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A law unto themselves

06 May 2016 / Sir Geoffrey Bindman KC
Issue: 7697 / Categories: Features
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Lawyers ain’t what they used to be, says Geoffrey Bindman QC

Since I began my legal training in 1956, the demands of legal practice have changed and with them the character and culture of the solicitors’ branch.

My first job after qualifying was as assistant to a partner in a West End firm. It was a small firm by modern standards, with five partners. The senior partner, whom I never met (he was absent through illness for several months), had corporate clients based in the northern city where he had grown up.

The office was a handsome Victorian house on several floors. I was assigned a tiny former maid’s bedroom in the attic. My boss occupied a grand drawing room on the first floor where he sat behind a huge mahogany desk. This and other rooms were filled with dark antique furniture. Files, papers and law books covered every surface.

Every day, in his pin-striped suit, my boss walked bowler-hatted with carefully rolled umbrella to his Pall Mall club for lunch with

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NEWS
One in five in-house lawyers suffer ‘high’ or ‘severe’ work-related stress, according to a report by global legal body, the Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC)
The Legal Ombudsman’s (LeO’s) plea for a budget increase has been rejected by the Law Society and accepted only ‘with reluctance’ by conveyancers
Overcrowded prisons, mental health hospitals and immigration centres are failing to meet international and domestic human rights standards, the National Preventive Mechanism (NPM) has warned
Two speedier and more streamlined qualification routes have been launched for probate and conveyancing professionals
Workplace stress was a contributing factor in almost one in eight cases before the employment tribunal last year, indicating its endemic grip on the UK workplace
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