Domestic abuse: your legal options

The issue of domestic abuse has been in the news quite a lot recently. Here, Carlson’s Solicitors’ managing director Daniel Russell looks at the legal options available to people who believe they have been victims of abuse in the home.

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Dayana Nikolova
The play-off lottery of litigation

The end-of-season football drama that is the play-offs finally reached its climax this week. Critics of the one-match shoot-out promotion system say it’s nothing more than a lottery. In his latest blog, Daniel Russell examines how dispute resolution through litigation can also be a game of chance.

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Dayana Nikolova
The best legal advice on buying a business

If I asked you to go and buy a couple of pints of milk, it would be a relatively straightforward task with very few factors to be considered, right? You’d probably check the use-by date to make sure it would last the longest possible time. And that would pretty much be that.

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Dayana Nikolova
Professional negligence: your loss or theirs?

If some things were easy, we’d do them ourselves. As it is, and regardless of how capable we might think we are, there are times in life when things are best left to professionals with the knowledge and expertise that come from years of training and experience.

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Why councils need to stand up and be counted on tenancy law

This week MPs voted to push forward proposed legislation that will see tenants have far greater influence over the way landlords are expected to deal with issues that are covered in tenancy agreements. The measures will tenants to bypass local authority enforcement processes.

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Why your Will should plan for the worst-case scenario

Last New Year’s Eve, British businessman Richard Cousins, his two sons, fiancée and her daughter took were killed when their pleasure flight crashed into a river, killing all on board. This month, thanks to Mr Cousins’ foresight, the Oxfam charity inherited £41m from his estate.

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Being made redundant doesn’t mean being set adrift

It’s the worst feeling in the world. Your company announces a restructuring process to ‘drive efficiencies’ – a euphemism which is slightly more palatable than its actual meaning: We need to save money, so we’re making redundancies. Suddenly everyone is thrown into a tailspin of worry.

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The loneliness of the accidental landlord

Of the estimated 5.4 million private landlords currently letting properties in the UK, a significant number are what the property industry describes as ‘accidental’, people who don’t live in their main residence but who need or want to recoup some or all of the outgoings associated with that property.

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If you’re a tenant, don’t sign up for more than you bargained for!

With rising house prices steadily widening the gap between first-time-buyers and a foot on the housing ladder, more and more people find themselves spending the first years of their independent lives in rented accommodation.

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