Stephen Kenny KC > Chambers of Gavin Kealey KC > London, England > Barrister Profile

Chambers of Gavin Kealey KC
7 King's Bench Walk
TEMPLE
LONDON
EC4Y 7DS
England
Stephen Kenny photo

Position

Barrister specialising in shipping, insurance and reinsurance. Shipping work includes bill of lading and charterparty disputes, ship building and ship sales, arrests, salvage, general average. Insurance and reinsurance work includes marine and non-marine insurance, facultative and treaty reinsurance, Lloyd’s, insurance broking. Also handles disputes involving aviation insurance, energy supply, carriage by road and air, sale of goods, trade financing, and professional negligence (brokers, solicitors, accountants). Recent cases include The “Alhani” [2018] EWHC 1495 (Comm); [2018] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 563 (Hague Rules Art. III Rule 8); The “Longchamp” [2017] UKSC 68, [2018] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 1 (York Antwerp Rules, Rule F); Khakshouri v Jimenez [2017] EWHC 3392 (QB) (deceit – loan to football club); The “Brillante Virtuoso” [2016] EWHC 1085 (Comm) (scuttling – owners’ claim struck out);  The “Maersk Neuchatel” [2014] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 377 (general average – charterers’ letter of undertaking); Glencore Energy v Cirrus Oil Services [2014] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 1 (sale of crude oil); The “Gaz Energy” [2012] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 211 (charterparty – speed and consumption); Air Transworld v Bombardier [2012] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 349 (sale of private jet – exclusion of conditions); PK Air Finance v Chartis Insurance, settled 2010 (aviation insurance); CNA Insurance Co Ltd v Willis Ltd, settled 2009 (reinsurance broking – alleged deceit).  For further detail see www.7kbw.co.uk.

 

Career

Qualified 1987; silk 2006.

Languages

French.

Memberships

Combar; London Common Law and Commercial Bar Association; British Insurance Law Association.

Education

MA, BCL (Oxon) First Class.

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > Commodities

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 3

Stephen Kenny KC   – 7 King’s Bench Walk Stephen’s strengths are his good response time, strong yet didactic drafting style for pleadings, and his understanding of the lay client’s needs when seeking advice through our instructions to him.’