Hagenwolf Reviews 1

TrustScore 3 out of 5

3.2

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3.2

Average

TrustScore 3 out of 5

1 review

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Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Beware of this so-called specialist litigation firm

A so-called specialist litigation firm that, in my experience, specialised in one thing: billing.

I instructed Hägen Wolf and Mr Philip Copley in August 2025 after my previous solicitor had left my case in ruins — a poorly prepared evidence bundle submitted late, a missed court fee, and the claim nearly struck out twice. My instruction was simple: repair the damage and get the case into a fighting position before trial. I paid close to £20,000 for that.

It did not happen.

The case went to trial in virtually the same state as when they took it over. The same flawed evidence bundle that drove me to switch firms in the first place went before the judge untouched. The judge described it as a mess. After nearly £20,000, nothing had been fixed.

What I got instead of legal work was a billing ledger dominated by emails. Reading them, sending them, forwarding them. Liaising with the previous solicitor, the defendant, the court. That is paralegal work. In most firms it would be handled by a secretary. I was charged specialist solicitor rates for it. And the substance of those emails? Largely passing on what the barrister had said. The analysis, the strategy, the actual legal thinking — that all came from counsel. Mr Copley's contribution, as far as I could see, was to act as a relay and issue invoices.

I never received a single piece of work in which the solicitor himself sat down with my facts, examined my arguments, and told me what he actually thought. That is not a specialist litigator. That is a postbox with a letterhead.

The amended Particulars of Claim, £1,500 billed, drafted by counsel, were never deployed because by the time they were finalised, it was too late to use them. I paid for work that never made it into the courtroom.

Everyone knows litigation carries risks. I did not need to spend nearly £20,000 to be told that repeatedly. I hired a specialist to tell me why my case was worth pursuing, how to strengthen it, and what needed to change. That guidance never came.

I lost. I am not going to pretend that plays no part in this review, it does. But losing is not the whole story. On top of nearly £20,000 in fees, the judge ordered me to pay the other side £13,500. More than £33,000 gone, and the case arrived at trial in no better condition than the day they took it on.

I filed a formal complaint. Every point was rejected without exception. No fault, no accountability, no reflection. The response blamed my previous solicitor, quoted my own words back at me, and treated generic risk warnings as though they constituted legal advice. They do not. The letter closed with a demand for immediate payment and a threat of enforcement action, despite the fact I had paid every invoice promptly throughout, often within 24 hours, and on occasion before a formal invoice had even been raised.

This is my experience. If you are considering instructing this firm, please think very carefully before you do. I would give zero stars if the option existed.

Update 28 April 2026:

After my complaint was rejected, the issues did not stop there.

The firm chased me for an invoice I had already paid in full, the day after their own complaint response letter demanded it. That same letter had failed to include a separate outstanding balance on an earlier invoice, meaning their own demand was incomplete to begin with. When I pointed this out, instead of acknowledging the error or offering any apology, they sent me my own emails back and attempted to blame me for not keeping track of their books. A client should not be expected to reconcile their solicitor's own accounts. To make matters worse, they had been chasing me for the wrong invoice number entirely, the outstanding balance belonged to a different invoice altogether.

One final warning: be very careful with what you put in writing if you instruct this firm. They are skilled at quoting your own emails back at you to deflect responsibility, as though that alone absolves them of their failings. For a firm that specialises in billing their clients, this is simply embarrassing.

March 26, 2026
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