Grahame Anderson > Chambers of Gavin Mansfield KC > London, England > Barrister Profile

Chambers of Gavin Mansfield KC
Littleton Chambers
3 KING'S BENCH WALK NORTH, TEMPLE
LONDON
EC4Y 7HR
England

Work Department

Employment and sports

Position

Grahame is an expert trial and appellate advocate in employment and equalities law and related disciplines and regularly appears unled against Silks and senior juniors. He is sought out in particular for complex discrimination and whistleblowing trials, as well as business protection cases involving team moves and breach of restrictive covenants. He regularly undertakes appellate work before the EAT and Court of Appeal. Clients include a wide range of public and private sector entities (including a number of FTSE 100 companies and HM Government).

Career

Called 2013 (Middle Temple)

Languages

French (fluent); Japanese (intermediate).

Education

University of Cambridge (MA); Université Panthéon-Assas (Paris II) (Maîtrise en Droit); Japan University of Economics (Tsuzuki Scholar).

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > Employment

(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 4

Grahame AndersonLittleton ChambersGrahame is technically strong on the law, all over the details, and is also commercial. He’s client friendly and a pleasure to work with.’

A strong set for employment work‘, Littleton Chambers has a solid track record in representing respondent clients in a wide range of challenging cases. In the Court of Appeal, David Reade KC and Grahame Anderson acted for the respondents in a test case on the rights of agency workers to access permanent employment opportunities (Kocur v Angard Staffing Limited and Royal Mail Group). Also in the Court of Appeal, Anderson and Nicholas Siddall KC acted in Kong v Gulf International Bank Ltd, a landmark case involving the scope of the distinction between a whistleblowing disclosure and the conduct related to its manner, known as the separability principle. Over in the Supreme Court, Mohinderpal Sethi KC and Sophia Berry appeared in Basfar v Wong, the first case to be granted permission to leapfrog appeal directly to the Supreme Court from the EAT. The case involved a claim brought against a serving diplomat by a domestic worker, who alleged that she had been trafficked to the UK and her employment conditions constituted modern slavery; the Supreme Court ruled that diplomatic immunity could not defeat such a claim as it fell under the commercial activity exception.

London Bar > Sport

(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 4

Grahame AndersonLittleton Chambers ‘An absolute star. Hard working, intelligent with powerful and focused advocacy skills.’