author Ashleigh Herbert Ashleigh Herbert is currently a pupil barrister at Cathedral Chambers, commencing tenancy in October 2024. She currently specialises in all areas of family law including financial remedies, private children and public children. Related Read the journal Financial Remedies Journal – 2026 Issue 1 | Spring Related Latest Mazur in the Court of Appeal: the Judgment That Saved Half the Profession from Accidental Criminality The Court of Appeal rewrites the landscape of ‘conduct of litigation’ – Mazur & Stuart v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP & Ors [2026] EWCA Civ 369. Portals: Bringing It All Together Tips and tricks on using the digital court portals from a member of the stakeholder group for the profession, including how to avoid the double login, when to denote documents as confidential, and how to prompt a response from the court. FRJ – ‘Well, He (or She) Didn’t Ask!’ – the Impact of Non-Disclosure When the Question Isn’t Asked Is it a shield to non-disclosure by one party during financial remedy proceedings if the other party could (and perhaps should) have asked? The duty on parties to give full and frank financial disclosure is not merely a private obligation between them; it is a duty to the court. is curated by The Leaders In Family Law Books & Software EXPLORE OUR PRODUCTS
Mazur in the Court of Appeal: the Judgment That Saved Half the Profession from Accidental Criminality The Court of Appeal rewrites the landscape of ‘conduct of litigation’ – Mazur & Stuart v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP & Ors [2026] EWCA Civ 369.
Portals: Bringing It All Together Tips and tricks on using the digital court portals from a member of the stakeholder group for the profession, including how to avoid the double login, when to denote documents as confidential, and how to prompt a response from the court.
FRJ – ‘Well, He (or She) Didn’t Ask!’ – the Impact of Non-Disclosure When the Question Isn’t Asked Is it a shield to non-disclosure by one party during financial remedy proceedings if the other party could (and perhaps should) have asked? The duty on parties to give full and frank financial disclosure is not merely a private obligation between them; it is a duty to the court.