Commercial Litigation UK

  • February 02, 2026

    Carter-Ruck Partner Can Claim Costs For Failed SRA Action

    The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal ruled Monday that a Carter-Ruck partner can in principle recover costs from the industry regulator after she was cleared of disciplinary charges linked to the OneCoin cryptocurrency scam, but said that the High Court should decide how much.

  • January 30, 2026

    Future Of Data Breach Claims Hinges On Top UK Court Case

    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision to examine a case that stems from the accidental disclosure of police officers' personal data will probably determine whether litigation involving such large-scale breaches accelerates, lawyers say — or whether it stalls.

  • January 30, 2026

    Charity Challenges Recruiters' 'Evo' TM With Bad Faith Claims

    A career guidance charity for minority applicants has pushed back against trademark infringement allegations, counterclaiming that a platform providing recruitment services had registered rival "evo" signs in bad faith over more services than it ever planned to market. 

  • January 30, 2026

    Little Simz Fights £2.8M In Copyright Battle With Producer

    Award-winning British rapper Little Simz has told a London court that she owns the copyright to several records despite the claims from her former producer and friend of over 20 years, as the two sides litigate over millions in allegedly unpaid fees. 

  • January 30, 2026

    Ex-Client's £40K Fee-Fraud Emails Ruled Defamatory

    A London judge ruled Friday that a series of emails sent by a law firm's former client accusing it of fraudulently charging him £40,000 ($55,000) were defamatory.

  • January 30, 2026

    Tech Exec Fired After Board Coup Bid Was 'Unfairly' Let Go

    A London Employment Tribunal has ruled that a financial technology payment startup unfairly dismissed its chief technology officer, but did not do so for the disclosures he made amid a souring relationship with the company's chief executive that led to an attempted boardroom coup.

  • January 30, 2026

    Ex-Pensions Lawyer Wins Whistleblowing Docs In Firing Case

    A former in-house lawyer at the National Employment Savings Trust has settled his whistleblowing claim against the pension scheme shortly after an employment tribunal granted him access to additional documents relating to its investigation into his concerns. 

  • January 30, 2026

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

    This past week in London saw collapsed solar bonds company Rockfire Capital sue the Royal Bank of Scotland, e-ticket platform Eventbrite target the owners of Salford Red Devils rugby club over an alleged contract breach, and Scottish distiller William Grant & Sons square off against a former MP in a trademark tussle tied to its Glenfiddich whisky. 

  • January 30, 2026

    TSB Beats 'Mortgage Prisoners' Appeal In £800M Rates Claim

    TSB was entitled to charge higher interest rates for loans to almost 400 former Northern Rock customers, a London appeals court ruled Friday, handing the lender a preliminary win in an £800 million ($1.1 billion) group action brought by borrowers.

  • January 30, 2026

    'Whiplash' Reforms Widen Justice Gap, Trade Group Claims

    The government's controversial reforms to "whiplash" injury claims almost five years ago have meant more claimants than ever are being denied access to justice, a legal trade body warned Friday.

  • January 30, 2026

    Trafigura Wins Trial Over $500M Nickel Fraud Against Magnate

    Trading company Trafigura was the victim of a "massive fraud" carried out by Prateek Gupta and his companies in which he made $500 million in sham nickel trades, a London court concluded on Friday.

  • January 30, 2026

    Deutsche Bank Denied Early Ruling In Barclay Family Dispute

    A Luxembourg bank can't get early determination of part of its claim against a member of the Barclay family over an unpaid £18 million ($25 million) loan, after a judge said Friday the issue of which court had jurisdiction needed to be determined first.

  • January 30, 2026

    Legal Services Biz Sues Insurer For £1M In Payment Row

    A legal expense insurance company has sued the insurer of an insolvent solicitors' firm for more than £1 million ($1.4) over allegations the law firm failed to pay premiums it owed that were linked to after-the-event litigation policies.

  • January 29, 2026

    Greenpeace Plans Legal Case Over UK Deep-Sea Mining Deal

    Greenpeace revealed plans on Friday for a legal challenge against the U.K. government's decision to hand licenses to mine the deep sea to a newly formed company, claiming the move breaches international and domestic laws.

