Commercial Litigation UK

  • December 02, 2025

    Gola Trainers Owner Sues Clarks Over Stripe Design

    The owner of the classic Gola trainer has accused Clarks of selling shoes that copy a specific protected stripe logo on its side, which it said was confusing shoppers and leading them to buy the rival footwear. 

  • December 02, 2025

    Nigerian Bank Settles $111M Loan Fight With Engineering Biz

    A Nigerian bank has settled its $111 million claim against an engineering business and a guarantor bank, agreeing to a stay in its case that they had refused to pay back a loan it had issued to acquire oil assets.

  • December 02, 2025

    Fired Doc Wins Slim Tribunal Award After Hiding True Earnings

    A tribunal has denied compensation for lost earnings to a National Health Service doctor who lost his job after sounding the alarm on possible discrimination, ruling that he failed to disclose the true income he had lost out on.

  • December 01, 2025

    Law Firm Sued Over Advice On Ballooned £11M Home Loan

    A homebuyer has accused a British law firm of negligently failing to advise her on the risks of funding her £1.9 million ($2.5 million) property deal with a bridging loan, telling a London court that with costly interest rates, her debt soared beyond £11 million.

  • December 01, 2025

    Spain, Zimbabwe Urge Top UK Court To Ax Arbitration Awards

    Spain and Zimbabwe urged the U.K.'s highest court Monday to throw out a ruling that they could not use state immunity to dodge enforcement of multimillion-dollar arbitration awards, saying they had not explicitly waived immunity in the international agreement.

  • December 01, 2025

    Record Label Sues Partner Over £4M Royalty Dispute

    A specialist record label has accused two music promotion companies of failing to pay almost £4 million ($5 million) in license fees and other royalties, asking a London judge to stop the former business partners from further infringing its IP. 

  • December 01, 2025

    Capita Faces Legal Action Over 2023 Data Breach Failures

    Capita faces a London claim on behalf of as many as 6.6 million people over the distress and financial loss caused by a 2023 cyberattack on the outsourcing giant that exposed their personal data.

  • December 01, 2025

    Takeda Defends UK Patent Protection For ADHD Drug Elvanse

    Takeda has swung back after a German rival asked a London court to call time on its extended patent protections for the ADHD treatment Elvanse, arguing that its U.K. supplementary protection certificate covering the drug is valid.

  • December 01, 2025

    AmTrust Fights Sompo For £59M At Trial Over Legal Funding

    AmTrust argued on the first day of trial on Monday that the insurer of two defunct law firms is liable to pay it £59 million ($78 million), in the latest development in the battle of who should cover the costs of a failed litigation-funding scheme.

  • December 01, 2025

    Brett Wilson Denies Mishandling Ex-IT Exec's Defense

    Brett Wilson has rejected claims that it provided negligent advice and failed to properly defend a former chief technology officer in criminal and civil proceedings over a cyberattack at his employer.

  • December 01, 2025

    Judicial Proceedings Immunity Can't Stop Whistleblower Claim

    A London appeals court revived on Monday a former charity worker's claim that his employer launched arbitration proceedings against him in retaliation for blowing the whistle on alleged verbal and physical abuse of staff.

  • December 01, 2025

    Sony Settles Enforcement Action Over $49M Share Dispute

    Sony Pictures has settled enforcement action against a Chinese conglomerate after a London court ruled the Chinese business had been contractually obliged to purchase $49 million worth of shares in a production company that owns the "Octonauts" children's TV show.

  • November 28, 2025

    Regeneron Claims Biocon Drug Mimics Its Patented Medicine

    Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has countersued Biocon to block it from infringing on its patents upholding its medication to treat macular degeneration, denying that the Indian pharmaceutical group's formulation would not infringe on its intellectual property in the U.K.

  • November 28, 2025

    Building Cladding Co. Hits Back At Bid To Nix Fire Safety IP 

    A building facade supplier has asserted that a cladding specialist is infringing its patent and design rights, pointing out that the rival's director had toured its factory years ago and received a demonstration of the products he later copied. 

  • November 28, 2025

    Loft Supplies Co. Takes Aim At Rival's UK Patents

    A loft supplies company has denied infringing a rival's flooring system patents, telling a London court that the U.K. registrations are not valid because they contain nothing inventive.

  • November 28, 2025

    ECJ Allows Portugal's Tax Checks On Foreign Pension Funds

    Portugal could impose stricter requirements on non-resident pension funds that claim a tax exemption when proportionate, despite the European Union's rules on freedom of movement for capital, the bloc's top court has ruled.

  • November 28, 2025

    LetterOne Denied Compensation Over Forced Broadband Sale

    An investment group backed by Russian oligarchs failed on Friday to secure the "fair market value" for its shares in a regional broadband provider that the U.K. government forced it to sell over national security concerns.

  • November 28, 2025

    Financial Analysts' Body Suffers Blow In Fight Over 'CEFA' TM

    The European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies has lost its bid to register a trademark for "CEFA EFFAS Certified European Financial Analyst" as a European court ruled that examiners had correctly found it was too similar to an existing sign. 

  • November 28, 2025

    Private Prosecutors Eye Victims' Assets Amid SFO Probe

    Lawyers and a fintech claims manager said Friday that they have begun efforts to help victims of an alleged $28 million fraud recover their money after a fraud-enforcement agency opened a criminal investigation into the "crypto hedge fund" scheme.

