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Commercial Litigation UK
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April 22, 2026
Real Estate Co. Fights Exit Tax On £142M Over Legal Certainty
A tribunal breached the principle of legal certainty in European Union law by ruling in favor of Britain's tax authority in a dispute over an exit tax on capital gains of £142 million ($192 million), a real estate investment company told a London court Wednesday.
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April 22, 2026
Nokia Fights English Court's Jurisdiction To Hear RAND Claim
Nokia told the Court of Appeal on Wednesday that the English courts have no business setting terms to license its suite of video-codec patents to Acer and Asus, marking the latest jurisdictional spat over standard-essential patents to reach the appellate court.
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April 22, 2026
Class Rep Seeks To Revive £2.7B FX Claim As Opt-In Action
A competition law consultant is fighting to relaunch a £2.7 billion ($3.65 billion) class action against major banks over alleged foreign exchange-rigging as an opt-in claim after a tribunal rejected it as an opt-out case.
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April 22, 2026
Law Society Won't Appeal Mazur Ruling On Litigation Rights
The Law Society said Wednesday that it will not challenge the Court of Appeal's recent landmark Mazur ruling, which allows non-solicitors to carry out litigation work under supervision.
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April 22, 2026
John Lewis Trans Bias Case Revived After Name-Change Error
A London appeals tribunal revived a transgender discrimination claim against John Lewis on Wednesday, ruling that an earlier judge should not have tossed the case after the claimant changed his name.
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April 22, 2026
Lenders Say Group Motor Finance Case Should Be Split Up
Several car finance providers sought on Wednesday to overturn a ruling that allows more than 5,000 customers to bring claims against them as a group, arguing at the Court of Appeal that they should be forced to bring the claims individually.
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April 22, 2026
Lloyd's, Chubb Accused Of Withholding $8M Ship Fire Payout
The owner of an oil tanker has alleged in a London court that several major insurers have refused to pay out $8.6 million outstanding under a marine policy after a fire in the engine room damaged the vessel.
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April 22, 2026
Apple Cites Top Court Ruling In Bid To Ax £785M Class Action
Apple urged the Competition Appeal Tribunal on Wednesday to throw out a £785 million ($1 billion) class action by app developers, arguing that the law has changed since it was given the green light.
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April 22, 2026
Drugmaker Denies Ripping Off Veterinary Injection Patent
A drugmaker has denied copying a Dechra unit's formula used to treat vomiting in cats and dogs, arguing that the pharmaceutical company never held a valid patent over the formula in the U.K.
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April 22, 2026
LC&F Solicitor Banned For Backdating Docs To Mislead FCA
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
FCA Faces Challenge Over Motor Finance Redress Formula
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 Win Landmark Case Over COVID Grant Deductions
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
Microsoft Must Face £1.7B Server License Abuse Class Action
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
UK Exit Tax Ruling Is Judicial Overreach, Court Told
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
SRA Fights Axiom Ince's £65M Fraud Oversight Claim
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
Sports Direct Challenges Costs In 10-Year Polo Club TM Spat
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
Ex-Trading Co. Execs Win Millions In Battle Over Equity Snub
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
Distillery Denies Infringing Brewery's 'Titanic' TM
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
Nigerian Airline Sues For $8.1M Over Botched Jet Service
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 Defends Crisis-Era €62B Bond Call At Trial
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 Sues Tech Biz In Wireless Charging Licensing Row
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
Bar Council Supports AI Declarations For Witness Statements
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
Ex-Oil Execs Say 'Dishonest' Asset Freeze Cost Them $1B
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 Rebuts £5.2M Royalties Claim From Parking Biz
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
ENRC's $290M Claim Defies Decades Of Precedent, SFO Says
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."
Expert Analysis
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Lessons From Spain's Decision Not To Enforce UK Judgment
In a recent ruling, a Barcelona court refused to recognize a €365 million U.K. judgment against Cerberus Capital, showing that a foreign decision may be sound, final and enforceable in its own jurisdiction, yet still be refused entry where it threatens to displace a dispute already before the Spanish courts, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square.
