Commercial Litigation UK

  • April 25, 2024

    Disciplinary Chair Wins Worker Status, Holiday Pay

    A barrister who served as a chair on the regulatory board for the Nursing and Midwifery Council has won his bid for paid annual leave, with the Employment Tribunal finding that gig economy workers must have an incentive to take holidays, so they do not swap cash for rest.

  • April 25, 2024

    Waitress Made Redundant While Pregnant Wins Bias Appeal

    A waitress has revived her pregnancy discrimination claim after a tribunal ruled that previous judges made "fundamental" errors when they sided with the cafe owner who made her redundant.

  • April 25, 2024

    Compliance Officer To Face Tribunal Over Accounts Failures

    A solicitor must face a disciplinary tribunal after he allegedly failed to provide accountants' reports for two law firms in southeast England and allowed the client account of one of those firms to be used as a banking facility, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said.

  • April 25, 2024

    Experian Judgment Provides Privacy Guidance, Lawyers Say

    A tribunal decision affirming the lawfulness of Experian's marketing services has industrywide implications, emphasizing the need for more detailed privacy information to be provided to individuals when their data is sourced from publicly available records, the credit reference agency's lawyers said Thursday.

  • April 25, 2024

    German Pharma Biz Blocks Italian Cosmetics TM

    A European court has overturned a decision that allowed Italian cosmetic dermatology brand Pherla Medical to register a trademark for its name, ruling that the logo was too similar to that of German pharmaceuticals company Verla-Pharm Arzneimittel.

  • April 25, 2024

    Aldi Hit With £3.6M Claim From Brussels Sprouts Supplier

    Supermarket chain Aldi allegedly cost its brussels sprouts supplier of 10 years £3.69 million ($4.6 million) after the retailer said it would not be buying from the seller, initially giving no reason for its decision.

  • April 25, 2024

    Black Nurse Wins Second Shot At Job Offer Withdrawal Claim

    An appeals tribunal has ruled that a Black nurse could have a second chance at arguing that a care home withdrew a job offer because he made a complaint of race discrimination during the recruitment process.

  • April 25, 2024

    Police Did Not Sack Officer For Making Adult TV Complaint

    A former police officer has failed to secure provisional compensation for her dismissal after a tribunal ruled that a London policing body did not fire her for blowing the whistle on colleagues for refusing to stop watching adult television at work.

  • April 25, 2024

    Activist Laurence Fox Must Pay £180,000 In Libel Damages

    Actor and political activist Laurence Fox was ordered by a London judge on Thursday to pay a total of £180,000 ($224,000) in damages to two men who he libelously called pedophiles after they described him as "racist."

  • April 25, 2024

    Post Office Official Denies Misleading Court About IT System

    A Post Office director denied misleading the court about what she knew about the IT system used to prosecute hundreds of innocent people, as she gave evidence to the inquiry into the scandal Thursday.

  • April 24, 2024

    Ex-Autonomy GC Tells Jurors He Wanted To Be 'Helpful' To HP

    Autonomy's former U.S. general counsel conceded Wednesday in the criminal trial of former CEO Michael Lynch that he told an HP lawyer he wanted to be as "helpful" as possible to the company as it was investigating Autonomy-related issues that popped up after the Silicon Valley giant purchased the British company, and that he was told he could face liability for his work at Autonomy.

  • April 24, 2024

    Energy Charter Treaty Backlash Hints At Broader Arbitration Woes

    Lawmakers in Europe on Wednesday overwhelmingly consented to the European Union's withdrawal from the Energy Charter Treaty, adding to an increasing global backlash against investor-state arbitration that was also laid bare in a vote by Ecuadorians decisively rejecting the mechanism this past weekend.

  • April 24, 2024

    Ex-Yukos Oil Shareholders To Auction Russian Vodka Brands

    The Benelux rights to trademarks for 18 Russian vodka brands, including Stolichnaya and Moskovskaya, will go to auction in June in the Netherlands, the former shareholders of Yukos Oil Co. said Wednesday as they sought to enforce arbitral awards now valued at $60 billion.

  • April 24, 2024

    Oligarch's Family Can't Nix €1.5B Bankruptcy Bid

    The widow and a daughter of the late Russian cement oligarch Oleg Bourlakov stumbled in their global legal battle with relatives over his fortune after a London judge declined to stop €1.48 billion ($1.59 billion) bankruptcy proceedings in St. Petersburg.

