“It really is saving us a huge number of hours over the days, weeks and months. Having more relevant support at hand, not having to draft or review documents them from scratch - it all adds up.”
Southampton FCAccess all documents on Option
When considering an arbitration, you should consider: how the dispute will be financed and managed overall can the client realistically cover your professional fees together with the arbitration expenses? could another party or source be prepared to pick up the entire bill? is any relevant insurance already in place and available? would after-the-event insurance cover be an appropriate option? might your firm accept a conditional fee arrangement, a damages-based agreement, or some other funding structure? See Funding Arrangements—Overview (note: this link is not arbitration-specific) is the client open to exploring third-party funding? ...
This illustration depicts the framework of a project procured via PPC 2000...
Checklist on remotely accessed mediations This Checklist outlines the principal points to weigh when deciding if, and in what manner, to take part in a remotely accessed mediation by video conference (VC). With the emergence of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, use of such mediations expanded, ie, mediations conducted online via VC became noticeably more common. VC mediations—often called ‘online mediation’, ‘remote mediation’ or ‘remotely accessed mediation’—are not the sole option for non face-to-face engagement; mediation can also proceed by telephone. Even so, the simplicity and enhanced user features of the many VC platforms have proved well suited to the process for remote access mediation in practice. For guidance on the parties’ duties to consider alternative dispute resolution (ADR), and the courts’ authority to order or promote consideration of ADR, both before and during litigation, see Practice Notes: Court powers to order or encourage ADR in civil proceedings and Court powers to order or encourage ADR in civil proceedings—key and illustrative decisions...
Interim payment process in the NEC4 Engineering and Construction contract—flowchart HGCRA 1996 applies — option Y(UK)2 selected...
Payment procedure within the NEC3 Engineering and Construction Contract (ECC) —workflow HGCRA 1996 governs — option Y(UK)2 chosen...
A company share option plan (CSOP) A company share option plan (CSOP) enables tax-favoured options over shares with a value up to £60,000 per person, assessed as at the grant date, to be awarded at the discretion of companies that satisfy the CSOP qualifying criteria, and is commonly adopted by companies that are too large to be eligible to issue enterprise management incentive (EMI) options...
In this issue: Public company takeovers Equity capital markets Corporate governance Partnerships Private equity Members LexTalk®Corporate: a Lexis®Nexis community Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Useful information Public company takeovers Takeover Panel publishes note on cancellation of admission to trading The Takeover Panel (Panel) has issued a new note offering advisers guidance on cancelling an admission to trading for companies caught by the Takeover Code (Code). It confirms that companies with registered offices in the UK, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man, whose securities are traded on specified markets, remain within the Code for two years after cancellation, irrespective of where central management and control is located or whether they re-register as private companies. The Panel encourages early engagement with the Panel Executive when a cancellation is contemplated, to ensure shareholders receive suitable disclosure about the Code’s continued effect, and it outlines...
Mergers Secretary of State makes statement to Parliament on RedBird IMI/Telegraph Media Group merger Addressing Parliament, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sports provided an update on the proposed takeover of Telegraph Media Group Ltd (TMG) by RB Investco Ltd, and on her continuing assessment of the deal, which follows a public interest intervention. She confirmed that RB Investco had informed her of its plan to dispose of the call option agreement granting it the right to acquire TMG, thereby in effect stepping back from the purchase...
Competition policy UK/EU conclude technical negotiations for a future competition cooperation agreement The Department for Business and Trade has confirmed the completion of technical talks with the European Commission (the Commission) on a UK-EU competition cooperation arrangement (the Competition Cooperation Agreement). The Competition Cooperation Agreement is intended to serve as a supplement to the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA), which provides for the option of a distinct agreement dedicated to cooperation on competition matters...
This Practice Note offers practical direction on correctly executing documents when one or more parties to a contract are not physically together, often referred to as virtual signing or a virtual closing. The Law Society has brought together established materials covering: execution of documents by virtual means, use of electronic signatures, its ‘Tips on how to operate in practice’ concerning virtual execution and the use of e‑signatures, and Q&A on using electronic signatures and completing virtual executions, including ‘Our position on the use of virtual execution and e‑signature during the coronavirus (COVID‑19) pandemic’. We have assembled a comprehensive, interactive collection to help users identify and navigate the concepts and common issues involved in executing documents, including by virtual means. Each section or phase contains practical guidance, precedent clauses and Q&As relevant to that stage. For more information, see: Execution collection. Mercury Tax Case This guidance aligns with the Law Society’s position issued on 16 February 2010 in response...
