the British Bankers' Association (BBA), the Building
Societies Association (BSA), the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG),
and other partners.
The new guidance, which is launched today,
provides the first universal framework for banks and building societies
to apply a consistent approach when helping relatives or carers who need
to manage an account on behalf of another person who is elderly,
vulnerable or unable to manage their own affairs.
Monday, 29 April 2013
Thursday, 18 April 2013
Bercow loses first Twiiter skirmish
The Speaker's
wife Sally Bercow has lost the first battle against Lord McAlpine in his libel
action over her alleged Twitter slur. The peer's lawyers persuaded High Court
judge Mr Justice Tugendhat to hear his case in two separate hearings. The first
will decide whether Mrs Bercow's tweet last year - "Why is Lord McAlpine
trending? innocent face" - was capable of being defamatory. If the tweet
is found to be defamatory - which Mrs Bercow denies - a second hearing will
rule on damages. Lawyers for Lord McAlpine have claimed that only a "moron
in a hurry" would not have made the connection between her tweet and false
allegations linking him to child sex abuse claims.
The Letter of The Law (email). The Times, Page: 11 The Daily Telegraph, Page: 2 The Guardian, Page: 9 The Independent, Page: 22 Daily Express, Page: 2 Daily Mail, Page: 26 Daily Mirror, Page: 2 The Sun, Page: 22 Evening Standard, Page: 9
Not Aloud!
Former Girls
Aloud singer Sarah Harding has been banned from driving for six months and
fined £500 after being caught driving with a mobile phone. Ms Harding had hired
celebrity lawyer Nick Freeman, known as "Mr Loophole" to defend her,
who told the court that she was too famous to take public transport and it
would affect her ability to visit her mother in Stockport. District Judge Nina
Tempia rejected the claim. She ruled: "As Mr Freeman has said, he is
asking the court to deal with you as opposed to a normal person. Well, you are
a normal person. I can see no reason why you shouldn't be disqualified."
The
Letter of the Law (email). The Times, Page: 18 Daily Express, Page: 7, 12 Daily Mail, Page: 11 Daily Mirror, Page: 16 Daily Star, Page: 6, 15 The Sun, Page: 23 Evening Standard, Page: 2
Friday, 5 April 2013
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