  • April 24, 2024

    Post Office GC Didn't Know To Disclose Witness Misled Court

    As he gave evidence to an inquiry Wednesday, the Post Office's former general counsel said external law firm Cartwright King didn't tell him that the fact that an expert witness lied to the court when testifying against subpostmasters needed to be disclosed.

  • April 24, 2024

    Fire And Rehire Justified By Equal Pay Threat, Tesco Argues

    Retail giant Tesco argued to the U.K. Supreme Court on Wednesday that its decision to "fire and rehire" warehouse workers on less favorable contracts was justified because keeping its promise of a "permanent" pay supplement could have exposed the company to equal pay claims worth millions of pounds.

  • April 24, 2024

    Fund Manager Denies Losing Jailed Politician's Wife £8M

    A fund manager has denied transferring €28 million ($30 million) from the account of an imprisoned Turkish politician's wife without her permission, claiming she gave written instructions to invest the money in emerging markets.

  • April 24, 2024

    Network Rail Rejected Pension Expert Due To Age Bias

    An employment tribunal has ruled that Network Rail discriminated against an applicant to the pensions team because he was in his mid-50s, saying that the manager processing submissions barely glanced at his curriculum vitae.

  • April 24, 2024

    Labcorp Prevails Over Software Biz TM Challenge In EU

    Labcorp has cleared its path to a trademark over its name in the European Union after a court ruled Wednesday that a German software business can't halt the application based on its earlier "labcore" signs that it has not sufficiently used in recent years.

  • April 24, 2024

    Boris Becker Settles With Creditors Over Missing Trophies

    Boris Becker's creditors have agreed not to chase the multiple Grand Slam tennis champion over the missing trophies he was accused of hiding to dodge paying debts, lawyers for the Wimbledon winner and bankruptcy trustees told a London court Wednesday.

  • April 24, 2024

    Panasonic Denies 'Illegitimate Pressure' In 4G Patent Fight

    Panasonic told a London court Wednesday that a bid by rival Xiaomi to have the Japanese giant's litigation accusing it of infringing standard essential wireless patents in other European courts thrown out is "dead in the water," saying its overseas claims against the company are legitimate.

  • April 24, 2024

    Keoghs Beats 'Rude' Job Candidate's Discrimination Claim

    An employment tribunal has thrown out a race discrimination claim against law firm Keoghs LLP, ruling that it did not treat a Greek national unfairly by rescinding a job offer for his "rude and uncooperative" behavior in an onboarding meeting.

  • April 24, 2024

    SFO Admits Deleting Osofsky's Phone Amid ENRC Leaks Row

    The Serious Fraud Office acknowledged on Wednesday that it "inappropriately" erased the mobile phone of its former director, Lisa Osofsky, during litigation over alleged leaks in what mining giant ENRC told a London court was a "flagrant breach" of its disclosure obligations.

  • April 24, 2024

    GXO Gets UK All-Clear For £762M Bid For Logistics Biz

    GXO Logistics Inc. said Wednesday that the U.K. government has granted national security clearance to its proposed £762 million ($950 million) takeover of British supply-chain group Wincanton PLC.

  • April 24, 2024

    Marine Tech Co. Fights MoD Unit's 'Inflated' $90M Claim

    A South Korean marine navigation business that misused a Ministry of Defence agency's data to make its own products has hit back at the agency's claim for as much as $90 million, alleging it includes jacked-up figures and miscalculations.

Expert Analysis

  • UK Tribunal Ruling Sheds Light On Workplace Speech Issues

    Author Photo

    The U.K. Employment Appeal Tribunal's recent judgment in Higgs v. Farmor's School — concerning a Christian employee dismissed for allegedly anti-LGBT social media posts — highlights factors that employers should consider in tricky situations involving employees' speech, says Anna Bond at Lewis Silkin.

  • Leading THC Case Lends Support To UK Legalization Debates

    Author Photo

    Even though the Court of Appeal's ruling in R v. Margiotta on legally importing and supplying low THC cannabis cannot be relied on post-Brexit, it provides powerful arguments for the legalization of supply in low THC cannabis, including the fact the product is not considered a narcotic drug, say Robert Jappie at Fieldfisher and Josh Normanton at Trinity Chambers.

  • Employment Tribunal Data Offers Workplace Practice Insights

    Author Photo

    A breakdown of the Ministry of Justice's recent Employment Tribunal figures shows shifting trends among employees, and potential challenges and possible improvement areas for employers, and if the data continues to be published, it could play an essential part in clearing the fast-growing backlog of tribunal matters, says Gemma Clark at Wright Hassall.

