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Employment law brief: 8 August 2019

08 August 2019 / Ian Smith
Issue: 7852 / Categories: Features , Employment
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Ian Smith gets serious before the publishing break with a fundamental review of the law
  • The Supreme Court in Tillman v Egon Zehnder Ltd [2019] UKSC 32 has reformulated the law on severance of unreasonable elements in clauses.

Unusually for this column (or, as a Dean of my old Law School used to refer to it, ‘Smith’s monthly rant’) this month it concentrates on just one case because it is of such importance and interest in revisiting an area (whether an invalid element in a restraint of trade clause in a contract of employment can be severed and the rest enforced) which has been untouched by the highest courts for decades. In doing so, the judgment overturns a 99-year-old leading authority with which we were all brought up. The case seems to be pro-employer in its result (relaxed rules on severance) but arguably the position is more nuanced than that. Moreover, not surprisingly given the fundamental nature of the rethink of the law here, there are aspects which will no

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NEWS
The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) must overhaul its complaints and risk assessment processes to fix ‘systemic shortcomings’, the Legal Services Consumer Panel has said
The opt-out collective actions regime is facing ‘significant challenges’ but could benefit the UK by £24bn a year if enhanced and expanded, a report by Stephenson Harwood has found
Ministers have rejected the Justice Committee review’s key recommendation for the ailing county court system—an ‘urgent and comprehensive’ review by spring at the latest
Firms preparing to mount Mazur applications alleging the other side has acted in breach of the Legal Services Act 2007 may be left disappointed, the Law Society has said
The first Post Office Capture conviction—the accounting software used before the faulty Horizon system—has been referred for appeal by the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC)
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