  • January 29, 2026

    Imported Scooters Not Duty-Free, UK Court Says In Reversal

    Mobility scooters imported into the U.K. by two companies should be assessed a 10% duty, a London court ruled, reversing a lower court decision it said labeled the scooters duty-free due to a misapplication of relevant rules.

  • January 29, 2026

    Fund Managers Should Be Taxed As Workers, HMRC Testifies

    Portfolio managers at BlueCrest Capital Management should be taxed as disguised employees because they don't hold wider legal responsibilities at the hedge fund, Britain's tax authority told the U.K. Supreme Court on Thursday.

  • January 29, 2026

    Cabo Lawyer Denies Misleading Court In £90M Bratz Row

    A solicitor who represented a toy maker suing MGA, the maker of Bratz dolls, denied Thursday that he had deliberately misled the court about his client's disclosure in the run-up to the trial over a campaign of antitrust violations and threats of patent infringement litigation.

  • January 29, 2026

    Manufacturer Settles Claim Over Rival Selling Patented Parts

    A manufacturing company has settled its claim against an air brake specialist that it alleged had infringed its brake caliper patents by remaking the vehicle component originally supplied by the German company and selling the parts in the U.K.

  • January 29, 2026

    Ex-Cricket Team Owner's India Suit Blocked In Ownership Row

    A London judge ordered a businessman on Thursday to stop bringing legal claims in India or any other jurisdiction linked to his dispute over the ownership of the Rajasthan Royals with the majority owners of the Indian Premier League cricket franchise.

  • January 29, 2026

    UK Gov't Rejects Women's Pension Redress For 2nd Time

    The government said Thursday that it will not pay compensation to millions of women affected by state pension errors, raising the possibility of new legal action.

  • January 29, 2026

    Local Authority Settles Claim Over Lost £20M Bond Investment

    A local council in England has agreed to a settlement in its £20 million ($28 million) claim against a regulatory host over allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations that led the now essentially bankrupt authority to invest in high-risk bonds.

  • January 29, 2026

    LSB Finds Gaps In Litigation Advice Ahead Of Mazur

    The legal oversight regulator said Thursday that it has found differences in the advice given by watchdogs about who is authorized to conduct litigation as the Court of Appeal prepares to hear a case that upended some firms' business models.

  • January 29, 2026

    Howard Kennedy's Ex-Client Can't Challenge £196K Legal Bill

    Howard Kennedy LLP has successfully defeated a former client's challenge to a legal bill of almost £196,000 ($270,000) racked up in connection with Financial Conduct Authority proceedings, as a London court ruled that the man was made aware of the costs.

  • January 28, 2026

    Fund Managers Should Be Taxed As Partners, UK Court Told

    Portfolio managers at a hedge fund should be taxed as partners, not disguised employees, because they have significant influence at the partnership, a hedge fund told the U.K. Supreme Court on Wednesday.

  • January 28, 2026

    Belarusian Co. Fights To Overturn 'Irrational' UK Sanctions

    A Belarusian construction company urged a London appellate court Wednesday to overturn a decision upholding the U.K. Foreign Office's imposition of economic sanctions on it, arguing that it no longer benefited from or supported the republic's government in Minsk.

Expert Analysis

  • Unpacking The Building Safety Act's Industry Overhaul

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    Recent updates to the Building Safety Act introduce a new principal designer role and longer limitation periods for defects claims, ushering in new compliance challenges for construction industry stakeholders to navigate, as well as a need to affirm that their insurance arrangements provide adequate protection, say Zoe Eastell and Zack Gould-Wilson at RPC.

  • Prompt Engineering Skills Are Changing The Legal Profession

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    With a focus on higher-value work as repetitive tasks are delegated to artificial intelligence, legal roles are set to become more inspiring, and lawyers need not fear the rising demand for prompt engineers that is altering the technology-enabled legal environment, say Eric Crawley, Shah Karim and Paul O’Hagan at Epiq Legal.

  • Opinion

    UK Whistleblowers Flock To The US For Good Reason

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    The U.K. Serious Fraud Office director recently brought renewed attention to the differences between the U.K. and U.S. whistleblower regimes — differences that may make reporting to U.S. agencies a better and safer option for U.K. whistleblowers, and show why U.K. whistleblower laws need to be improved, say Benjamin Calitri and Kate Reeves at Kohn Kohn.

