Katherine (Kate) Hallett#1910

Katherine (Kate) Hallett

Barrister, Three Stone
Katherine has a broad practice encompassing a wide variety of chancery and commercial litigation, including advisory work. She has particular interest in insolvency and property law.

As regards insolvency, Katherine’s practice includes:
• petitions for bankruptcy and winding up
• applications to set aside statutory demands
• validation orders
• annulment and rescission applications
• applications for possession and sale
• actions against officers for misfeasance
• transactions at an undervalue, preferences, unlawful dividends etc
• challenges to office-holders’ remuneration and expenses

Katherine’s property-related work includes:
• landlord and tenant disputes (residential and commercial, including ASBO-related matters)
• real property (boundary disputes, adverse possession claims, easements and rights of way)
• trusts of land matters (including orders for sale)
• proprietary estoppel
• mortgage repossessions (including mortgage fraud)

She is also particularly interested in disputes relating to beneficial interests in property.

Katherine’s commercial practice covers:
• company law
• breach of contract
• sale of goods
• supply of services
• contracts regulated by the Consumer Credit Act 1974
• personal guarantees and indemnities

Katherine’s probate-related practice covers:
• the validity, interpretation and rectification of wills
• administration of estates
• claims under the Inheritance (Provision for Family & Dependants) Act 1975
• challenges to wills on the grounds on lack of testamentary capacity, want of knowledge and approval and undue influence

Contributed to

1

After-acquired property under section 307 of the Insolvency Act 1986
After-acquired property under section 307 of the Insolvency Act 1986
Practice Notes

This Practice Note, produced in partnership with Katherine Hallett of Three Stone Chambers and amended in light of the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 by Amit Gupta of Enterprise Chambers, looks at the concept of after-acquired property under section 307 of the Insolvency Act 1986, which enables a trustee in bankruptcy to claim property for the bankruptcy estate which is acquired by, or devolves on, the bankrupt after the date of the bankruptcy order and before the bankrupt’s discharge.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2006

Membership

  • Property Bar Association
  • Chancery Bar Association
  • Paris Bar Inns of Court Exchange (2011)
  • Lincoln’s Inn

Qualification

  • BA Oxon (Jurisprudence); MA Oxon (2005)

Education

  • New College, University of Oxford (2002-05)

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