Barrister Norman O’Bryan SC has abandoned his defence of misconduct allegations stemming from the Banksia Securities class action and expressed contrition to the court for his actions.
Media companies can file evidence of another alleged murder in Roberts-Smith defamation case
Gilbert + Tobin faces appeal by Sydney businessman Charif Kazal
Waived on through: Federal Court highlights the fine distinctions that govern waiver of privilege
A recent decision in ASIC’s case against ANZ has highlighted the potential risks of waiver of client legal privilege, with the Federal Court observing that the distinctions can be “fine”. While ANZ avoided having to disclose its legal advice to the regulator, the decision is a reminder of the potential pitfalls of referring to legal advice in correspondence, and that pleading a state of mind in litigation carries risks from a privilege perspective, says Hall & Wilcox partner Jacob Uljans.
Lawyers say judge has power to close class action with tweak to group member definition
Lawyers running a class action against recycling company Sims Metal Management say the court has power to approve their bid to amend the group member definition that will effectively close the class, but the judge overseeing the case will appoint a contradictor to represent group members in a hearing over the application.
Maurice Blackburn escapes discrimination case by former client
Commonwealth Bank, Westpac’s BT face potential class actions over insurance ‘rort’
Google, Facebook face fines of at least $10M for breaches of ACCC media bargaining code
ASIC scores ‘narrow’ win in case against ex-Tennis Australia director
Judge questions whether Banksia class action lawyers should be struck off roll
The judge overseeing a trial over legal fees and funding commission in the Banksia Securities class action has questioned whether the lawyers behind the case should remain on the roll of practitioners if allegations of misconduct aired in the hearing so far — which include billing for phantom costs — are made out.