Sponsored chambers briefing: Kings Chambers – a set apart from the rest

Kings Chambers

Our philosophy is to provide practical and commercial advice, applying the highest professional standards. Our members combine advisory work with litigation and advocacy services. While we commonly appear in the High Court and the higher appellate courts, our commitment to service standards is such that all members retain a uniform approach to the pursuit of excellence irrespective of forum and the financial worth of a case. It is on this uncompromising approach, and what our market regards as our client-friendly ethos, that our reputation is built and maintained.

We are regularly involved in arbitration and mediation and, if a matter is fought in the courts, our members are characterised by a reputation for strong and incisive advocacy backed by firm negotiating skills.

Our clients are individual and corporate, national and multinational, plc and private. We have a strong and wide national base of clients across the whole spectrum of industries, including banks (including clearing and secondary), developers, retailers, manufacturers, services, professional bodies, government agencies and local authorities. Members now regularly represent many emerging companies in the newer information technology, e-commerce and leisure markets.We accept instructions from all those permitted under the rules of the Bar Council. We welcome instructions from overseas lawyers and through the Licensed Access Rules.

Areas of expertise

  • Administrative and public law and local government
  • Business and property
  • Clinical negligence and personal injury
  • Court of Protection and mental health
  • Employment
  • EU and competition law
  • Inquests
  • Licensing
  • Litigation funding and costs
  • Mediation
  • Planning and environment
  • Sport

‘Kings Chambers is proud of providing first-class representation to our clients and our members’ expertise matches any set in the country, which makes us a ‘go-to’ chambers for many leading national and international law firms, public sector and private sector organisations and individuals.’

For more information, please contact:

T: 0345 034 3444
E: [email protected]

Manchester
36 Young Street,
Manchester M3 3FT
DX: 718188 MCH 3
T: 0161 832 9082

Leeds
5 Park Square
Leeds LS1 2NE
DX: 713113 LEEDS PARK SQ
T: 0113 242 1123

Birmingham
Embassy House, 60 Church Street
Birmingham B3 2DJ
DX: 13023 BIRMINGHAM
Direct Dial: 0121 200 3570

www.kingschambers.com

Sponsored chambers briefing: Specialisation in the regions – a rational approach

Pallant Chambers

Alister Williams of Pallant Chambers discusses the set’s goals, strengths and successes

Pallant Chambers is based in Southampton and Chichester. Pallant has developed into a highly specialist civil and family set, instructed regionally but also in the senior courts where one would expect the London Bar to be utilised. Alister Williams, head clerk, explains Pallant’s approach: ‘I came to Pallant in 2001 after 12 years at a specialist commercial chancery set in London.’ That experience was vital. ‘In delivering legal services, the ultimate goal is to do what is best for the client and specialisation is the rational way of achieving that. That is what we set out to develop.’

Members are encouraged and supported in focusing their practices. In recent years practitioners have joined from leading London sets, adding strength to the commercial, employment, chancery, property and family offering. Emphasis is also placed on recruiting very able pupils.

Specialisation has become a buzzword throughout the legal profession and is easily paid lip-service to. It might also be considered a risky approach in the regions.

‘Pallant is an example of specialisation being possible in the regions, and that it works.’
Alister Williams, Pallant Chambers

According to Williams: ‘Pallant is an example of specialisation being possible in the regions, and that it works. We are proud to be a regional set with a strong, predominantly regional client base. Our longstanding clients work with us more often on a wider range of matters, which are increasingly complex, and we have a platform to work with new clients locally and further afield. Ultimately, we are delivering a better service, which produces more opportunities.’

Court and contentious advisory work remain core business areas, with members of the commercial, chancery, property, private client and family teams regularly appearing in the senior courts, and undertaking high-level work in the county court, family court, First-tier Tribunal and Employment Tribunal. Members are also working collaboratively with litigation funders, experts, and on non-contentious and transactional work.

‘We realise that the we can add value to traditional and non-traditional clients outside of our core business,’ adds Williams.

The market trend supports the approach with smaller, more focused organisations performing well.

‘Our size helps us. We are able to maintain our personal approach and build relationships, whilst providing appropriate expertise and a range of options. We have made progress.’

Pallant was nominated for Regional Chambers of the Year by The Legal 500 in 2014, 2017 and 2019, and is currently ranked as a tier-1 set, with 15 individual entries. Six members sit as recorders, deputy district judges or First-tier Tribunal judges. Chambers currently has three pupils with two more joining in the next 12 months.

Economic and political pressures continue to test the profession, but Williams is optimistic: ‘We will have to adapt, but we will continue to develop a very attractive offering if we remain client focused, regional, personal and specialist.’

