Slater & Gordon plans to sue Watchstone Group

The law firm is chasing $86.5m from the relic of Quindell which it paid $1.3b last year to buy its professional services division.

Slater & Gordon has announced its intention to file claims against the Watchstone Group, the relic of UK company Quindell which it paid $1.3b last year to acquire its professional services division.
 
Slater & Gordon said in an ASX announcement that it has notified Watchstone it intends to bring a claim against the group arising from the purchase of Quindell’s Professional Services Division. It said £50m ($86.5m) is set aside from the purchase price for warranty claims.
 
The law firm, now having the unfortunate title of recording the largest loss in the world’s legal sector yet, did not indicate whether the claim will be filed in the UK or in Australia.
 
Most of the value of the Quindell purchase was written off by Slater & Gordon in its latest full year fiscal report. For fiscal 2016, it posted a $1.02b loss which includes $879.5m non-cash goodwill impairment.
 
For the first half of 2016, the firm recorded a $958.3m loss while it posted a $59.3m net loss before tax for the second half. Non-GAAP revenue for the whole fiscal year stood at $908.2m.
 
The claim will be another challenge Watchstone faces. Just months after the acquisition of Quindell’s Professional Services Division, the UK’s Serious Fraud Office investigated the firm for accounting practices, forcing it to restate its 2013 accounts.
 
Meanwhile, Slater & Gordon which recently dumped its conveyancing business in Australia as part of its numerous cost-cutting steps has also been reported to undergo a board shakeup which saw only one director from three who left replaced.
 
Slater & Gordon, the first law firm to be listed on a stock market, has seen its stock price fall from a high of over $8 per share last year on the ASX for a market cap of $2.8b. The stock closed at $0.4 yesterday valuing the company at a relatively measly $141m.
 

Recent articles & video

Proposed merging of Foodstuffs grocery entities denied clearance

Small modifications to approved building plans now treated differently

LeeSalmonLong promotes Emma Armstrong to partner

King & Spalding seeks dismissal of lawsuit over its diversity job program

Harvard Law reports decline in students of colour after Supreme Court's affirmative action ban

UK legal sector criticized for gaps in anti-money laundering supervision

Most Read Articles

Rachel Rumball and Ross Hill join Juno Legal, in-house support provider

Duncan Cotterill appoints Glen Cornelius as CEO and Brian Nathan as chair

Supreme Court rejects appeal by transgender prisoner challenging segregation at Auckland facility

Genesis Energy, advised by Bell Gully, to acquire 65% stake in ChargeNet