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Commercial Litigation UK
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May 20, 2025
Businesses Argue For £80M In COVID Payouts From Insurers
Hospitality businesses forced to close during the COVID-19 crisis said their insurers owe them £80 million ($107 million), arguing at the first day of trial on Tuesday that they should be compensated for every time they were materially affected by pandemic measures.
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May 20, 2025
£120M Vodafone Battle Heads To Court After Failed Mediation
A £120 million ($160 million) case against Vodafone will go to court after mediation failed with over 60 franchisees who alleged that the mobile giant imposed arbitrary decisions to cut commission and issue excessive fines.
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May 20, 2025
Alexion Can't Halt Amgen, Samsung Soliris Biosimilars In UK
A London court has cleared Samsung and Amgen's path to launching biosimilar versions of the blood disease drug Soliris, ruling on Tuesday that they will not infringe an AstraZeneca subsidiary's patent.
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May 20, 2025
Turkish Coffee Biz Sues UK Chain For TM Infringement
A Turkish coffee maker has accused a London dessert chain of using the trademarked name of its founder to mislead consumers into buying baklavas and other sweet treats from the Middle Eastern country.
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May 20, 2025
Benson Mazure Fights To Nix £4.6M Negligence Case
Benson Mazure LLP urged a London court on Tuesday to toss a £4.6 million ($6.1 million) negligence claim form an energy business, alleging that the law firm's solicitors fraudulently signed a mortgage deed that led to its collapse.
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May 20, 2025
Innsworth Bags £68M As Mastercard Settlement Approved
The Competition Appeal Tribunal gave final approval on Tuesday to a £200 million settlement between Mastercard and Walter Merricks to end litigation over credit card fees, with the funder of the claim set to receive approximately £68 million.
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May 20, 2025
Russell Brand Denies Missed Deadlines Breached Book Deal
Former actor and comedian Russell Brand has denied owing Macmillan Publishers International Ltd. £220,000 ($294,000) for failing to write two non-fiction books for the company to sell — even after failing to produce the books more than four years past the deadline.
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May 20, 2025
Slater And Gordon Beats Claim By 224 Clients Over Retainers
A London court has thrown out a claim against Slater and Gordon brought by 224 clients over the retainers on their personal injury cases, ruling that the terms of the agreements are clear and enforceable.
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May 19, 2025
Panthera Wants $1.5B From India In Mining Project Fight
British gold miner Panthera Resources PLC said Monday that its Australian subsidiary is now seeking more than $1.5 billion in damages from India in an investment treaty claim over a rejected mining project.
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May 19, 2025
Osborne Clarke Pro's Conduct Risked Public Trust, SDT Says
A disciplinary tribunal has ruled that an Osborne Clarke LLP partner committed the kind of misconduct that "would clearly undermine public trust" in lawyers by misusing legal language to try to shield an email sent on behalf of former Chancellor of the Exchequer Nadhim Zahawi from being published, explaining its decision to fine the solicitor over the incident.
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May 19, 2025
The Times Sued For Naming Phone Co. Owner In Fraud Probe
The founder of an exclusive mobile phone provider has sued Times Media Ltd. for allegedly violating his privacy by publishing articles — sourced from covert recordings — identifying him as the subject of a now-closed criminal investigation into corruption in sport.
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May 19, 2025
Shein Must Provide Photo Theft Case Documents In The UK
A London judge has ordered Shein to disclose documents in the English courts to prove it owns the copyright to a sample of photographs it has accused Temu of stealing, as part of an ongoing battle between the two ultra-fast-fashion rivals.
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May 19, 2025
Motorola Unit Says Home Office Breached Contract Over Fees
A Motorola Solutions subsidiary that has alleged the Home Office owes it £13.5 million ($18 million) urged a judge at the start of a trial on Monday to rule that the government department's defense was not based on the actual contract between them.
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May 19, 2025
Construction Co. Owes £27K To Worker Dismissed In Transfer
An employment tribunal has ordered Altrad Babcock Ltd. to pay £27,446 ($36,772) to an employee over a botched redeployment effort following an instance of "potential sexual harassment."