For more information, please contact:

Alister Williams, head clerk

Pallant Chambers
12 North Pallant
Chichester
West Sussex
PO19 1TQ

T: 01243 831900

E: [email protected]

www.pallantchambers.co.uk

Sponsored chambers briefing: Bristol – the legal hub of the South West

St John’s Chambers

An overview of the award-winning St John’s Chambers

St John’s Chambers is one of the largest and most prestigious barristers’ sets in the South West, with nine silks and 76 juniors attracting high-quality work in all major areas of law. Recently voted Chambers of the Year 2018 by the Bristol Law Society, Regional Set of the Year 2018 by The Legal 500, and shortlisted for Chambers of the Year at The Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners Awards in 2017 and in 2018, these awards endorse our position as a standout national set.

The focus of chambers is to continually ensure that Bristol is recognised nationally as the legal hub for the South West and that we are able to compete with London for business. We have demonstrated excellence and innovation in the provision of legal services by being involved in a number of landmark decisions in the High Court and Court of Appeal. Continue reading “Sponsored chambers briefing: Bristol – the legal hub of the South West”

Sponsored chambers briefing: The Bar – reputation management

Bell Yard Communications

Melanie Riley reflects on a tough climate for chambers and discusses how Bell Yard Communications can help steer its clients through the minefield

It must feel like tough times at the Bar these days – fee pressures, legal aid cuts, increased competition and self-representation, not to mention the challenge of marrying tradition with changing cultural norms. Reputational banana skins seemingly round every corner. Continue reading “Sponsored chambers briefing: The Bar – reputation management”

LB100: Main Table

Best viewed full screen – click full screen button on bottom right of table..

Download pdf version.


Go to The Legal Business 100 2019 main menu

Revolving doors: US & City firms target Simmons & Simmons as Ashurst makes hires

Simmons & Simmons

US & City firms saw a steady influx of lateral hires across sectors as Latham & Watkins, Allen & Overy (A&O) and Watson Farley & Williams hired partners from Simmons & Simmons.

US firm Latham hired Simmons’ head of equity capital markets, Chris Horton, as partner in its corporate department. Horton joined Simmons in 2008 and has experience advising on IPOs, secondary offerings and M&A transactions by listed companies, investment banks, and hedge funds. Continue reading “Revolving doors: US & City firms target Simmons & Simmons as Ashurst makes hires”

LB100 drives income up 9% to £26.35bn but fears mount of a chaotic no-deal as Brexit fallout spreads

Boris Johnson grafitti wall

With daily headlines reminding the City of the Brexit-induced crisis engulfing the UK, the Legal Business 100 (LB100) has shrugged off the pervasive uncertainty to post another year of robust growth.

Amid the increasing probability of the UK facing a wrenching ‘no-deal’ exit from the EU on the looming 31 October deadline, the LB100 results show the UK’s leading law firms driving collective revenues up 9% to £26.35bn. Continue reading “LB100 drives income up 9% to £26.35bn but fears mount of a chaotic no-deal as Brexit fallout spreads”

Dealwatch: Rich pickings for A&O and Linklaters on €120bn tech listing as Addleshaws wins Battersea redevelopment

The European teams of Allen & Overy (A&O) and Linklaters are set to bring in a total of more than €4m in legal fees after acting on the largest European listing of the year.

Meanwhile in London, Addleshaw Goddard and Norton Rose Fulbright acted on the £600m financing of the latest phase in the redevelopment of Battersea Power Station. Continue reading “Dealwatch: Rich pickings for A&O and Linklaters on €120bn tech listing as Addleshaws wins Battersea redevelopment”

Enhance your contract negotiation process with a data and process-driven approach

Morae Global

At most organisations, the contract negotiation process is highly manual, inconsistent and reliant on the institutional knowledge of the attorneys involved. Companies lack well-documented clause-level risk standards to advise on contract issues, and have no clear and consistent process for entering into agreements. The implications are unnecessary risk, inefficiency, cost and delays.

Taking a data and process-driven approach to enhancing the contract negotiation process can unlock hidden value that leads to a simplified contracting process, less risk, improved insights, higher productivity and a better bottom line. Continue reading “Enhance your contract negotiation process with a data and process-driven approach”

Another team walks at Clydes as eight partners depart in San Francisco

San Francisco, California

Eight partners will be leaving Clyde & Co’s  San Francisco office in favour of setting up their own firm in the US.

As reported in RollOnFriday, the partner group led by Joan D’Ambrosio and Bill Casey, focuses on insurance coverage and monitoring work. The team includes Christina Terplan, Julie Hawkinson, Jamie Narbaitz, Christina Marshall, Eric Moon and David Jordan who will also be leaving the firm. Continue reading “Another team walks at Clydes as eight partners depart in San Francisco”

Dentons furthers pan-African play as it announces five new local deals

Dentons is showing no sign of slowing its expansion spree of late, making it ten tie-ups in less than two months after announcing it is to enter another five African countries and add a further 54 lawyers to its ranks.

