17 06 2024
Landmark Chambers' barristers feature in the 2024 Pro Bono Recognition List
Her practice covers all aspects of real property including conveyancing and title disputes. She regularly acts for clients in relation to development agreements as well as options, restrictive covenants, easements and rights to light that affect property development. She also handles property related environmental and professional negligence claims.
Her landlord and tenant practice encompasses, amongst other things, dilapidations, tenant default and insolvency, forfeiture, break clauses, rent review, service charges, ESG and 1954 Act renewals. Camilla also has considerable experience in disputes relating to the management of both residential and commercial premises.
Camilla has previously held posts as a tutor and lecturer of land law, equity & trusts and commercial leases at Oxford University. In 2019 she was appointed a fellow of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies (University of London) and is a member of its advisory board. She has published widely in her field and has been an editor of Hill & Redman on Landlord and Tenant since 2002.
Appointments
As the former Chair of both Landmark Chambers’ Equality and Diversity and Wellbeing Committee and Retention of Women Working Group, and a current member of Chambers’ Management Committee, she takes a keen interest in diversity, inclusion and wellbeing at the Bar.
Camilla is also committed to pro bono work which she accepts through Advocate (formerly the Bar Pro Bono Unit). She has been one of Advocate’s Senior Reviewers for property and landlord and tenant cases for a number of years.
She has previously sat on the Independent Decision making Body (IDB) of the Bar Standards Board and served as Vice Chair of its Qualifications Committee
Camilla has been a qualified mediator since 2009 and accepts instructions to act as a mediator in relation to property disputes. She is on the Chancery Bar Association’s panel of pro bono mediators.
Her practice covers all aspects of real property including conveyancing and title disputes. She regularly acts for clients in relation to development agreements as well as options, restrictive covenants, easements and rights to light that affect property development. She also handles property related environmental work, in particular relating to nuisance, as well as professional negligence claims.
Camilla’s landlord and tenant practice encompasses, amongst other things, dilapidations, tenant default and insolvency, forfeiture, break clauses, rent review, service charges, ESG and 1954 Act renewals. She also has considerable experience of disputes relating to the management of both residential and commercial premises.
She has appeared in high profile property cases in both the High Court and Court of Appeal. Significant property cases in which she has acted include:
Camilla has previously held posts as a tutor and lecturer of land law, equity & trusts and commercial leases at Oxford University. In 2019 she was appointed a fellow of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies (University of London) and is a member of its advisory board. She has published widely in her field and has been an editor of Hill & Redman on Landlord and Tenant since 2002.
She regularly lectures on property law and practice. She was a speaker at the PLA Midlands CPD updates in 2023 (on the MEES Regulations) and 2019 (on electronic signatures), the Insolvency Lawyers’ Association Annual Conference 2018 (on property issues in CVAs), the ChBA Shanghai Conference 2018 (on good faith in development contracts), the ChBA Property Seminar 2018 (on the 1954 Act), the PLA Annual Conference 2018 (on landlord’s consents) and the PLA Annual Training Day 2017 (on rating for property lawyers), the 2016 ChBA Conference (on nuisance), the 2015 UKELA Conference (on flooding and nuisance claims) and the 2015 Property Bar Association Conference (on service charges).
Camilla has been a qualified mediator since 2009 and accepts instructions to act as a mediator in relation to property disputes.
Camilla’s commercial landlord and tenant practice encompasses, amongst other things, dilapidations, tenant default and insolvency, forfeiture, break clauses, rent review, service charges, the electronic communications code, ESG and 1954 Act renewals.
Camilla is regularly instructed in respect of opposed and unopposed lease renewals, most frequently relating to retail and warehousing units. She has co-authored a book for the RICS on the subject. She has recently acted for the Crown Estate Commissioners in a ground (f) case relating to a building on Piccadilly, as well as for both landlord and tenants in unopposed lease renewal proceedings relating to retail units occupied by Next, Dunelm, Poundland and WHSmith.
Camilla has considerable experience in the field of tenant default and commercial forfeiture, including tenant insolvency. She was a speaker at the Insolvency Lawyers’ Association Annual Conference on the topic of property issues arising in CVAs and formed part of the team that successfully acted for Debenhams Retail Ltd in opposing the challenge to its CVA in the High Court. She represented a superior landlord in successfully forfeiting the head lease of an apartment building at Princes Dock in Liverpool following an allegedly fraudulent transfer.
Her service charge expertise extends to commercial leases and mixed-use schemes. She has advised a number of institutional landlords and retail tenants as to the apportionment of services charges in shopping centres. She acted for head lessors in a multi-party service charge dispute before the Upper Tribunal in respect of the Brunswick Centre.
In the field of rent review, Camilla receives instructions to advise as to the correct construction of rent review provisions and to make submissions in the context of expert determination.