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May 19, 2025
Earl Can't Oust Trustees Of Country Estate Amid Family Feud
A London court on Monday rejected a bid by the eldest son of a British aristocratic family to oust the trustees of their multimillion-pound country estate after his father decided not to pass him the property amid a family feud.
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May 19, 2025
Phones 4u Fights Decision Clearing UK Networks Of Collusion
The administrators of Phones 4u urged an appeals court on Monday to overturn a finding that the U.K.'s biggest phone operators did not unlawfully collude when they pulled out of supplying the retail chain, which subsequently went out of business.
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May 19, 2025
Email Sealed DAZN-Coupang FIFA Broadcast Deal, Court Says
The e-commerce business Coupang won its case Monday against streaming platform DAZN, when a judge found the sports broadcaster had reached a deal to provide Coupang with a license to broadcast the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in South Korea.
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May 19, 2025
Associated British Foods Blames Storm For Malawi Flood
Associated British Foods PLC has denied claims from more than 1,700 Malawi citizens that embankments surrounding one of its plantations negligently diverted floodwater into a village, arguing "extraordinarily heavy" rainfall is to blame for the destruction.
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May 19, 2025
UK Aims To Recruit 1,000 Tribunal Judges, Panelists In 2025
The government is aiming to recruit 1,000 judges and panel members by the end of the year before a probable deluge of claims once the Employment Rights Bill comes into effect.
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May 19, 2025
Kelyn Bacon Named President Of Competition Appeal Tribunal
The government has appointed Kelyn Bacon to be president of the Competition Appeal Tribunal, naming a specialist in competition and EU law who has already helped the tribunal to take a tougher stance on the suitability of class action representatives.
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May 19, 2025
EY Accused Of Flawed Audits At NMC Health's £2B Fraud Trial
The administrator of NMC Health accused EY on Monday of "fundamentally flawed" auditing that allowed a major fraud against its business by principal shareholders to go undetected for more than seven years, as a multibillion-pound trial kicked off.
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May 19, 2025
Firm And Consultant Fined £10K Over Accounts Rules Breach
An English law firm and a consultant were each hit with a £5,000 ($6,700) fine by a disciplinary tribunal on Monday after the solicitors' regulator alleged that they allowed the company's client account to be used as a banking facility.
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May 16, 2025
State Immunity In England Needs Clarification, Judge Says
Investors in an Indian satellite communications company have been granted permission to challenge a ruling allowing India's sovereign immunity defense in English litigation to enforce a $217 million arbitral award, after a judge in London ruled Friday that the immunity issue raises broader questions.
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May 16, 2025
Solicitor Struck Off For £1M Fraudulent Transfers
A former owner of a now-defunct law firm has been banned from working as a solicitor after he allowed the firm's client account to receive and transfer more than £1 million ($1.3 million) for illegal purposes long after the business had stopped trading.
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May 16, 2025
Work Agency Loses VAT Deregistration Appeal Over Tax Fraud
An agency worker supply company has lost its latest bid to challenge a decision by the U.K. tax authority to cancel its VAT registration over its alleged links to a tax fraud scheme, as a London appeals court refused its bid on Friday.
Expert Analysis
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How 'Copyleft' Licenses May Affect Generative AI Output
Open-source software and the copyleft licenses that support it, whereby derivative works must be made available for others to use and modify, have been a boon to the development of artificial intelligence, but could lead to issues for coders who use AI to help write code and may find their resulting work exposed, says William Dearn at HLK.
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UK Compulsory Mediation Ruling Still Leaves Courts Leeway
An English Court of Appeal recently issued a landmark decision in Churchill v. Merthyr Tydfil County, stating that courts can compel parties to engage in alternative dispute resolution, but the decision does not dictate how courts should exercise this power, which litigants will likely welcome, say lawyers at Herbert Smith.
