Code of conduct copyright litigation resolved
Thursday 03 April 2008The litigation between Andrew Hopper QC and Gregory Treverton-Jones QC and the Law Society has been amicably resolved. In a general announcement, the parties stated:
'The Law Society and the authors of the Solicitor's Handbook, Andrew Hopper QC and Gregory Treverton-Jones QC, are delighted to announce the amicable resolution of their dispute over copyright issues relating to the reproduction in full of the Society’s Code of Conduct.'
For contractual reasons both parties declined to comment on the precise details
of the settlement. The Society will now publish the Handbook, containing all
the current professional rules, codes and regulations together with a critical
examination of the regulatory regime governing solicitors' practice.
Des Hudson, chief executive of the Law Society commented:
'We are very pleased, and we are looking forward to working with the authors on this project. We consider the Handbook to be a valuable resource for our members and are strongly committed to it'.
Andrew Hopper added:
'We are delighted that this dispute has been resolved and that we are working with the Law Society to get the Handbook published and available to the profession.'
Mr Treverton-Jones commented:
'I am excited at the prospect of a long and successful relationship with Law Society Publishing'.
The result of the settlement is that the
publication will now contain the Code of Conduct in full and will be available
to the profession from the Law Society by the end of May 2008.
The Handbook has been written by two recognised leading practitioners and
will provide insight on issues previously covered in the now defunct
Guide to the Professional Conduct of Solicitors, the 8th and final edition
of which was published in 1999. It will contain all the most important
regulatory rules and regulations that affect solicitors, together with text
from the authors which describes the practical reality of the regulatory and
disciplinary world in which solicitors operate and discusses all of the relevant
decided cases in the field.
Journalists should call the Law Society press office on 020 7320 5811.