Why do companies have reorganisations? Groups of companies carry out reorganisations for numerous and varied reasons. These steps will frequently have implications for existing share plans and other employee equity arrangements. In some instances, the consequences are commercial in nature. Examples include: the reorganisation prompting early vesting, exercise and/or lapse of awards because the relevant provisions in the share plan rules on a change in control of the parent company, or on the participant’s employment ending, have been engaged; and a requirement for awards over shares in the current parent to be swapped for awards over shares in a newly formed parent company. In certain situations, if the right steps are not taken within a defined period, valuable tax advantages may ultimately be lost entirely. Common types of reorganisation The most frequent forms of reorganisation include the following: placing a new group holding or parent entity above an existing company or group, often to enable an initial...
Many UK-resident companies are expected to operate solely within the UK, with their entire customer base and supplier network located here, so that all profits and gains arise from UK activity undertaken domestically within national borders. Nevertheless, this is not universal; for a sizeable proportion of UK companies, overall profits also comprise non-UK amounts earned from activities outside the UK...
STANDARD SECURITY by [ INSERT THE GRANTOR’S NAME ] in favour of [ INSERT GRANTEE’S NAME ] Security Subjects: [ INSERT DETAILS OF PROPERTY ] 1 [ I OR We ], being [ insert name of Seller under Option Agreement ] [ of [ insert address ] OR incorporated in [ Scotland OR England and Wales ] with company registration number [ insert company registration number ] and registered office at [ insert address ] ] (the ‘Grantor’), as the present heritable proprietors of the aftermentioned Security Subjects, ACKNOWLEDGING that [ I OR we ] have assumed certain obligations under the option agreement entered into between (1) [ me OR us ], the said Grantor, and (2) [ insert name of Buyer under Option Agreement ] [ of [ insert address ] OR incorporated in [ Scotland OR England and Wales ] with company registration number [ insert company registration number ] whose registered office is at [ insert address ] ] (the ‘Grantee’ and which expression includes successors...
This Agreement is dated [ insert date ] Parties [ insert licensor name ], [ of OR a [ company OR partnership OR limited liability partnership ] [ incorporated OR constituted ] in [ insert jurisdiction, eg England and Wales ], registered number [ insert company or LLP number ], with [ registered office OR principal place of business ] at [ insert address ] (Licensor); and [ insert licensee name ], [ of OR a [ company OR partnership OR limited liability partnership ] [ incorporated OR constituted ] in [ insert jurisdiction, eg England and Wales ], registered number [ insert company or LLP number ], with [ registered office OR principal place of business ] at [ insert address ] (Licensee) Each of the Licensor and the Licensee is a party; together, the Licensor and the Licensee are the parties. Background The Licensor is the proprietor of the Technology IP. The Licensee has agreed...
This Agreement is entered into on [ insert date ] of [ insert month ] [ insert year ] by and between: [ insert name ], of [ insert address ] (' Council '); [ insert name ], of [ insert address ] (' County Council '); [ insert name ], a company duly incorporated and registered in [ insert details ] under number [ insert details ], whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (' Developer '); [ Additional parties as necessary eg owner, landlord, mortgagee, option holder etc. ] (' [ insert additional parties as necessary eg owner, landlord, mortgagee, option holder etc ] '). Recitals The Council is the local planning authority for the purposes of section 106 of the 1990 Act for the area within which the Land is situated and is the body by whom the obligations contained in this Deed are enforceable. The County Council is the local highway...
Section 2 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 (LTA 1987) Section 2 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 (LTA 1987) states that a person is the landlord if they are (a) the direct landlord of the qualifying tenants of flats in the premises, or (b) where any such tenant is a statutory tenant, the person who, but for that statutory tenancy, would have the right to possession of the flat. Consequently, the relevant landlord is usually the immediate landlord of the qualifying tenants, so a transfer of a superior interest is generally outside scope. Intermediate headleases are often used to avoid the regime. However, s 2(2) LTA 1987 provides that where the immediate landlord is also a tenant of the premises under a tenancy that is either: a term under seven years, or a term exceeding seven years, but capable of termination within the first seven years at the superior landlord’s option, the superior landlord is also treated as the...
When the fixed term of an assured tenancy (including an assured shorthold tenancy) ends and the tenant remains in occupation, a statutory periodic tenancy arises under section 5(2) of the Housing Act 1988. To end that statutory periodic tenancy, the landlord may proceed using either the section 8 or section 21 route. The section 21 option is usually preferable, as no grounds need to be proven, unless the landlord cannot meet the pre-conditions for serving a section 21 notice. In those circumstances, a section 8 notice can be used, provided the landlord can rely on one of the specified grounds. For fuller guidance, see Practice Note: Assured and assured shorthold tenancies—terminating, particularly the sections ‘Method of landlord termination’, ‘Section 8’ and ‘Section 21—pre-conditions to service’...
The appropriate section of the HMRC annual return to complete hinges on whether the relevant share appreciation right (SAR) or restricted stock unit (RSU) constitutes a securities option for the purposes of s 420(8) of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003. In both scenarios, the award counts as a securities option if it grants a legal entitlement to obtain shares, and this, in turn, is determined in practice by the precise terms of the award concerning the method by which settlement may actually occur...