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Commercial Litigation UK
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October 30, 2025
Gov't Weighs Paccar Reversal Amid Litigation Fears
The government has not set a deadline for reversing a controversial ruling that has disrupted the litigation-funding sector, but has indicated it could go further as it praised the industry's "critical role" in supporting the U.K.'s status as a global hub for commercial litigation and arbitration.
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October 30, 2025
Amazon Ruling Could Spark Premature Global Patent Claims
The success of Amazon's bid to stop InterDigital preventing the High Court from determining final licensing terms for InterDigital's patents could encourage companies to bring litigation earlier to gain leverage in licensing spats, lawyers say.
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October 30, 2025
Top Law Firms, Brokers Compete For Legal Finance Honors
Law firms, legal technology companies and litigation-finance brokers are among those who have made the shortlist in the International Legal Finance Association's inaugural awards, which recognize achievement and innovation in the global industry, the trade association said Thursday.
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October 29, 2025
Appeals Court Adjusts Award In Risky Trading Product Dispute
An investment firm partially won a challenge to a compensatory award for an amateur investor it allowed to use an advanced high-risk product, with an appeals court ruling Wednesday that the investor was partially to blame for overstating his experience.
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October 29, 2025
Senior Barrister Disbarred After Admitting Sexual Harassment
A senior criminal barrister was disbarred at a London legal disciplinary tribunal Wednesday after he admitted sexually harassing a junior colleague in 2018.
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October 29, 2025
UK Starts Redress Program For 'Capture' Post Office Scandal
The government launched a new compensation program on Wednesday for postmasters who suffered financial losses as a result of faulty Capture accounting software.
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October 29, 2025
Fired Bank of Africa Whistleblower Argues UK Arm Is Liable
The former head of human resources for Bank of Africa argued Wednesday that a London tribunal had rightly held the lender's U.K. arm liable for her firing and mistreatment for whistleblowing, as she fought its appeal against the ruling.
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October 29, 2025
Microsoft Says Retailer's £262M Reselling Claim Is Too Late
Microsoft has hit back at a retailer's £262 million ($347 million) antitrust claim alleging that the tech giant deliberately suppressed sales of aftermarket software licenses, telling a London court that its opponent waited too long to bring the case.
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October 29, 2025
Pupil Transport Biz Hired Criminals As Drivers, Council Says
An English local authority has hit a private transport company with a £5.37 million ($7.1 million) counterclaim, claiming the business breached a deal for services to transport children to school by hiring convicted criminals as drivers.
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October 29, 2025
UK Launches Review Of Controversial 'Whiplash' Reforms
The government said Wednesday that it has launched a review of its 2021 reform program for "whiplash" personal injury claims, amid industry concerns over delays to compensation and the failure of insurers to pass on savings to policyholders.
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October 29, 2025
Ecclestone Bids To Ax Massa's £64M Claim Over 2008 F1 Title
Bernie Ecclestone and the governing bodies of Formula One urged the High Court on Wednesday to throw out claims brought by Felipe Massa about the result of the 2008 world championship, with lawyers arguing that Massa's own mistakes cost him the title.
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October 29, 2025
Aviva Says Colleges' £62M COVID Losses Fall Outside Policy
Aviva Insurance has denied it is wrongfully refusing to pay out over losses of more than £62 million ($82 million) allegedly suffered by a group of University of Oxford colleges during the COVID-19 pandemic, claiming the disruption fell beyond the policy's cover.
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October 29, 2025
Christian Worker Claims Religious Bias In Rescinded Job Offer
A Christian social worker whose job offer was rescinded over concerns about his views on sexuality and marriage argued to the Employment Appeal Tribunal on Wednesday that the discriminatory decision was unjustifiable.
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October 29, 2025
Exec Denied £55K Bonus For Cosmetic Lifts After Dismissal
A former employee of a cosmetic surgery practice has failed to persuade an employment tribunal that the company owes him £55,000 ($72,700), because he had no right to commissions for medical procedures that took place after he left the job.
