Cathrine Grubb > Civitas Law > Cardiff, United Kingdom > Barrister Profile

Civitas Law
THE MEWS, 38 CATHEDRAL ROAD
CARDIFF
CF11 9LL
United Kingdom

Work Department

Commercial & Insolvency, Property & Land, Wills and Probate, Public & Regulatory, Asylum & Immigration, Education, Social Services and Court of Protection

Position

Barrister specialising in chancery, commercial and public law. Cathrine also accepts instrucion in personal injury cases and has a particular interest in claims with a foreign element having authored the relevant guidance on the topic in Butterworth’s Personal Injury Litigation Service Division 1 B 9. Cathrine is qualified to accept instructions under the Bar Standards Board Public Access Scheme.

Career

Called to the Bar in 2007 at Middle Temple and spent the year prior to pupilage working as an advocate for Legal Practice Clerks specialising in debt recovery and enforcement including mortgage possessions, landlord and tenant possessions, return of goods & insolvency.

Qualified as a barrister in 2009 and has a busy chancery and public law practice. Her notable cases include Smith v DECC [2013] EWCA Civ 1585; Asghar & Another v Ahmad & Others [2015] EWHC 1118. Her practise includes dealing with:

  • Appeal and Judicial Review cases before the First & Upper Tier tribunal and High Court in all areas of Immigration including family, work, study and visit visas (including TOEIC issues), deportation, EU and Ankara Applications and asylum with a particular emphasis on asylum claims from Iran, Pakistan, Vietnam and human trafficking claims.
  • Proceedings in the court of protection.
  • Commercial disputes including breach of contract, misrepresentation and HMRC appeals. Recent cases include claim for recovery of sums paid to finance a project to buy and import rough diamonds from Sierra Leone, Liberia and DRC, claim for rescission of a business purchase agreement in respect of a UEA property management company.
  • Property and Land cases including boundary disputes, easements, constructive trusts, proprietary estoppel, and claims under the Inheritance (provision for family and Dependants) Act 1975.
  • Debt recovery and Insolvency.

Recent publications Include:

  • Butterworth’s Personal Injury Litigation Service Division 1: Part A: General Principles of Compensation; Part B9: Cross Border Issues; Part I: Special Aspects of Future Loss; Part O: Finalising the Award or Settlement
  • Brexit brainstorming: implications for Wales – 166 NLJ 7703, p7, 17th June 2016
  • Cutting out the middleman – 166 NLJ 7702, p10, 10th June 2016 on Third parties (Rights Against Insurers) Act 2010
  • Comment on case of Bundesagentur für Arbeit – Familienkasse Sachsen v Trapowski [2015]EUECJ C378/14, Lexis Nexis, October 2015 (examined coordination of social security across the EU.
  • Welsh Devolution under the St. David’s Day Agreement – Legal News, April 2015

Languages

English, German.

Memberships

PIBA; ELA.

Education

  • Cardiff Law School (2007 Bar Vocational Course (Outstanding)
  • University College London (2003 LLB Law with German Law (2.1)

Leisure

Yoga, Skiing, Snowboarding, travel and the Arts

Lawyer Rankings

Regional Bar > Wales and Chester Circuit > Administrative and public law (including civil liberties and human rights)

(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 2

Cathrine Grubb  – Civitas Law

Members of Civitas Law receive instructions from a wide range of clients, including central and local government, institutions like the NHS and police forces, insurers, businesses, and individuals. Owain Rhys James, able to advise and advocate in Welsh, regularly acts at the instruction of local authorities in commercial and property cases with public law issues at stake. Anthony Vines advises on a range of administrative matters, while Cathrine Grubb has returned to private practice after time spent employed at the Independent Monitoring Authority working on the effective implementation and application of the UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement.

Regional Bar > Wales and Chester Circuit > Immigration

(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 1

Cathrine GrubbCivitas Law

Civitas Law offers considerable immigration law expertise. Cathrine Grubb has particular experience in relation to EU free movement and the human rights law elements of issues such as deportation, human trafficking, and statelessness and detention, contributing experience of an in-house role at the Independent Monitoring Authority, which is responsible for protecting the rights of EEA nationals and their families in the UK post-Brexit. Lucy King represents appellants as well as the Home Office in relation to asylum and deportation cases in the First and Upper Tier Immigration Tribunals.