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Summary SQE1 FLK Revision Notes - Complete Course Bundle $92.87   Add to cart

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Summary SQE1 FLK Revision Notes - Complete Course Bundle

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Hello! These notes are a complete review of the SQE1 course from the University of Law. They contain everything you need to know to pass. I successfully completed both SQE1 and SQE2 both times and I attribute it to these notes which were incredibly effective when reviewing prior to the exams. The p...

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  • January 31, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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SQE 1 Preparation Course

Ethics and Professional Conduct
 SRA Principles
o Arrangement with third parties
 Referral fees are prohibited in situations relating to damages of death or
personal injury
 Clients must be informed of any fee-sharing arrangement that is relevant to a
matter
 Clients can only be referred to a separate business unless given informed
consent  must be informed of any interests in the referral and cannot receive
a referral fee without giving to client
o Complaints handling
 Solicitors must ensure that clients are informed in writing at the time of
engagement about:
 Their right to complain about the solicitor’s services and charges
 How complaints may be made and to whom
 Any right they have to complain to the Legal Ombudsman and when
o Conflicts of interest
 Two formal exceptions: 1) where the clients have a substantially common
interest or 2) where clients are competing for the same objective (likely only
corporate clients)
 Where the only conflict between the parties is their wider business
interests then this will not create any conflict-of-interest issues.
 Conditions for acting: 1) all the clients have given informed consent,
given or evidenced in writing, to the solicitor acting, 2) where
appropriate, effective safeguards are put in place to protect the clients’
confidential information, 3) and the solicitor is satisfied it is reasonable
to act for all the clients
 Only between current clients, not former clients whose file is closed
o Confidentiality
 Must not disclose information without client’s consent
 Unless
 Where a client has indicated their intention to commit suicide or serious
harm
 Preventing harm to children or vulnerable adults
 Preventing the commission of a criminal offence
 The solicitor has a duty of confidentiality towards previous clients and so must
not disclose any information about previous clients to new clients dealing with
them. The solicitor’s duty towards new clients are to “make the client aware of
all information material to the matter of which you have knowledge”, but there
is an exception where “your client gives informed consent, given or evidenced in
writing, to the information not being disclosed to them”.

,FLK 1: Business Law, Contract Law, Dispute
Resolution, Tort Law, Legal Services, Legal
Systems, Constitutional Law
Business Law
Vehicles of a Company
 Business mediums
o Sole traders or sole proprietors
 Single person owns and runs a business as a self-employed person, in their own
personal capacity with unlimited liability
 No procedures and documentation required to start
o General partnerships
 At least two people carrying on business in common, with unlimited liability
 Regulated under the Partnership Act 1890, but most customize via their own
partnership agreement
 No procedure and documentation required to start, just two people acting as
partners with the view to profit
o LLPs
 Taxed as a general partnership, but are considered a separate legal entity and
benefit from limited liability
 If at any time the members of an LLP reduces to one for more than 6
months, that partner is jointly and severally liable for any of the LLP’s
debts in the 6 month period
 To commence operating:
 File form LL IN01 and the applicable fee with Companies House
 Choose a name
 Have a registered address - this will be publicly available
 Have an LLP agreement that says how the LLP will be run
 Register the LLP with Companies House
 Individual members of the LLP must register with HMRC as self-
employed
o Private companies
 Separate legal personality and limited liability (a shareholder’s liability is limited
to the amount already invested)
 Companies Act 2006
 Owners (shareholders) are separate from managers (directors)
o Public companies
 Can sell shares to the public
 Forming a company
o Companies House
 Form IN01 submitted to Companies House, along with memorandum of
association (or articles, if not using the Model Articles)
 Will contain: first directors and addresses, first shareholders and
addresses

,  IN01 must state the number of shares the company has and the total
nominal value
 Will also include prescribed particulars: dividends, redemption potential
of shares for money, whether they can vote on certain matters, how
many votes their shares entitle them to
 Companies House will issue a certificate of incorporation stating:
 The name and registered number of the company  name cannot
contain swear words, must be Plc or Ltd, cannot suggest government
affiliation
 The date of its incorporation
 Whether it is a limited or unlimited company and, if it is limited,
whether it is limited by shares or by guarantee
 Whether it is a private or public company
 The company’s registered office  must be where business is
conducted
 Must register with HMRC for corporation tax
 To switch from private to public company: pass a special resolution, register
with Form RR01, alter name to Plc
o Company constitution: memorandum of association, Articles of Association, certificate
of incorporation, current statement of capital, shareholders’ resolutions, court orders
and legislation which affect the company’s constitution.
 Articles of Association: rulebook incl. notice period for board meetings,
minimum number of directors required in order for board meeting to be valid,
whether the board of directors can refuse to register a new shareholder and the
circumstances in which a director will not be allowed to vote
 Model Articles: will be for companies incorporated after October 1, 2009
 Forming a partnership
o Partnership Act 1890
 Assumes equality of capital contribution, sharing of profits and losses, equality
of property between partners
 All assumptions can be rebutted through implied conduct which is
consistent  profit sharing, hours of work every week (as the PA does
not require a set number of work hours)
 Duty of good faith/implied non-compete: must share any profits they make if
they have a business that competes with the partnership
 Expulsion: no right to expel a partner
 Retirement: can be terminate by any one partner giving notice
 Would not remove their liability for already incurred debts, but any
debts going forward are not liable if they:
o Give notice to existing customers and suppliers
o Put an announcement in the London Gazette
o Remove their name from the website/stationery
 Former partners who do not have knowledge that they were being
represented as being a partner on the firm’s old notepaper after asking

, to be taken off will not be held liable for the debt to the supplier (s14
Partnership Act 1890)
 Partners who have accounted to the partnership for their share of the
debts when leaving a partnership will not absolve themselves from
liability for debts – they can claim against the remaining partners to be
reimbursed
 Dissolution under the PA:
 When a partner retires
 On expiry of a fixed term
 By the death or bankruptcy of any of the partners
 Notice of dissolution to a partner who has (by order of the court)
granted a charge over their share of the partnership property
 If unlawful actions take place
 Distribution of proceeds of sale
 1) creditors of the firm must be paid in full. If there is a shortfall, the
partners must pay the balance from their private assets
 2) partners who have lent money to the firm must be repaid the
amount outstanding on the loan, including interest.
 3) partners must be paid the share of the partnership’s capital to which
they are entitled.
 4) any surplus is shared between the partners in accordance with the
terms of their partnership agreement
 Binding the partnership
 Actual authority: did the person in question have permission to enter
into the contract on behalf of the partnership?
 Apparent authority: the other party believes the person is a partner that
has the authority to act and normally it would be expected that they can
act
o Partnership agreements
 Does not need to be written, can be implied through conduct
 Non-competes are often added in, but not in the PA 1890
 There is no automatic right to veto, but by customizing a partnership agreement
a right to veto can be added in
 Roles: each partner’s roles and duties
 Decision making is made by majority, except unanimously for:
 Changing the nature of the business
 Introducing a new partner
 Changing the terms of the partnership agreement
 Share in income and capital profits/losses
 Ownership of assets
 Dissolution: if it does not address this issue, the partner may insist on assets
being sold to buy him out or 5% annum interest on the value of their
partnership
 Liability between partners: a partner when leaving is entitled to their share of
the assets, minus their share of the debts

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