Camilla has been appointed to act as a single joint expert in this field and welcomes such instructions. She was awarded the RICS Award in Arbitration in 2012. Camilla is also an established mediator and has experience of successfully mediating commercial property disputes.
Camilla undertakes residential work, particularly relating to service charges, management, building safety and the development and disposal of mixed-use estates. She has considerable experience in service charge litigation and is the editor of the chapter in Hill & Redman’s Law of Landlord and Tenant on residential service charges and management.
She acted for a number of the respondents in Leaseholders of Foundling Court and O’Donnell Court v Camden LBC [2016] UKUT 366, [2017] L & TR 7, a multi-party service charge dispute before the Upper Tribunal relating to the Brunswick Centre in which it was held that obligation to consult fell upon a superior landlord. She has acted in contested proceedings for the appointment of a manager of a residential building in Chelsea under Part 2 of the 1987 Act.
She represented a superior landlord in successfully forfeiting the head lease of an apartment building at Princes Dock in Liverpool following an allegedly fraudulent transfer, and dealing with multiple applications for relief by way of vesting order made by leaseholders and lenders.
Camilla has recently advised both landlords and tenants as to the implications of the Supreme Court decision in Duval v 11-13 Randolph Crescent Ltd [2020] UKSC 18 for the management of residential buildings and in particular the treatment of applications for landlord’s consent to alterations.
She also provides advice in relation to the application of tenants’ rights of first refusal under Part I of the 1987 Act.
Camilla’s environmental practice is property-related and includes nuisance and contaminated land. She has a particular interest in claims arising out of flooding, a subject on which she has published articles. She was a speaker at the UKELA Annual Conference 2015 on the issue of liability for flooding.
Camilla has “recognised skill in dealing with property disputes with an environmental angle” (Chambers and Partners 2015) and “has been extremely active this year handling commercial development and property-related environmental matters” (Who’s Who Legal UK Bar, 2015).
Clients that Camilla has acted for in her environmental practice include:
Mediation
Camilla became an accredited mediator in 2009 and has successfully acted as a mediator both in relation to property disputes and more generally in commercial and civil disputes. She is willing to mediate a wide range of disputes in person and by video conferencing. She also holds the RICS Award in Arbitration which she was awarded in 2012.
She has extensive knowledge of the law as well as a practical understanding of the wider issues often facing participants in these types of disputes, whether they arise between commercial entities or private clients. She is ideally placed to help participants find solutions to property and inheritance centred disputes, especially those between landlords and tenants, neighbours and family members. She has successfully mediated a number of property disputes ranging from commercial dilapidations to disputes as to the beneficial ownership of family assets. She also mediates disputes that are unconnected to property.
Camilla is a member of the Chancery Bar Pro Bono Mediation Scheme and mediates chancery/ property disputes referred to her through that scheme.
As well as acting as a mediator she has considerable experience acting for property clients as a mediation advocate.
Commercial Landlord and Tenant
Residential Leasehold Management and Disputes
Agricultural Law
Boundary and Ownership Disputes
Conveyancing Disputes
Easements and Profits a Prendre
Highways and other Transport Infrastructure
Housing
Insolvency
Land Registration and Adverse Possession
Mortgages, Charges, Charging Orders and Securitisation
Property Development including Overage disputes
Professional Negligence Claim Related to Property
Protestor Injunctions
Public Sector and Local Government Property issues
Restrictive Covenants
Rights of Light
Riparian Rights, Watercourses and Harbours
Squatters and other Trespass
Telecommunications
Trusts of Land and other Equitable Claims
Village Greens, Commons and Manorial Rights
Air Quality
Nuisance
Pollution and Contaminated Land
Protection of the Countryside
Utilities
ADR
Undoubtedly one of the best senior juniors."
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Landmark Chambers' barristers feature in the 2024 Pro Bono Recognition List
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Building Safety Act Conference (REPEAT) - full presentation
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Full Presentation
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Property Law Quarter Day update - Service Charges in the Supreme Court
David Holland KC, Camilla Lamont, and Simon Allison
Real Estate Litigation, Chambers and Partners, 2024
Property Litigation, Legal 500, 2024
Real Estate Litigation, Chambers and Partners, 2023
Property Litigation, Legal 500, 2023
Chambers and Partners, 2022
Property Litigation, Legal 500, 2022
Real Estate Litigation, Chambers and Partners, 2021
Legal 500, 2021
Real Estate Litigation, Chambers and Partners, 2020
Who’s Who Legal: UK Bar Real Estate, 2020
Legal 500, 2020
Chambers and Partners, 2019
Legal 500, 2019
Chambers and Partners, 2018
Legal 500, 2017
Who’s Who Legal: UK Bar Real Estate, 2017
Chambers and Partners, 2017
Chambers and Partners, 2017
Chambers and Partners, 2016
Legal 500, 2016
Chambers and Partners, 2015
Legal 500, 2015
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