Scott Goldstein > Payne Hicks Beach LLP > London, England > Lawyer Profile
Payne Hicks Beach LLP Offices

10 NEW SQUARE
LINCOLN'S INN
LONDON
WC2A 3QG
England
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Scott Goldstein

Work Department
Dispute Resolution/Property Litigation
Position
Scott trained in the City and spent seventeen years in practice in Top 100 firms. Latterly he headed up the Property Disputes Team of a leading Thames Valley firm. Drawing on this experience, Scott is able to bring a wide range of technical knowhow and commercial nous to bear on any property dispute, be it commercial or residential. He is building up a following of developer and high net worth clients.
Landlord and tenant work is of particular interest to Scott. On the commercial side, he has developed an expertise dealing with cases involving the applicability of the criteria for opposing a new business tenancy on the grounds of redevelopment (ground (f)). With residential tenancies, Scott has represented landlords and tenants of long leases in connection with enfranchisement claims, service charge disputes and disputes between tenant directors of freehold companies. He acted for the successful landlord in a Court of Appeal case concerning waiver of the right to forfeit a long residential lease.
Scott has had articles and comment published in the Financial Times, Property Week, Prime Resi, News on the Block, the Property Law Journal, LexisNexis and The Daily Beast. He regularly gives talks to professionals and clients alike and in February 2018 presented two one hour seminars to an audience of several hundred surveyors and other property professionals at the Five Counties Conference in High Wycombe.
Reported Cases
BDW Trading Limited v Opticlife Limited [2010] EWHC 1951 (Ch) (Notices to Complete had been incorrectly served, entitling the client purchaser to the return of deposits worth £1.5m)
Greenwood Reversions Limited v (1) WEF (2) Mehra [2008] H.L.R. 31 (CA) (consideration of the correct approach to granting relief against forfeiture of a long residential lease
Hollis et al v Rolfe et al [2008] EWHC 1747 (Ch) (undue influence in property contracts)
Career
Qualified 2002, joined Payne Hicks Beach 2018, senior associate 2018, partner 2019.
Memberships
Scott is a member of the Education and Training Committee of the Property Litigation Association.
Education
Scott has an MA in Social and Political Sciences from Girton College, Cambridge.
Lawyer Rankings
London > Real estate > Property litigation
Payne Hicks Beach LLP’s property litigation offering is wide ranging, with demonstrated experience in high-value residential work, and recent expansion into the hospitality sector. The ‘extremely diligent’ Matthew Spring anchors the group and is skilled in residential and commercial landlord and tenant matters and has recently been involved in cases concerning rights of light and party walls, in addition to leasehold enfranchisement disputes. Spring is ably supported by the ‘commercially astute’ Scott Goldstein, who frequently advises ultra-high-net-worth clients on various property disputes. Natasha Lawson concentrates on possession claims.
Lawyer Rankings
Top Tier Firm Rankings
- Private client > Contentious trusts and probate
- Private client > Family
- Employment > Immigration: personal
- Private client > Personal tax, trusts and probate
Firm Rankings
- Private client > Agriculture and estates
- Public sector > Education: individuals
- Employment > Immigration
- Employment > Immigration: human rights
- Corporate and commercial > M&A: Smaller Deals, £10m-£100m
- TMT (technology, media and telecoms) > Reputation management
- Real estate > Residential property
- Private client > Art and cultural property
- Dispute resolution > Commercial litigation: mid-market
- Crime, fraud and licensing > Crime: general
- Employment > Senior executives
- Private client > Charities and not-for-profit
- Real estate > Commercial property: corporate occupiers
- Real estate > Property litigation
- Real estate > Commercial property: development
- TMT (technology, media and telecoms) > Sport
- Crime, fraud and licensing > Fraud: white-collar crime (advice to individuals)
- Employment > Employers