Commercial Law
Our broad commercial practice includes all aspects of international trade and commerce, with particular emphasis on banking and finance, insurance and reinsurance, joint venture disputes, shipping, aviation and professional negligence.
Our barristers frequently appear in the Chancery Division, the Queen's Bench Division (in particular the Commercial Court, the Admiralty Court and the London Mercantile Court) and the Court of Appeal.
Additionally, Stone Chambers' barristers often appear in courts abroad and before various arbitral tribunals constituted under the auspices of the ICC, LCIA, SCC, HKIAC, SIAC and LMAA and at mediations. A number of our barristers act as arbitrators and mediators.
Steven Gee QC is author of the leading practitioners' text Commercial Injunctions.
All members of Chambers are members of COMBAR (the Commercial Bar Association).
Steven Gee QC is recommended in the areas of Commercial Arbitration, International Arbitration, Insurance and Reinsurance and Commercial Litigation by Chambers and Partners 2012 and/or Legal 500 2011.
Timothy Hill QC is recommended as a leading silk for commercial litigation in Legal Experts.
Philip Riches is also recommended in the Legal 500 2011 as a leading junior barrister for Commercial Litigation, International Arbitration and Civil Fraud.
For further information please click see Testimonials.
Commercial Barristers at Stone Chambers:
- Steven Gee QC
- John Reeder QC
- Elizabeth Blackburn QC
- Vasanti Selvaratnam QC
- Timothy Hill QC
- Sarah Miller
- Colin Wright
- Dominic Happe
- Rachel Toney
- Ishfaq Ahmed
- Mary Gibbons
- Mark Jones
- Ravi Aswani
- Philip Riches
- Tom Whitehead
- James Shirley
- Neil Henderson
- Jeremy Lightfoot
- Sandra Healy
- Henry Ellis
- Peter Stevenson
- Liisa Lahti
- Andrew Leung
- Andrew G Moran QC
- Charles Debattista
- Dato' Jude P Benny
- Stephen Howells
Elizabeth Blackburn QC ... beloved by solicitors for 'always having the facts at her fingertips.'
(Chambers & Partners 2009)
See all recommendations in Testimonials.