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Russia Ruling Shows UK's Robust Jurisdiction Approach
An English High Court's recent decision to grant an anti-suit injunction in the Russia-related dispute Renaissance Securities v. Chlodwig Enterprises clearly illustrates that obtaining an injunction will likely be more straightforward when the seat is in England compared to when it is abroad, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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EU Rejection Of Booking.com Deal Veers From Past Practice
The European Commission's recent prohibition of Booking's purchase of Etraveli based on ecosystem theories of harm reveals a lower bar for prohibiting nonhorizontal mergers, and may mean increased merger scrutiny for companies with entrenched market positions in digital markets, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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PPI Ruling Spells Trouble For Financial Services Firms
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Canada Square v. Potter, which found that the claimant's missold payment protection insurance claim was not time-barred, is bad news for affected financial services firms, as there is now certainty over the law on the postponement of limitation periods, rendering hidden commission claims viable, say Ian Skinner and Chris Webber at Squire Patton.
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UPC Decision Highlights Key Security Costs Questions
While the Unified Patent Court recently ordered NanoString to pay €300,000 as security for Harvard's legal costs in a revocation action dispute, the decision highlights that the outcome of a security for costs application will be highly fact-dependent and that respondents should prepare to set out their financial position in detail, says Tom Brazier at EIP.
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Extradition Ruling Hints At Ways Around High Burden Of Proof
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling in Popoviciu v. Curtea De Apel Bucharest confirmed that, in a conviction extradition case, the requested person must establish a flagrant violation of their right to a fair trial, but the court's reasoning reveals creative opportunities to test this boundary in the U.K. and Strasbourg alike, says Rebecca Hughes at Corker Binning.
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IP Ruling Could Pave Way For AI Patents In UK
If implemented by the U.K. Intellectual Property Office, the High Court's recent ruling in Emotional Perception AI v. Comptroller-General of Patents, holding that artificial neural networks can be patented, could be a first step to welcoming AI patents in the U.K., say Arnie Francis and Alexandra Brodie at Gowling.
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UK Review May Lead To Lower Investment Screening Burden
The government’s current review of national security investment screening rules aims to refine the scope of mandatory notifications required for unproblematic deals, and is likely to result in much-needed modifications to minimize the administrative burden on businesses and investors, say lawyers at Simpson Thacher.
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What Prince Harry Privacy Case May Mean For Media Ethics
An English High Court recently allowed the privacy case brought by Prince Harry and six other claimants against the Daily Mail publisher to proceed, which, if successful, could embolden other high-profile individuals to bring claims and lead to renewed calls for a judicial public inquiry into British press ethics, says Philippa Dempster at Freeths.
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How European Authorities Are Foiling Anti-Competitive Hiring
Lawyers at Squire Patton discuss key labor practice antitrust concerns and notable regulation trends in several European countries following recent enforcement actions brought by the European Commission and U.K. Competition and Markets Authority.
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When Can Bonuses Be Clawed Back?
The High Court's recent decision in Steel v. Spencer should remind employees that the contractual conditions surrounding bonuses and the timing of any resignation must be carefully considered, as in certain circumstances, bonuses can and are being successfully clawed back by employers, say Merrill April and Rachael Parker at CM Murray.
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The State Of UK Litigation Funding After Therium Ruling
The recent English High Court decision in Therium v. Bugsby Property has provided a glimmer of hope for litigation funders about how courts will interpret this summer's U.K. Supreme Court ruling that called funding agreements impermissible, suggesting that its adverse effects may be mitigated, says Daniel Williams at DWF Law.
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Trial By AI Could Be Closer Than You Think
In a known first for the U.K., a Court of Appeal justice recently admitted to using ChatGPT to write part of a judgment, highlighting how AI could make the legal system more efficient and enable the judicial process to record more accurate and fair decisions, say Charles Kuhn and Neide Lemos at Clyde & Co.
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Why It's Urgent For Pharma Cos. To Halt Counterfeit Meds
With over 10.5 million counterfeit medicines seized in the EU in 2023, it is vital both ethically and commercially that pharmaceutical companies take steps to protect against such infringements, including by invoking intellectual property rights protection, says Lars Karnøe at Potter Clarkson.