Louise Bond#13047

Louise Bond

Senior Associate, K&L Gates
Louise Bond is a Commercial Disputes associate and routinely works on complex international arbitrations and litigation, with cases in the High Court, Court of Appeal, and Supreme Court. Louise has a broad range of experience across a variety of industries and legal issues, which enables her to bring a open-minded perspective to all the cases she works on. 

Her recent experience covers the aviation, material sciences, sport and gambling, commodities, fine arts, logistics, IT and telecommunications, and construction sectors.

Louise qualified as a solicitor in September 2019, having completed her training contract with the firm in the disputes, corporate, real estate, and asset and corporate finance groups. Her previous experience in key transactional areas of law provides her with a keen awareness of the commercial context in which disputes often arise. 

She also has a keen interest in diversity, inclusion and equality initiatives, and is a member of the D&I Committee in London and the firm-wide Disability Inclusion Task Force. 
Contributed to

2

Cross-border service—application for permission to serve outside England and Wales
Cross-border service—application for permission to serve outside England and Wales
Practice Notes

This Practice Note provides assistance when making an application to obtain the courts’ permission to serve the claim form outside England and Wales. Such an application is generally made without notice and on the papers. This Practice Note covers the timing of the application, the documentation required to make the application and considerations when completing it. It then sets out the steps that need to be taken if permission is granted.

Cross-border service—Form N510
Cross-border service—Form N510
Practice Notes

This Practice Note considers the requirement for completing Court Form N510 (Notice for service out of the jurisdiction where permission of the court is not required) when serving a claim form out of the jurisdiction without the court’s permission. It explains what Form N510 is and when it must be used. It then explains the different parts of the form to be completed, depending on which jurisdiction the claim form is to be served in. It also provides some considerations when completing Form N510 and explains the consequences of a failure to complete it correctly. Finally it covers when the form must be filed and served and the consequences if this does not take place.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2019

Education

  • University of York

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