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Keeping the peace at Christmas – top tips for shared parenting over the festive season
Lauren Evans
The High Court recently exercised its discretion pursuant to Section 2 of the Forfeiture Act 1982 (“FA 1982”) in the case of Macmillan Cancer Support v Hayes and Long [2017] EWHC 3110.
The decision in the case of Sargeant v Sargeant [2018]EWHC 8 Ch was handed down last week. The Court held that the widow of a farmer was too late to make an application for reasonable financial provision from her husband’s estate; having made the application more than 10 years after the grant of probate was obtained.
The Supreme Court has gone back to basics in its approach to the assessment of damages in a claim involving a negligent valuation.
One of the trends over the last few years in civil fraud cases has been the increase in applications to the Court for defendants in civil fraud proceedings to be committed to prison for contempt of court (“Committal Applications”). Cases against a number of “Oligarchs” for breaches of freezing orders spring to mind.
However, recent cases show that the increase in Committal Applications is not just in fraud proceedings.
The Public Accounts Committee published its report on the growing threat of online fraud, after considering evidence from organisations such as Age UK, Lloyds Banking Group, and the British Retail Consortium. It made for depressing reading with the cost of the crime for individuals estimated at £10 billion, and around 2 million cyber-related fraud incidents last year alone. That number is thought to be growing rapidly.
Lauren Evans
Roberta Draper
Christopher Perrin
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