Barbara Zeitler

Barbara came to the Bar after a career as a university lecturer in the United States.

She practises in all aspects of Discrimination and Employment Law and has a substantial Housing Law practice, appearing regularly for both Social Landlords and Tenants.  A formidable advocate in Court, Barbara also has a reputation for fast and effective production of paperwork. She is a regular lecturer.

Barbara is qualified to accept instructions under the Bar Council Public Access Scheme, and has extensive experience in dealing with Public Access clients.

BZphotonew

2001 Lincoln’s Inn

BA(London) PhD (London)

LLM (London)

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Degree/University
BA(London) PhD (London)
LLM (London)
Memberships
Employment Bar Association
Employment Lawyers’ Association
HLPA
SHLA
European Bar Association
Bar Pro Bono Unit
Volunteer for Consultations gratuites, an advice facility for the Francophone community of London
Scholarship/Awards

             JP Warner Scholarship

             Pegasus Scholarship

Areas of Practice
Discrimination Law
Employment Law
Housing: possession proceedings, disrepair, homelessness
Neighbour Disputes
Anti-Social Behaviour
Harassment Law
Property: Landlord and Tenant (residential), Boundaries.
Easements, Nuisance claims
General Common Law

Languages spoken

French and German (fluent), Italian (conversational), and a smattering of Arabic.
Outside Interests
Travel, especially in the Mediterranean, and cinema.
 

An Englishman abroad

Mark Jones explores the tricky issue of domicile of origin over domicile of choice in Morris v Davies

 

The recent decision of the High Court in the case of Morris v Davies [2011] EWHC 1773 (Ch) emphasised the tenacious nature of a person's domicile of origin and the intensely fact-based approach to considering assertions of substitution of the same by an alternative domicile of choice.

The dispute arose from the administration of the estate of the late Owen Davies, who was born in England on 1 November 1963 and who died unexpectedly of a heart attack in Paris on the 26 November 2008, aged just 45. What happened thereafter informed much of the considerable antipathy in the case and the media interest at the time of the trial, where those close to the deceased agreed to and did conceal the fact of his death and his funeral from his family, with such a degree of success that for several months after both events they remained in complete ignorance.

 

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The Dowry in law

"The Dowry in law" by Miss Suki K Johal,

Barrister at 3 Dr Johnson's Building. Temple. London

In recent years there has been a proliferation of cases in the English courts on the issue of Indian dowries particularly in areas of high Asian population. The Oxford English Dictionary broadly defines dowry as encompassing 'money or property the wife brings with her to the husband's home; the portion given with the wife; a present or gift given by a man to or for his bride'. The Chambers English Dictionary provides 'the property which a woman brings to her husband at marriage; sometimes a gift given to or for a wife at marriage'. These definitions provide that dowry has two constituents- the giving of property to the bride from parents and kin and the giving of jewellery from the in-laws.

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