Rezumat
The Access to Justice Act 1999 reformed the legal aid system in England and Wales, replacing the Legal Aid Board with the Legal Services Commission. It established the Community Legal Service (for civil cases) and the Criminal Defence Service (for criminal cases). The Act also reformed conditional fee agreements ('no win, no fee') and rights of audience for solicitors.
Puncte cheie
- Created the Legal Services Commission to replace the Legal Aid Board
- Established the Community Legal Service Fund for civil legal aid
- Created the Criminal Defence Service for publicly funded criminal defence
- Reformed conditional fee agreements (CFAs) — 'no win, no fee'
- Allowed recovery of success fees and insurance premiums from losing parties (later reversed by LASPO 2012)
- Extended rights of audience to employed solicitors
Părți și secțiuni
Istoricul amendamentelor
2012 — Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012
Replaced the Legal Services Commission with the Legal Aid Agency, reformed CFA cost recovery (abolishing recovery of success fees and ATE premiums from the losing party), and recast the scope of civil legal aid.
2007 — Legal Services Act 2007
Overhauled the regulation of legal services and superseded much of Part III, creating the Legal Services Board and the approved-regulator framework.