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April 01, 2026
A London court said Wednesday that Banksy and his licensing company can recover the money they spent defending themselves against a street art retailer's £1.4 million ($1.9 million) libel claim that it later dropped.
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April 01, 2026
An experienced solicitor has been suspended for six months and must pay £25,000 ($33,000) after a tribunal concluded she acted dishonestly by falsely signing as a witness to a signature she did not observe in order to progress a client's trust matter.
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April 01, 2026
A financial company cannot be held liable for £1.7 million ($2.3 million) in losses from failed property investments, Britain's top court ruled Wednesday, finding that it wasn't responsible for the actions of the firm it appointed to set up the projects.
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April 01, 2026
An asset management firm has persuaded a London appeals tribunal to reject the latest attempt by a former senior vice president to show that his dismissal for ill health was an act of disability discrimination.
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March 31, 2026
A Court of Appeal ruling which clarified that litigation work can be carried out by non-authorized staff under proper supervision restores certainty to the legal sector after months of disruption, lawyers say.
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March 31, 2026
A group of war-risk insurers can challenge their liability in a multibillion-dollar dispute over hundreds of aircraft stranded in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, after an appeals court held Tuesday that their appeal had a prospect of success.
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March 31, 2026
A solicitor who was branded a "dishonest fraudster" by a judge has been struck off after a disciplinary tribunal concluded that he asked clients to pay almost £60,000 ($79,000) into his personal bank account and misled a court.
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March 31, 2026
Banks and vehicle financing companies are expected to mount legal challenges to the Financial Conduct Authority's £7.5 billion ($9.9 billion) motor finance compensation program, threatening to capsize the plan and probably delay its implementation for months.
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March 31, 2026
The Daily Mail's publisher said at the end of a trial on Tuesday that privacy claims brought by Prince Harry and other public figures should be dismissed, saying they had been forced to make "frankly desperate allegations" because of lack of evidence.
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March 31, 2026
Litigation Capital Management Ltd. said Tuesday that there is still "material uncertainty" over whether the Australian disputes funder can continue to receive support from its lender, as it looks to recover after investing in a series of loss-making cases.
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March 31, 2026
The founder of Rosenblatt asked an appeals tribunal on Tuesday to throw out a Black former partner's appeal over failed race discrimination claims stemming from the use of a racial slur by the firm's former CEO at a work dinner.
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March 31, 2026
A stand-up comedian failed on Tuesday in his challenge to a London court's interpretation of an allegedly defamatory press statement issued by a West End theater that accused him of having verbally abused Jewish audience members after one of his shows.
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March 31, 2026
A Welsh bus operator has defeated an elderly bus driver's age discrimination claim, convincing a tribunal that it dismissed him because of concerns over his driving rather than the fact he was over 80 years old.
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March 31, 2026
The Court of Appeal said Tuesday that supervised non-solicitors can carry out litigation work, reversing a landmark judgment and offering reassurances to some law firms whose operating models have faced scrutiny.
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March 30, 2026
British mining company Emmerson PLC on Monday submitted its arguments before an international tribunal based on Morocco's purported breaches of a bilateral investment treaty, accusing the country of expropriating a potash mine in a $1.22 billion arbitration case.
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March 30, 2026
German entrepreneur Lars Windhorst was given an 18-month suspended prison sentence after being held in contempt in a London court Monday for refusing to attend a hearing to provide evidence of his company's assets after it failed to pay €27 million ($31 million).
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March 30, 2026
A fashion retail outlet urged an appeals court Monday to block Russian proceedings by UniCredit aimed at taking some of its roughly €42 million ($50 million) property portfolio, arguing the matter needed to be dealt with via a Vienna arbitral tribunal.
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March 30, 2026
A tribunal has ruled that Bond's Utilities unfairly sacked two drainage workers in a spat over weekend shifts, awarding them almost £30,000 ($40,000) each after the company fired them on WhatsApp despite them having no contractual requirement to work those hours.
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March 30, 2026
A construction company has failed to have a foreman's whistleblowing claims thrown out on the grounds that he was a self-employed contractor, with a London tribunal ruling that the characteristics of his relationship with the company meant he was a worker.
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March 30, 2026
A solicitor has won £45,400 ($60,000) after a tribunal ruled that an immigration services business racially discriminated against her when it fired her without any notice.
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March 30, 2026
The U.S.-Israel war with Iran could trigger a wave of complex commercial disputes in England similar to that seen after COVID-19 and the invasion of Ukraine, according to lawyers who say they are already being tapped by clients for advice over the evolving conflict.
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March 27, 2026
Arbitration is vulnerable to criticism because its proponents don't do a good enough job of selling its positive aspects to the public, who often view the dispute resolution method through the lens of a small number of high-profile and controversial cases, a new report has concluded.
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March 27, 2026
Russian chess officials are facing a three-year suspension from sanctioned international play after the Court of Arbitration for Sport ordered Moscow to stop scheduling matches in occupied Ukrainian territories.
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March 27, 2026
A London judge has found that a probate executive's online reviews calling a law firm owner a "fraudster" amounted to defamation, but the firm itself couldn't claim that it had also taken a hit as it was left out of her one-star reviews.
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March 27, 2026
A technical college providing free courses to students with U.K. government funding was right to treat the funding as consideration for its taxable supply of services, making it subject to value-added tax that could be recovered from HM Revenue & Customs, a London court ruled Friday.