Practice overview

Ben joined Chambers in September 2021 on successful completion of his pupillage.

His pupil supervisors were James McCreathTom RoscoeJonathan ChewBobby FriedmanSimon Atkinson and Harriet HolmesDuring pupillage he gained experience across the range of Chambers’ work, and he is now building a broad commercial chancery practice taking in pensions, trusts, property, commercial disputes, company law, tax, and insolvency. He is equally happy to be instructed as sole counsel or as part of a team.

Before joining Wilberforce Ben received a double starred first in history from Cambridge (coming first in his year in the University) and a doctorate in the history of political philosophy. He was awarded a Distinction on the GDL and was graded Outstanding on the bar course.

Benjamin's expertise

Trusts, Tax, Probate & Estates

Recent and ongoing work includes:

  • Acting, with Jonathan Hilliard KC, for trustees of a very large offshore family trust structure which holds a international business.
  • Acting, led by Andrew Mold KC and James Goodwin, in a major international succession dispute spanning various common- and civil-law jurisdictions.
  • Acting as sole counsel for an English trust faced with an application pre-action disclosure under CPR 31.16 from the judgment creditors of a person alleged to be a beneficiary.
  • Representing the claimant, as sole counsel, at Final Dispute Resolution hearing in a 1975 Act case: the settlement reached was unusually favourable for an adult-child claimant.
  • Acting for the one of several holders of the legal title to a property in circumstances where each of the legal owners asserts a 100% beneficial interest in the property by way of a resulting or common-intention constructive trust.
  • Advising, as sole counsel, the trustees of a pension fund on the tax implications of a property development.

Property

Ben acted, led by Zoë Barton KC, in a major case over rights of way in prime central London. The dispute involved complex issues of (i) construction of express grants, (ii) s. 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925, and (iii) prescription; it settled at the start of a 14-day trial.

Ben’s real-property practice has also involved a focus on freehold covenants, including (i) the registration of covenants; (ii) the seller’s duties of disclosure in respect of unregistered covenants; and (iii) positive covenants and the mechanisms by which they can bind the covenantor’s successors in title.

Ben has experience of advising on boundary disputes, including as to complex issues around adverse possession, and of acting in nuisance disputes.

Ben has considerable experience of residential and non-residential possession claims by landlords, by mortgagees, and against trespassers. A good proportion of these have been technically complex and raised difficult points of law or procedure, including (i) the court’s jurisdiction to make a possession order against a freehold co-owner under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973; (ii) the problem of structures left on agricultural land which are in the grey area between chattels and fixtures; (iii) the Animals Act 1971 regime; (iv) uncertainty as to which of various entities is the landlord, in the wake of corporate restructuring; and (v) issues surrounding s. 48 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987. Ben also has substantial experience of contesting disrepair counterclaims by tenants, and of devising ways to settle such claims while obtaining an enforceable order for possession.

Ben is also gaining wide experience of other landlord-and-tenant work. Recent cases have involved the implied surrender of leases, the pitfalls of rooftop developments, service charge disputes, and 1954 Act renewals.

Civil fraud and commercial

Recent and ongoing work includes:

  • Advising, with Tim Penny KC, on a possible claim for fraudulent misrepresentation relating to a large residential property portfolio.
  • Acting, as sole counsel, for a company on a possible derivative claim for breach of trust and a possible claim for dishonest assistance against an offshore broker. The claim involves complex jurisdictional issues
  • Acting, led by Jonathan Chew, in a dispute over the ownership of a valuable painting.
  • Acting for an online clothing retailer in a contractual dispute with a provider of e-commerce services.
  • Defending for a solicitors’ firm against a claim for professional negligence to do with the drafting of a mortgage.
  • (As a pupil) assisting Bobby Friedman and his leader on a three-week trial in the Chancery Division: Dalkilich v Pekin [2021] EWHC 219 (Ch).

Pensions

Recent and ongoing work includes:

  • Advising, with Jonathan Hilliard KC, the trustees of a very large pension fund on complex issues to do with rectification and the validity of historic amendments.
  • Acting as sole counsel for the trustees of a pension fund seeking restitution of alleged overpayments to a member.
  • Advising, as sole counsel, the trustees of a pension fund contemplating a claim for professional negligence against the fund’s sometime administrators.
  • Advising, as sole counsel, the trustees of a pension fund on the tax implications of a property development.

Insolvency

Ben has gained considerable experience on both sides of applications to set aside statutory demands, and has also acted for creditors bringing bankruptcy petitions and seeking to enforce charging orders via orders for sale. Various of these cases have involved difficult procedural issues, especially to do with service.

Other recent work has involved:

  • Collective investment schemes under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000.
  • The setting aside of preferences under s. 340 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
  • Defending a claim against the directors of an insolvent company in respect of directors’ loan.
  • Undertaking a detailed analysis of insolvency law in the Cayman Islands for a major offshore law firm.

Benjamin's insights & events View all thought leadership View all events

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    Events / Webinars

    Wilberforce Trusts Litigation Day 2023

    Monday 23 January 2023 | 9am - 5.45pm followed by drinks and dinner
    InterContinental Hotel (and online via Zoom), InterContinental Hotel, One Hamilton Place, Park Lane, Mayfair, London W1J 7QY

    £360 + VAT/£299 + VAT | 6.0 CPD

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    Events / Webinars

    Wilberforce Insolvency Conference 2022

    Wednesday 13 July 2022 | 12.20pm - 6pm, followed by drinks
    Convene (and online via Zoom), 22 Bishopsgate, London EC2N 4BQ

    £120 + VAT | 4.0 CPD

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    Articles

    Womble Bond Dickinson (Trust Corporation) Ltd (as trustee of the Stephris Trust) v No Named Defendant [2022] EWHC 43 (Ch): Taking action against potentially collusive actions?

    To read and download this piece as a pdf, please click here. Commentary by Benjamin Slingo Introduction One way this case differs from most is obvious from its name. There was a claimant, but no defendant. Nevertheless, the court was... Read more

    By Benjamin Slingo
    Thursday 17 February 2022

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Benjamin's Details

BSB/VAT information

Registered name: Dr Benjamin Conway Slingo
VAT number: 392505000

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Qualifications and Appointments

  • BA in History, Peterhouse, University of Cambridge (Double Starred First, ranked first in the University)
  • MPhil in Political Thought and Intellectual History, St John’s College, University of Cambridge (Distinction)
  • PhD in History, St John’s College, University of Cambridge
  • Junior Research Fellow in History at Clare College, University of Cambridge
  • Graduate Diploma in Law, BPP (Distinction)
  • Bar Professional Training Course, City University (Outstanding)
  • Major Scholar, Inner Temple

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