Harrison Denner > Chambers of Charles Gibson KC > London, England > Barrister Profile
Henderson Chambers Offices

Henderson Chambers
2 HARCOURT BUILDINGS, TEMPLE
LONDON
EC4Y 9DB
England
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Harrison Denner

Work Department
Group actions, product liability, commercial litigation, banking (including consumer credit), EU & competition law, personal injury, health and safety.
Position
Harrison has a broad practice, with a wealth of experience both led and unled in a variety of fields. Harrison has a particular focus on commercial litigation, as well as banking and consumer finance, product liability and group actions.
Prior to joining Chambers, Harrison graduated from Oxford University with a BA in jurisprudence, followed by obtaining a Distinction from UCL in the LLM and an Outstanding on the BPTC. He also worked at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP as a corporate paralegal.
Memberships
Lincoln’s Inn
Education
BA, Oxon (Jurisprudence); LLM, UCL (Distinction); BPTC, University of Law (Outstanding).
Hardwicke Entrance Award, Lord Denning Scholarship, Buchanan Prize, Wolfson Scholarship (Lincoln’s Inn); Performance Award, Ede & Ravenscroft Prize (University of Law)
Lawyer Rankings
London Bar > Banking and finance (including consumer credit)
(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 3Henderson Chambers’ experience in banking and finance law includes advising and representing clients such as banks on a wide range of instructions, from advising and litigating on consumer credit and consumer protection, to advising on matters governed by the regulatory regime of FSMA and the FCA. Julia Smith specialises in consumer finance and has been involved in reviewing and drafting regulated agreement documentation and exempt bridging loan documentation. William Hibbert‘s expertise in consumer credit and consumer-facing financial services includes regulated credit and secured borrowing, while Harrison Denner represented HSBC UK Bank plc in Holloway v HSBC UK Bank Plc, which involved a claim made by the defendant alleging mis-sale of the PPI policy and an unfair relationship.