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Arcane pricing & practices

10 August 2012 / Michael Cook
Issue: 7526 / Categories: Features , Costs
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Michael Cook confronts the ghost of hourly billing

Adam Sampson, the Legal Ombudsman, wrote in The Guardian that for too long lawyers have got away with “arcane pricing and billing practices” (“Lawyers beware: your clients are rebelling”, 6 March 2012). He continued: “Protected by their social status, political power and deliberately obfuscatory language, lawyers have hitherto been able to ignore the notion of customer service…Nowhere is the battle between the traditional view of client and customer more marked than in the notion of pricing…Law firms who seem incapable of working on a fixed costs model for individual clients appear far more willing to do so for insurers and the Legal Services Commission.”

According to the Master of the Rolls, Lord Neuberger, addressing the Association of Costs Lawyers on 11 May: “Hourly billing at best leads to inefficient practices, at worst it rewards and incentivises inefficiency. Moreover, it undermines effective competition in the provision of legal services, as it ‘penalises...well run legal business whose systems

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Gilson Gray—Linda Pope

Gilson Gray—Linda Pope

Partner joins family law team inLondon

Jackson Lees Group—five promotions

Jackson Lees Group—five promotions

Private client division announces five new partners

Taylor Wessing—Max Millington

Taylor Wessing—Max Millington

Banking and finance team welcomes partner in London

NEWS
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Barristers Ben Keith of 5 St Andrew’s Hill and Rhys Davies of Temple Garden Chambers use the arrest of Simon Leviev—the so-called Tinder Swindler—to explore the realities of Interpol red notices, in this week's NLJ
Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys [2025] has upended assumptions about who may conduct litigation, warn Kevin Latham and Fraser Barnstaple of Kings Chambers in this week's NLJ. But is it as catastrophic as first feared?
Lord Sales has been appointed to become the Deputy President of the Supreme Court after Lord Hodge retires at the end of the year
Limited liability partnerships (LLPs) are reportedly in the firing line in Chancellor Rachel Reeves upcoming Autumn budget
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