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October 29, 2025
Engineer Denies Housing Developers' £9M Negligence Claim
A civil engineering company has denied causing a consortium of British housing developers to face a bill of almost £9 million ($11.9 million) by negligently failing to account for removal of earth from a large residential construction project.
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October 29, 2025
Top UK Court Rules NHS Parking Services Subject To VAT
Britain's top court ruled Wednesday that provision of car parking services by a National Health Service trust should not be exempt from value-added tax, a decision that will affect dozens of stayed appeals by NHS entities worth up to £100 million ($132 million).
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October 28, 2025
Romania Pushes €2B Claim Over Stymied Bucharest Project
A property developer is facing a €2 billion ($2.3 billion) claim asserted by Romania in a London Court of International Arbitration proceeding relating to an ill-fated shopping and entertainment center project in central Bucharest.
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October 28, 2025
Salvage Co. Gets OK To Subpoena Banks In $67M Case
Heavy lifting and transport company Mammoet Salvage BV won approval on Tuesday from a New York federal judge to subpoena several banks as it seeks information on assets belonging to Iraqi state-owned Basra Oil Co., part of its efforts to enforce an arbitral award now worth some $67 million.
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October 28, 2025
ZTE Says Interim Relief Poses 'Significant Risk' To FRAND
Counsel for ZTE urged justices at the Court of Appeal Tuesday to overturn a lower court decision that it argues will reshape the global landscape of standard-essential patent licensing if it is left to stand.
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October 28, 2025
Amended Employment Claim Avoids Early Conciliation
An appellate court has ruled that a previous judge was ultimately right to greenlight amended claims of whistleblowing detriment brought by a former staffer at a real estate agency, despite the fact that she skipped the mandatory early conciliation process before filing her claims.
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October 28, 2025
Gov't Didn't Maliciously Block £37M Training Biz Buyout
A court in London rejected claims on Tuesday that a government agency maliciously scuppered a £37 million ($49 million) private equity buyout of a training business, ruling that the agency's boss did not bear a grudge against the company's shareholders.
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October 28, 2025
Dubai Trader Says Iran Sanctions Don't Block $16M Payment
A Dubai-based petroleum products trader accused a U.K. broker on Tuesday of wrongly withholding $16.5 million from its cash account due to U.S. sanctions targeting Iran, at the beginning of a London trial.
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October 28, 2025
Salmon Producers Deny Price-Fixing In Tesco Collusion Claim
Salmon producers have denied Tesco's claim that they secretly shared commercially sensitive information on the sales of the fish farmed in Norway to increase prices in England, arguing that exchanges would have been to legitimately negotiate deals in the unpredictable market.
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October 28, 2025
Bank Of Africa Fights To Overturn Whistleblower's Win
Bank of Africa sought on Tuesday to overturn a ruling that its former head of human resources was fired for whistleblowing, telling the Employment Appeal Tribunal that a lower court had made findings "it could not have possibly reached."
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October 28, 2025
Internet Biz Wins Redo Of Ex-CEO's Payout For Unfair Sacking
A London appeals tribunal has handed an internet service provider the chance to re-argue its former chief executive's payout for unfair dismissal, ruling that an earlier tribunal misstepped when working out his losses.
Expert Analysis
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Intra-EU Enforcement Trends
Hungary recently declared a distinct stance on the European Court of Justice's 2021 ruling in Moldavia v. Komstroy on intra-EU arbitration under the Energy Charter Treaty, highlighting a critical divergence in the bloc on enforcing investment awards and the complexities of balancing regional uniformity with international obligations, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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Adjudication Dispute Ruling Elucidates Merit Of Cross-Claims
In Morganstone v. Birkemp, the High Court recently found that an adjudicator's refusal to consider cross-claims outside the scope of an interim payment breached natural justice, highlighting inherent risks in the adjudication process, including that not all decisions will be enforced automatically, say Ryland Ash and Jonathan Clarke at Watson Farley.
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Employer Lessons From Teacher's Menopause Bias Win
A Scottish employment tribunal’s recent decision to award a teacher over £60,000 ($77,829) for unfair dismissal is a reminder that menopausal symptoms can amount to a disability, and together with potentially stronger measures from the new Labour government, should prompt all employers to implement effective menopause support policies, say Ellie Gelder and Kelly Thomson at RPC.
