Staff

Cartmell Shepherd Commercial Team Ready for Take Off…

January 7th 2020
 

CARLISLE Airport was the setting as Cartmell Shepherd Solicitors’ expanded 12-strong business team met to plan how they can best support companies to expand their horizons in 2020. Cartmell Shepherd Solicitors’ business team now includes three corporate lawyers, six commercial property lawyers, and three in its commercial employment team, delivering advice to businesses of all sizes across Cumbria, Northumberland and beyond. With commercial lawyers with a wealth of experience available…

Cartmell Shepherd

New legal recruit loving life in the north-east

January 3rd 2020
 

LIFE in the north-east is proving just the ticket for solicitor Alice Whittome who has just landed her dream job. Alice, a Newcastle United season ticket holder, has joined leading legal firm Cartmell Shepherd Solicitors as a private client solicitor in Haltwhistle. Alice is now preparing for her first Christmas as a homeowner with fiance Robbie, a trainee GP at Hexham General Hospital, and their two miniature dachshunds Evie and…

Bella Italia loses dispute over terminating lease

January 3rd 2020
 

The restaurant chain Bella Italia has lost a dispute about terminating a commercial lease. The property in question was a new development of retail premises on a site owned by two groups of trustees. In November 2014, Bella signed the agreement for lease, with the trustees as the named freeholder and landlord. The other parties to the agreement were the developer and a company which guaranteed Bella’s obligations under the…

Mark Aspin

Chronic fatigue sufferer wins unfair dismissal claim

December 23rd 2019
 

An occupational therapist who lost her job after years of suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome has won her claim of discrimination and unfair dismissal. Ms D Ward had worked for Northumberland Tyne & Wear NHS Foundation Trust since 2000. The trust operated a sickness and absence management policy under which employees faced disciplinary action if they had more than three absences from work in a 12-month period. In 2009, Ward…

Joanne Stronach

Winter Solstice Wild Swimming Adventure Attracts Cumbria Legal Executive

December 19th 2019
 

WILD swimming meets the Winter Solstice in the English Lake District this weekend and Laura Clarke wouldn’t miss it for the world. Laura, whose outdoor adventures include trekking to Everest Base Camp, loves nothing more than an early morning dip in the tranquil waters of the Lake District. “There’s just you and the water surrounded by amazing scenery at the first light of day,” said Laura. “It takes your mind…

Tenants win enfranchisement appeal over freehold of flats

December 18th 2019
 

A group of tenants have won their appeal to exercise the right of collective enfranchisement and acquire the freehold of their flats. The properties were owned by Grosvenor (Mayfair) Estate and held on a long lease by K Group Holdings Inc (2019). The issue arose after Aldford House Freehold Ltd, the nominee purchaser for 17 lessees, served an initial notice claiming to exercise the right of collective enfranchisement on the…

Natalie Tatton

Ryanair discriminated against flight attendant over brain tumour

December 16th 2019
 

The Employment Tribunal has ruled that the airline Ryanair discriminated against a flight attendant when she returned to work after being diagnosed with a brain tumour. Margita Dworak had worked for Ryanair from 2004-2018 and was a senior flight attendant at the time she resigned. In 2015, she began to experience severe headaches. These lasted for years and in 2017 she visited a specialist in Poland. She was later hospitalised…

Claire Davies

Leasing firm wins claim over outstanding invoices worth £560k

December 11th 2019
 

A vehicle leasing company has won its claim to recover more than £560,000 in unpaid invoices following a dispute with a customer. The case involved Venson Automotive Solutions Ltd v Morrisons Facilities Services Ltd. The two companies had entered into a contract in which Venson leased a fleet of 1,014 vehicles to Morrisons. The hire agreement contained a clause stipulating that if Morrisons disputed any of the invoices, it needed…

Minority shareholder stops company issuing new shares

December 9th 2019
 

A minority shareholder has been granted an interim injunction preventing a company from issuing new shares and loan notes. The applicant in the case had a minority shareholding in Brickvest Ltd (2019). There was a shareholders’ agreement specifying that certain matters required the applicant’s written consent, including the allotment of shares. The applicant sought an injunction preventing Brickvest from issuing new shares and loan notes, which it was planning on…

Financial adviser unfairly dismissed after ‘spurious allegations’

December 6th 2019
 

A financial adviser was unfairly dismissed after his employer put unreasonable pressure on him to extend a restrictive covenant. That was the decision of the Employment Tribunal in a case involving Peter Ward, who worked as a financial planning provider for Fiducia Comprehensive Financial Planning from 2009-2018. In May 2018, Ward resigned from the company and gave his three months’ notice, stating that he intended to spend more time with…

Joanne Stronach
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