Partner Article
Homebuying experts join legal team
Two new legal specialists have strengthened the conveyancing team at a law firm in Wolverhampton.
Hayley Griffiths and Zainab Hafeez have joined the residential property team at FBC Manby Bowdler’s Wolverhampton office.
Senior associate Hayley, who is a member of the Law Society’s Conveyancing Quality Scheme (CQS), is now heading up the department.
Hayley obtained her LLB (Hons) law degree at the University of Wolverhampton before completing the Legal Practice Course (LPC). Upon qualification in 2014, Hayley managed a residential team at a Staffordshire firm before moving to work in Wolverhampton for a Legal 500 firm.
Zainab has joined FBC Manby Bowdler as a conveyancing executive. She has worked in conveyancing for more than 10 years, dealing with residential sales, purchases and re-mortgage transactions, and has experience in conveyancing transactions linked with Islamic finance.
Neil Lloyd, managing director at FBC Manby Bowdler said: “It’s great to welcome Hayley and Zainab to the Wolverhampton team. They bring a lot of valuable experience to our residential property team, further enhancing the great service we offer to clients. I’m delighted to welcome them on board.
“Buying or selling a home can be extremely stressful. Our residential property team, led by Hayley, works tirelessly with all our clients to make the whole process as stress-free, simple and smooth as possible.”
FBC Manby Bowdler has specialists in all types of legal work and has offices in Wolverhampton, Telford, Shrewsbury, Redditch, Bridgnorth and Church Stretton.
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Melanie Boulter .
Purposeful procurement for long-term growth
Time to rethink outdated views on apprenticeships
The scale-ups rocketing through our fast world
Care about the experience, not just the outcome
The rise of an alternative investor model
Bots don't beat personal business coaching
From COVID-19 to the Middle East crisis
How to build credibility in B2B marketing
Is your business ready for the trade union change?
Government 'must take its foot off businesses' throats'
Upskilling key to civil engineering's future
Why apprenticeships are becoming a strategic asset