Abstract

The present article analyses the difficulties that may arise in bringing a barrister to civil liability for losses caused to the principal, in particular, the difficulties in determining the grounds of liability. The author makes an attempt to find a solution to these practical problems through the prism of analyzing the legal nature of such liability and its common principles. In the absence of practice-established approaches to identifying the grounds and procedure for the implementation of liability of advocates for losses caused to their principals and taking into account the nature of such liability, the author justifies by the analogy of law the applicability of approaches to liability developed by practice in other sphere.

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