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April 22, 2026
A solicitor found to have abetted a Ponzi scheme that siphoned off millions of pounds from British investors was banned from practicing on Wednesday after a disciplinary tribunal found that he had backdated documents to mislead auditors and regulators.
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April 22, 2026
A consumer organization said Wednesday that it will bring a legal challenge to review how the Financial Conduct Authority's £7.5 billion ($10 billion) motor finance redress system is calculated, the first time such a program has been tested.
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April 22, 2026
Insurers were right to deduct the value of the government support that companies received during the COVID-19 pandemic from successful claims for business interruption, Britain's top court ruled Wednesday.
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April 21, 2026
A London antitrust tribunal cleared the way for a collective action on behalf of 59,000 businesses to proceed against Microsoft for its alleged abuse of dominance in cloud computing that cost the businesses £1.7 billion ($2.3 billion) since 2018, rejecting Microsoft's bid to split the class and crediting regulators' finding that the company's practice disadvantaged competitors.
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April 21, 2026
A tribunal overstepped its authority by ruling in favor of Britain's tax authority to impose an exit tax on U.K. trusts leaving the country in breach of European Union law long before Brexit was enacted, a trust argued before a London appeals court Tuesday.
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April 21, 2026
The Solicitors Regulation Authority hit back at claims from the now-defunct Axiom Ince that it was negligent in failing to spot the firm's leaders' alleged misappropriation of £65 million ($87.7 million) in client money early on.
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April 21, 2026
Counsel for Sports Direct asked the Court of Appeal on Tuesday to reconsider whether the licensing arm of Lifestyle Equities should be awarded costs for prevailing in a decade-old trademark fight over the Beverly Hills Polo Club brand.
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April 21, 2026
The former chief executive of trading technology business Finalto won more than £1 million ($1.2 million) in damages on Tuesday, as a London court found that the company's new buyers failed to show that an equity term sheet had no legal effect.
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April 21, 2026
A British distillery has denied infringing a brewery's "Titanic" trademark covering beers, telling a London court that its own Titanic brand has "peacefully coexisted" in the separate market for gin.
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April 21, 2026
A Nigerian private jet charter company has sued a plane maintenance company in a London court for $8.1 million, alleging it bungled the aircraft's maintenance.
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April 21, 2026
Greece urged a London court on Tuesday to confirm the validity of its buyback of GDP-linked bonds first issued for €62.4 billion ($73 billion) in 2012 during the country's debt crisis, on the first day of a trial against the bonds' trustee.
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April 21, 2026
Apple has accused an Israeli tech company of demanding excessive fees for wireless charging patents and using parallel litigation in the U.S. to pressure the iPhone maker into accepting an unfair licensing deal.
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April 21, 2026
The professional body for barristers in England and Wales said Tuesday it supports new rules which would require litigators to declare that they have not used artificial intelligence tools to prepare some witness statements.
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April 21, 2026
Two former top executives at oil trader Arcadia told a court on Tuesday that a decadelong order freezing their assets in support of a meritless fraud claim prevented them from setting up a business that would have earned them more than $1.1 billion.
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April 21, 2026
TomTom has denied owing £5.2 million ($7 million) in royalties under a licensing agreement with a company that indexes car park locations, arguing at a London court that its opponent owes money under the deal.
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April 21, 2026
The Serious Fraud Office and Dechert argued at trial on Tuesday that the $290 million claim brought by ENRC over a botched criminal investigation flies in the face of 30 years of legal precedent and simply "doesn't work."
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April 21, 2026
The Law Commission has said that it is considering the introduction of a new class action regime for consumer law claims that could replicate the collective proceedings system at the Competition Appeal Tribunal.
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April 21, 2026
A London court rejected on Tuesday the latest attempt by Unite the Union to swerve its former legal chief's claim that it leaked information to the press about his suspension amid suspicions he had been involved in financial misconduct.
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April 27, 2026
How is your work-life balance? Are you content with your compensation and opportunities for advancement at work? Take the 2026 Law360 UK Pulse Lawyer Satisfaction Survey and share your thoughts.
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April 21, 2026
A recent court ruling that expands legal advice privilege to cover some internal corporate communications gives companies greater scope for withholding sensitive material but is likely to prompt challenges over whether those documents meet the test for protection, lawyers say.
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April 20, 2026
A California entity that previously bought the assets of liquidated Ukrainian banks has initiated an investment treaty claim against Ukraine after its license to do so was yanked, weeks after it slapped the country with a $127 million lawsuit in Washington, D.C., accusing it of violating international law.
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April 20, 2026
A computer company should have known it was dealing with value-added tax fraudsters whose business was too good to be true, so HMRC's denial of a nearly £430,000 ($582,000) tax deduction is valid, the First-tier Tribunal said in a decision.
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April 20, 2026
HM Revenue & Customs can't retain over £18 million ($24.3 million) in a withholding tax claimed by an Irish company on debt interest from collapsed bank Lehman Brothers, a London court ruled Monday.
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April 20, 2026
A housing provider has lost its bid to strike out claims from unionized staffers over a blog post from its CEO offering a pay raise to nonunion members, after failing to convince an employment tribunal that the post might have broken the law during ongoing pay negotiations.
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April 20, 2026
A court approved a settlement Monday between Refinitiv and two grandchildren of Serbian politicians over a claim that they were unlawfully identified as relatives of politically exposed people, before what would have been the first trial to consider data protection law and a know-your-client database.