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Lessons From ESMA's Record €1.4M Trade Repository Fine
The European Securities and Markets Authority's recent fine against REGIS-TR for data and procedure breaches under Market Infrastructure and Securities Financing Regulations demonstrates that a license confers no immunity from sanctions, and that dually registered trade repositories face a greater financial exposure in the event of noncompliance, say lawyers at White & Case.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Tracing Paths To Award Recovery
Recent subpoenas to Adidas and Hilton deployed in Blasket Renewables v. Spain, pending in D.C. federal court, show arbitration award recovery to be a disciplined exercise in constructing visibility, applying pressure and sequencing procedural advantage, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn Square.
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ECJ Ruling Shows When Cos. Can Reject Data Requests
The European Court of Justice’s recent decision in Brillen Rottler v. TC clarifies that although data controllers must be cautious in declining data subject access requests under the EU General Data Protection Regulation, a company may refuse to respond where the request is manifestly unfounded or excessive, even at first contact, says Rob Dalling at Jenner & Block.
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Dubai Ruling Delineates Standard For Foreign Arbitration Aid
By delineating the limits of its jurisdiction with clarity, in the recent Orabelle v. Orzenia decision, the Court of First Instance of the Dubai International Financial Centre Courts enhances predictability and reinforces the court's standing as a forum combining international openness with strict adherence to statutory constraints, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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What Oatly's Loss Means For Plant-Based Food Industry
The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent judgment in Dairy U.K. v. Oatly demonstrates that under European Union agricultural marketing regulations courts consider fair competition to take precedence over consumer protection, and that dairy labeling challenges can succeed even where there is no realistic prospect of demonstrating consumer confusion, say lawyers at TLT.
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New French In-House Privilege Reshapes Arbitration Strategy
The French Constitutional Council’s recent granting of legal privilege to in-house counsel marks a structural evolution in French arbitration practice and alters the evidentiary balance of document production in cross-border disputes, although the new protection is neither absolute nor risk-free, say lawyers at King & Spalding.
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What 2nd Circ. Discovery Stay Means For Sovereign Litigation
The Second Circuit’s recent stay of a postjudgment discovery order against Argentine officials in an oil investment dispute is worth examining in its full doctrinal and practical context, as limiting enforcement efforts that pry into foreign governments' internal workings could quietly reshape the trajectory of sovereign litigation in the U.S., says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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EU Ruling Signals More Intrusion Into Commercial Arbitration
Three things stand out from the recent opinion of the advocate general of the European Court of Justice in Reibel v. Stankoimport, which is the next step in a long line of measures chipping away at the viability of international arbitration in the European Union, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.
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UK Top Court Clarifies Time Limit Issue In Shareholder Claims
The long-awaited U.K. Supreme Court decision in THG PLC v. Zedra Trust confirms that even historical acts can be remedied without a firm limitation date by allowing courts to order appropriate relief for unfairly prejudicial conduct, which will be welcomed by both petitioners and respondents, say lawyers at Stewarts.
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Crypto-Asset Market Downturn Is Driving Litigation Risk
Recent volatility in the crypto-asset market has placed a strain on balance sheets and laid bare weaknesses that may have been overlooked during more stable periods, increasing the risk for disputes over whether procedures or enforcement have been carried out correctly, say lawyers at Kennedys.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: UK Top Court On State Immunity
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling denying Spain's and Zimbabwe's bids to escape arbitration awards using state immunity claims provides significant clarification of the relationship between sovereign immunity and the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes system, and reinforces the finality and enforceability of ICSID awards, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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Why UK Criminal Court Changes Need To Be Systemic
The proposals in the second part of Brian Leveson's long-anticipated independent review of criminal courts, aimed at easing pressure on the criminal justice system and restoring public confidence, are broadly welcomed, but without structural change and sustained funding, they risk becoming little more than temporary fixes, says Vicky Lankester at Brett Wilson.
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UK Territories May Yet Prevail On Ownership Disclosure
Despite its recently launched anti-corruption strategy, the U.K. government appears to have little appetite in the short term to impose fully public ownership registers on the overseas territories, a position that will be welcomed by advisers and individuals, says Rupert Cullen at Allectus Law.
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FCA Enforcement Newsletter Reflects Shift Toward Openness
The Financial Conduct Authority’s inaugural Enforcement Watch newsletter provides clarity on the cases the regulator is opening and highlights its approach to early communication of enforcement activity, offering a welcome insight into its emerging priorities, says David Hamilton at Howard Kennedy.