The 10,000-lawyer firm said it is to combine with a firm each in Angola, Morocco, Mozambique, Uganda and Zambia, building on what chief executive Elliott Portnoy described as a strategy to ‘become the first pan-African law firm, owned and controlled by Africans’. Continue reading “Dentons furthers pan-African play as it announces five new local deals”

Dealwatch: Slaughters leads on Hong Kong’s £32bn LSE bid as US firms tap into mid-market

London Stock Exchange

Strategic deals have continued into September after a busy summer, with firms rallying to get deals over the line before a Brexit cliff-edge threatens to become a reality.

Slaughter and May has landed a mandate to advise Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) on a bid which, if successful, would see it acquire the London Stock Exchange (LSE) for £32bn. Partner David Watkins is leading the Slaughters team. Continue reading “Dealwatch: Slaughters leads on Hong Kong’s £32bn LSE bid as US firms tap into mid-market”

Bad timing – A&O loses M&A duo to Skadden following failed US merger talks

US-branded shark fin in a City sea

Allen & Overy has lost two well-respected London corporate partners to Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom just days after the magic circle firm confirmed the collapse of its merger talks with US firm O’Melveny & Myers.

Simon Toms and George Knighton have quit A&O, inflicting a considerable hit on its M&A capabilities ten days after it announced it was calling it a day on its attempts to tie up with O’Melveny after more than a year of talks. Continue reading “Bad timing – A&O loses M&A duo to Skadden following failed US merger talks”

Three in the race to be next Bakers chair as partners prepare to vote

fiona carlin

Baker McKenzie EMEA chief executive Fiona Carlin (pictured), Hong Kong managing partner Milton Cheng and North America head Colin Murray have made the final stage of the election process to become the firm’s next chair.

Bakers’ seven-strong appointments committee drew up the shortlist of three candidates earlier this week following soundings with partners over the summer, whittled down from a list of six contenders who had initially been in the running. Continue reading “Three in the race to be next Bakers chair as partners prepare to vote”

A&O’s Mansell to appear before SDT in December as #MeToo fallout promises busy winter

Zelda Perkins

Allen & Overy (A&O) employment partner Mark Mansell is to face his first Solicitor Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) hearing on Wednesday 5 December following an investigation into his role drafting a controversial non-disclosure agreement (NDA) for disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein.

A spokesperson for the SDT confirmed to Legal Business yesterday (9 September) the new date for Mansell’s hearing, which had originally been scheduled for 3 June. Continue reading “A&O’s Mansell to appear before SDT in December as #MeToo fallout promises busy winter”

Deloitte launches pioneering post-grad training contract as education shake-up looms

Big Four giant Deloitte has teamed up with the University of Law (ULaw) to launch a work-based training contract for graduates to harness the incoming regime to replace traditional solicitor training routes.

Hailed as a pioneering move, the three-year course will be targeted at graduates, phasing out the need for the Legal Practice Course (LPC), making use of the incoming Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) regime, touted as a more flexible means of producing solicitors. Continue reading “Deloitte launches pioneering post-grad training contract as education shake-up looms”

Revolving doors: Back to school for new City Clydes, Kennedys and Pinsents laterals as European hires continue apace

Clyde & Co

City firms have been gearing up for what looks to be a busy September as Clyde & Co, Kennedys and Pinsent Masons have added to their London benches and others continue with European investment drives.

Clyde & Co has appointed Stephen Jurgenson as partner in the firm’s global projects and construction group. Continue reading “Revolving doors: Back to school for new City Clydes, Kennedys and Pinsents laterals as European hires continue apace”

‘Focus and speed’: A&O to fast-track US investment after foiled O’Melveny merger with new hires imminent

Andrew Ballheimer

Andrew Ballheimer, Allen & Overy’s (A&O’s) global managing partner, has promised heavy investment in its US practice in the wake of the City giant’s abandoned tie-up with O’Melveny & Myers, saying new US hires are on the verge of being announced.

Speaking to Legal Business on Friday (6 September), Ballheimer said the market could expect ‘more focus and speed of execution’ in the Magic Circle firm’s US recruitment push as new partners, including US lawyers, have recently been voted in by the partnership. Continue reading “‘Focus and speed’: A&O to fast-track US investment after foiled O’Melveny merger with new hires imminent”

Clyde & Co shipping team sets sail to establish boutique firm

Clyde & Co

Clyde & Co has lost at least five partners from its global marine group, with the shipping team leaving to set up a boutique firm.

Andrew Preston is set to leave after joining the firm in 1994 and becoming a partner in 2000, as well as Elizabeth Turnbull, co-chair of the firm’s Latin American strategy committee who joined Clydes in 2009. Continue reading “Clyde & Co shipping team sets sail to establish boutique firm”

New Law leader Axiom abandons IPO for Permira private equity sale

Axiom

New Law pioneer Axiom has ditched long-trailed plans for an initial public offering (IPO) after securing a ‘significant investment’ from private equity house Permira.

The undisclosed investment makes Permira the company’s majority owner and calls time on Axiom’s much-hyped public offering, which many considered a bellwether for the fast-growing alternative legal services market. Continue reading “New Law leader Axiom abandons IPO for Permira private equity sale”