  • 4 Legal Privilege Lessons From Dechert Disclosure Ruling

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in Al Sadeq v. Dechert LLP, finding that evidence may have been incorrectly withheld, provides welcome clarification of the scope of legal professional privilege, including the application of the iniquity exception, says Tim Knight at Travers Smith.

  • BT Case May Shape UK Class Action Landscape

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    The first opt-out collective action trial commenced in Le Patourel v. BT in the U.K. Competition Appeal Tribunal last month, regarding BT's abuse of dominance by overcharging millions of customers, will likely provide clarification on damages and funder returns in collective actions, which could significantly affect the class action regime, say lawyers at RPC.

  • Key Points From EC Economic Security Screening Initiatives

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    Lawyers at Herbert Smith analyze the European Commission's five recently announced initiatives aimed at de-risking the EU's trade and investment links with third countries, including the implementation of mandatory screening mechanisms and extending coverage to investments made by EU companies that are controlled subsidiaries of non-EU investors.

  • Following The Road Map Toward Quantum Security

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    With the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent publication of a white paper on a quantum-secure financial sector, firms should begin to consider the quantum transition early — before the process is driven by regulatory obligations — with the goal of developing a cybersecurity architecture that is agile while also allowing for quantum security, say lawyers at Cleary.

  • Why EU Ruling On Beneficial Ownership May Affect The UK

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    Following the EU judgment in Sovim v. Luxembourg that public access to beneficial ownership information conflicts with data protection rights, several British overseas territories and dependencies have recently reversed their commitment to introduce unrestricted access, and challenges to the U.K.’s liberal stance may be on the cards, says Rupert Cullen at Allectus Law.

  • Opinion

    Labour Should Reconsider Its Discrimination Law Plans

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    While the Labour Party's recent proposals allowing equal pay claims based on ethnicity and disability, and introducing dual discrimination, have laudable intentions and bring some advantages, they are not the right path forward as the changes complicate the discrimination claim process for employees, say Colin Leckey and Tarun Tawakley at Lewis Silkin.

  • AI Is Outpacing IP Law Frameworks

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    In Thaler v. Comptroller-General, the U.K. Supreme Court recently ruled that artificial intelligence can't be an inventor, but the discussion on the relationship between AI and intellectual property law is far from over, and it's clear that technology is developing faster than the legal framework, says Stephen Carter at The Intellectual Property Works.

  • Tracing The History Of LGBTQ+ Rights In The Workplace

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    Pride History month is a timely reminder of how recent developments have shaped LGBTQ+ employees' rights in the workplace today, and what employers can do to ensure that employees are protected from discrimination, including creating safe workplace cultures and promoting allyship, say Caitlin Farrar and Jessica Bennett at Farrer.

  • Ruling In FCA Case Offers Tips On Flexible Work Requests

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    In Wilson v. Financial Conduct Authority, the Employment Tribunal recently found that the regulator's rejection of a remote work request was justified, highlighting for employers factors that affect flexible work request outcomes, while emphasizing that individual inquiries should be considered on the specific facts, say Frances Rollin, Ella Tunnell and Kerry Garcia at Stevens & Bolton.

  • Pension Scheme Ruling Elucidates Conversion Issues

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    In Newell Trustees v. Newell Rubbermaid UK Services, the High Court recently upheld a pension plan's conversion of final salary benefits to money purchase benefits, a welcome conclusion that considered several notable issues, such as how to construe pension deeds and when contracts made outside scheme rules can determine benefits, say Ian Gordon and Jamie Barnett at Gowling.

  • New Fraud Prevention Offense May Not Make Much Difference

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    By targeting only large organizations, the Economic Crime Act's new failure to prevent fraud offense is striking in that, despite its breadth, it will affect so few companies, and is therefore unlikely to help ordinary victims, says Andrew Smith at Corker Binning.

  • Aldi Design Infringement Case Highlights Assessment Issues

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    The forthcoming English Court of Appeal decision in Marks and Spencer v. Aldi, regarding the alleged infringement of design rights, could provide practitioners with new guidance, particularly in relation to the relevant date for assessment of infringement and the weight that should be attributed to certain design elements in making this assessment, say Rory Graham and Georgia Davis at RPC.

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