Author Archives for Kate Williams

Kate Williams appointed Partner at Colemans

9th April 2015 4:02 pm Comments Off on Kate Williams appointed Partner at Colemans

Established Maidenhead firm, Colemans Solicitors , are pleased to announce that Kate Williams was appointed a Partner of the firm with effect from 1st April 2015. Kate began her legal career at Colemans in 2007 as a trainee solicitor and after qualifying as a solicitor in October 2009 she joined the firm’s litigation department and…


Changes to Employment Law – 2014

3rd September 2014 10:18 am Comments Off on Changes to Employment Law – 2014

Changes to employment law and practice are normally implemented in either April or October in order to make life easier for employers, who must ensure that their policies and procedures comply by the implementation dates. The Collective Redundancies and Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) (Amendment) Regulations 2014 were an exception to this rule, as…


Court Underlines Duty of Candour in Contract Negotiations

10:17 am Comments Off on Court Underlines Duty of Candour in Contract Negotiations

A lack of candour in contractual negotiations can lead to grave financial consequences, as was shown when an event management company that lost its only customer four months after signing a new five-year deal won the right to substantial damages. Company A had for 30 years provided management services to company B in respect of…


Deadlock Forces Sale When Family Inherits Business

10:17 am Comments Off on Deadlock Forces Sale When Family Inherits Business

When a family business is handed down and ownership is split between two or more members of the next generation, the result can all too often be discord. Normally, this can be resolved by one party buying out the other, but when this does not occur, the result can be a disaster, as a recent…


Director Counts Cost of Preferential Payments

10:17 am Comments Off on Director Counts Cost of Preferential Payments

Company directors should know that as well as their duties to shareholders, they also have a duty under both common and statute law to protect the interests of creditors. When this duty is not adhered to, the consequences can be severe, as a recent case illustrates. The director concerned was a director of a group…


Ex-Couple’s Trade Mark War Ends in Stalemate

10:17 am Comments Off on Ex-Couple’s Trade Mark War Ends in Stalemate

Mixing business and personal relationships can produce additional complications if a break-up occurs, as evidenced by the stalemate reached by a warring former couple who are at loggerheads over the future of their deadlocked business and its intellectual property (IP) rights. The ex-couple were partners in business and in life for 26 years and ran…


Non-Disclosure in Business Sale Leads to High Court

10:17 am Comments Off on Non-Disclosure in Business Sale Leads to High Court

In a case which underlines the need for both full and accurate disclosure of potential liabilities when selling a business, a lawyer who failed to reveal the existence of a potentially substantial negligence claim against his firm before disposing of it will receive a lesser sum for its sale, following a High Court ruling. The…


Potential Insolvency Brings Stay of Payment

10:16 am Comments Off on Potential Insolvency Brings Stay of Payment

Normally, when a building dispute arises that leads to an adjudicator making an award in favour of one party, the award is simply paid to the other party and that is that. However, sometimes things are more complicated. Recently, a company went to the High Court arguing that it should not have to pay an…


Principle, Not Technicalities, Crucial in Landlord’s Notice

10:16 am Comments Off on Principle, Not Technicalities, Crucial in Landlord’s Notice

Professional landlords are well aware of the complexities they can face when giving notice to tenants that they require possession of the let premises. Because of the rather tortuous provisions of the Housing Act 1988 with regard to the giving of notice, numerous court rulings have been made that a landlord’s notice to a tenant…


Refusal to Pay Arbitrator Did Not Repudiate Contract

10:16 am Comments Off on Refusal to Pay Arbitrator Did Not Repudiate Contract

Not every breach of contract will be treated as ‘repudiatory’ – the legal term for a breach in which one side has refused to perform its side of the contract. Recently, the High Court ruled that one party’s refusal to pay an arbitrator’s fees in advance did not ‘go to the root’ of the parties’…


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