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Why Ukraine Aircraft Insurance Case Failed To Take Off In UK
In Aercap v. PJSC Insurance, the High Court decided the claimants could not avoid an exclusive jurisdiction clause and advance their case in England rather than Ukraine, and the reasoning is likely to be of relevance in future jurisdiction disputes, say Abigail Healey and Genevieve Douglas at Quillon Law.
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What UK Digital Markets Act Will Mean For Competition Law
The new Digital Markets Act’s reforms will strengthen the Competition and Markets Authority's investigatory and enforcement powers across its full remit of merger control and antitrust investigations, representing a seismic shift in the U.K. competition and consumer law landscape, say lawyers at Travers Smith.
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UK Supreme Court Confirms Limits To Arbitration Act Appeals
Every year, disappointed parties come out of U.K.-seated arbitrations and try to seek redress in the English courts, but the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision in Sharp v. Viterra serves as a reminder of the strict restrictions on appeals brought under the Arbitration Act, says Mark Handley at Duane Morris.
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Examining The EU Sanctions Directive Approach To Breaches
In criminalizing sanctions violations and harmonizing the rules on breaches, a new European Union directive will bring significant change and likely increase enforcement risks across the EU, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.
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Trends, Tips From 7 Years Of EPO Antibody Patent Appeals
Recent years of European Patent Office decisions reveal some surprising differences between appeals involving therapeutic antibody patents and those for other technologies, offering useful insight into this developing area of European case law for future antibody patent applicants, say Alex Epstein and Jane Evenson at CMS.
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4 Takeaways From Biotech Patent Invalidity Ruling
The recent Patents Court decision in litigation between Advanced Cell Diagnostics and Molecular Instruments offers noteworthy commentary on issues related to experiments done in the ordinary course of business, joint importation, common general knowledge and mindset, and mosaicking for anticipation, say Nessa Khandaker and Darren Jiron at Finnegan.
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Why Reperforming Loan Securitization In UK And EU May Rise
The recently published new U.K. securitization rules will largely bring the U.K.’s nonperforming loan regime in line with the European Union, and together with the success of EU and U.K. banks in reducing loan ratios, reperforming securitizations may feature more prominently in relevant markets going forward, say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.
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What French Watchdog Ruling Means For M&A Landscape
Although ultimately dismissed due to lack of evidence, the French competition authority’s recent post-closing review of several nonreportable mergers is a landmark case that highlights the increased complexity of such transactions, and is further testament to the European competition authorities’ willingness to expand their toolkit to address below-threshold M&As, say lawyers at Cleary.
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How Life Science Companies Are Approaching UPC Opt-Outs
A look at recent data shows that one year after its launch, the European Union's Unified Patent Court is still seeing a high rate of opt-outs, including from large U.S.-based life science companies wary of this unpredictable court — and there are reasons this strategy should largely remain the same, say Sanjay Murthy and Christopher Tuinenga at McAndrews Held.
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New Directors' Code Of Conduct May Serve As Useful Guide
Although the Institute of Directors’ current proposal for a voluntary code of conduct is strongly supported by its members, it must be balanced against the statutory requirement for directors to promote their company’s success, and the risk of claims by shareholders if their decisions are influenced by wider social considerations, says Matthew Watson at RPC.
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Lego Ruling Builds Understanding Of Design Exam Process
In Lego v. Guangdong Loongon, the European Union Intellectual Property Office recently invalidated a registered design for a toy figure, offering an illustrative guide to assessing the individual character of a design in relation to a preexisting design, says Christoph Moeller at Mewburn Ellis.
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Contractual Drafting Takeaways From Force Majeure Ruling
Lawyers at Cleary discuss the U.K. Supreme Court's recent judgment RTI v. MUR Shipping and its important implications, including how the court approached the apparent tension between certainty and commercial pragmatism, and considerations for the drafting of force majeure clauses going forward.