  • November 28, 2025

    Odey Libel, Sex Assault Claims To Reach Trial In June

    Former hedge fund manager Crispin Odey's £79 million ($104 million) libel claim against the Financial Times, alongside claims from five women accusing him of sexual abuse, will reach trial in 2026, a judge said at a London court on Friday.

  • November 28, 2025

    PrivatBank Pursues $3B Fraud Judgment Against Ex-Owners

    PrivatBank has said that its former owners have failed to pay more than $3 billion ordered by a London court after it found that they had orchestrated an elaborate money-siphoning scheme of sham loans tied to fictitious commodity trades.

  • November 28, 2025

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen the National Crime Agency target an Azerbaijan politician and a subsidiary of Withers over a disputed £50 million ($66 million) property portfolio, the eldest son of a British aristocratic family challenge the trustees of their multimillion-pound estate, and a sports lawyer suspected of dishonesty face action by the Solicitors Regulation Authority following his firm's closure.

  • November 28, 2025

    Guardian Can't Defend 'Alt-Right' Agitator Remark As Opinion

    A court ruled in a preliminary decision on Friday that the publisher of The Guardian was making a statement of fact when its articles described a journalist an "'alt-right' agitator," preventing the newspaper from defending the defamatory remark as an opinion.

  • November 28, 2025

    Gupta Denies Hiding $600M Nickel Fraud From Trafigura

    A businessman told the High Court on Friday that he did not attempt to hide the true contents of metal sold to Trafigura in an alleged $600 million nickel fraud, arguing that the trading firm could have inspected the shipments at any time without his involvement.

  • November 27, 2025

    Gorgon Music Hits Back Over Bunny Lee Reggae Catalog

    Gorgon Music has asserted that two subsidiaries of German media giant BMG failed to promote the music of dead reggae producer Bunny "Striker" Lee and therefore breached their licensing deals, meaning they were no longer enforceable. 

Expert Analysis

  • Why Reperforming Loan Securitization In UK And EU May Rise

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    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.

  • What French Watchdog Ruling Means For M&A Landscape

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    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.

  • How Life Science Companies Are Approaching UPC Opt-Outs

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    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.

  • New Directors' Code Of Conduct May Serve As Useful Guide

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    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.

  • Lego Ruling Builds Understanding Of Design Exam Process

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    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.

  • Contractual Drafting Takeaways From Force Majeure Ruling

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    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.

  • Behind The Stagecoach Boundary Fare Dispute Settlement

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    The Competition Appeal Tribunal's recent rail network boundary fare settlement offers group action practitioners some much-needed guidance as it reduces the number of remaining parties' five-year dispute from two to one, says Mohsin Patel at Factor Risk Management.

  • The Unified Patent Court: What We Learned In Year 1

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    ​​​​​​​The Unified Patent Court celebrated its first anniversary this month, and while questions remain as we wait for the first decisions on the merits, a multitude of decisions and orders regarding provisional measures and procedural aspects have provided valuable insights already, says Antje Brambrink at Finnegan.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Spanish Judicial Oversight

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    The recent conviction of arbitrator Gonzalo Stampa underscores the critical importance of judicial authority in the realm of international arbitration in Spain, and emphasizes that arbitrators must respect the procedural frameworks established by Spanish national courts, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn.

  • F1 Driver AI Case Sheds Light On Winning Tactics In IP Suits

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    A German court recently awarded damages to former F1 driver Michael Schumacher's family in an artificial intelligence dispute over the unlicensed use of his image, illustrating how athletes are using the law to protect their brands, and setting a precedent in other AI-generated image rights cases, William Bowyer at Lawrence Stephens.

  • High Court Ruling Sheds Light On Targets For Judicial Review

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    The High Court's recent dismissal of iDealing.com's judicial review application for service complaint decisions by the Financial Ombudsman Service highlights the difficulty of distinguishing what decisions are amenable to judicial review, demonstrating that those made by statutory bodies may not always be genuine targets, say Alexander Fawke, Tara Janus and Bam Thomas at Linklaters.

  • Appeal Ruling Clarifies 3rd-Party Contract Breach Liability

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in Northamber v. Genee World serves as a warning to parties that they may be held liable for inducing another party to breach a contract, even if that party was a willing participant, say Neil Blake, Maura McIntosh and Jennifer O'Brien at HSL.

  • CPR Proposal Affirms The Emphasis On Early Mediation

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    While the recent proposal to incorporate mandatory alternative dispute resolution into the Civil Procedure Rules following a 2023 appeal decision would not lead to seismic change, given current practice, it signals a shift in how litigation should be pursued toward out-of-court solutions, say Heather Welham and Cyra Roshan at Foot Anstey.

  • How Law Firms Can Handle Challenges Of Mass Claims

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    With a wave of volume litigation possibly about to hit the U.K. courts, firms developing mass claim practices should ensure they heed the Solicitors Regulation Authority's May warning and adopt strategies to ensure regulatory compliance and fair client representation, says Claire Van der Zant at Shieldpay.

  • Potential EPO Reproducibility Ruling May Affect IP Strategies

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    A potential European Patent Office decision in referral G1/23, concerning the reproducibility criteria for patenting commercial products, may affect how disclosures are assessed as prior art and could influence how companies weigh protecting innovations as trade secrets versus patents, says Michael Stott at Mathys & Squire.

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