  • Unpacking The Rwanda Policy Appeal Decision

    Author Photo

    The Court of Appeal recently declared the U.K. government's Rwanda policy unlawful in AAA v. Secretary of State, but given that this was only on the basis that Rwanda is not currently a safe third country, it is possible that the real risk of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights breaches will be obviated, says Alex Papasotiriou at Richmond Chambers.

  • Getty Case Will Be Pivotal For Generative AI Copyright Issues

    Author Photo

    The Getty v. Stability AI litigation in the U.K. and U.S. raises legal ambiguities on who owns generative artificial intelligence output, and the outcomes will set a major precedent on copyright practices for businesses in both countries and beyond, say Victoria Albrecht at Springbok AI and Mark O'Conor at DLA Piper.

  • ESG Litigation May Move Toward Untrue Statement Claims

    Author Photo

    As the environmental, social and governance agenda has gained significant momentum, and more activists and investors hold businesses accountable to their commitments, the Financial Services and Markets Act provides a legal vehicle for shareholders to exert pressure on listed companies, say Rupert Lewis and Ceri Morgan at Herbert Smith.

  • What The Collective Interests Bill May Mean For Irish Litigation

    Author Photo

    As multinational corporations continue to increase their presence in Ireland, the forthcoming Collective Interests of Consumers Bill is expected to significantly alter the Irish litigation landscape and provide fertile ground for consumer-led group actions, backed by a gradual edging toward wider third-party litigation funding reform, say lawyers at Kennedys.

  • Successfully Implementing AI Rules Requires A Cultural Shift

    Author Photo

    Recent positive use cases of artificial intelligence demonstrate the potential benefits it can bring to the legal profession, and while the development of AI rules is essential, their effectiveness depends on user adoption, behavioral change and human acceptance, say Charlie Morgan and Salman Dhalla at Herbert Smith.

  • Recent Cases Mark Maturation Of CAT Class Cert. Approach

    Author Photo

    The Competition Appeal Tribunal's recent refusal to grant collective proceedings applications against Visa and MasterCard in the Commercial and Interregional Card Claims case shows that the tribunal takes its role as a gatekeeper seriously, and that it will likely continue to be difficult for defendants to defeat certification first time around, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • Why The UK Needs Tougher Fraud Enforcement

    Author Photo

    The Crown Court's recent conviction of Anthony Constantinou for running a Ponzi scheme is a rare success for prosecutors, highlighting the legal system's painfully slow course when it comes to complex fraud, and the need for significant funds and resources in the fight against financial crime, says James Clark at Quillon Law.

  • Global M&A Outlook: Slow But Moving Along

    Author Photo

    Global merger and acquisition markets had a tough start to the year, with inflation, rising interest rates and the Ukraine conflict knocking sentiment, but in the macroeconomic, deal makers have continued to unearth pockets of activity to keep deal volumes ticking over, say lawyers at White & Case.

  • Emmentaler Case Elucidates Recipe For EU Food Trademarks

    Author Photo

    In light of the EU General Court recently rejecting the Emmentaler cheese trademark application for lacking distinctive character and not meeting the geographical indication requirements, producers must ensure to protect their trade names before they become commercially generic, says Lars Karnoe at Potter Clarkson.

  • Why Int'l Investors Should Keep An Eye On German M&A Regs

    Author Photo

    While German reform proposals will digitize corporate law formalities that have long been immune to change, international limitations remain, particularly for countries outside the European Union, as Germany moves to tighten regulatory hurdles to control inbound investment, say Marcus Geiss and Sonja Ruttmann at Gibson Dunn.

  • Mass EU Privacy Litigation May Be Imminent After GDPR Case

    Author Photo

    While the EU Court of Justice decision in Österreichische Post, clarifying that personal data infringements under the General Data Protection Regulation must be effectively compensated, has not yet opened the floodgates for data breach litigation, it has definitely encouraged individuals to pursue damage claims, says Jan Spittka at Clyde & Co.

  • What Google Case Means For Privacy Class Action Litigation

    Author Photo

    While the recent High Court decision in Prismall v. Google UK and DeepMind highlights the high bar for bringing collective actions on an opt-out basis and the difficulties of relying on the tort in misuse of private information, it is not impossible as long as the case is right, says Kingsley Hayes at Keller Postman.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here
Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Commercial Litigation UK archive.
Hello! I'm Law360's automated support bot.

How can I help you today?

For example, you can type:
  • I forgot my password
  • I took a free trial but didn't get a verification email
  • How do I sign up for a newsletter?
Ask a question!