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Commercial Litigation UK
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April 04, 2025
Denmark's £56M Cum-Ex Fraud Case Struck Out On Appeal
Denmark's roughly £56 million ($72 million) tax refund fraud claim against an English brokerage was struck out Friday after a London appeals court ruled that an issue "fundamental" to the case had been decided in earlier proceedings.
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April 04, 2025
Ex-Everton FC Director Calls Sanctions Decision 'Political'
A former director of Everton Football Club accused the British government of being improperly politically motivated when placing him under sanctions after Russia invaded Ukraine, as he asked a court Friday for further information to challenge his designation.
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April 04, 2025
Scaffolding Biz Says Rival Infringed Safety-Gate Patent
A scaffolding company has accused a rival of infringing its patent over a loading bay safety-gate by marketing its own version with an "identical" structure, asking a London court to block any further sales of the competing goods.
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April 04, 2025
Engineering Biz Challenges Ex-Director Over Shares Transfer
An engineering company has urged an appeals court to side with it in a shareholding dispute, saying a former director should be deemed to have transferred his shares to the company when he was fired as an employee, despite the fact that he stayed on as director.
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April 03, 2025
International Disputes And Trade Lawyer Heads To Foley Hoag
A trade lawyer with experience in World Trade Organization dispute settlement and commercial mediation has joined Foley Hoag LLP's international litigation and arbitration practice in Paris as senior counsel, according to the law firm.
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April 03, 2025
Lloyds Dodges Contractor's Blacklisting And Equal Pay Claim
An employment tribunal has dismissed a racial discrimination and blacklisting claim against Lloyds Bank and a consultancy recruitment agency, ruling that the contractor filed his claim too late and lacked evidence to support his allegations of secret hiring bans and unequal pay.
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April 03, 2025
Staley Told No 'Deliberate' Epstein Lies, Lawyer Says In Close
Former Barclays CEO Jes Staley was honest about the nature of his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, his lawyer reiterated in closing submissions at trial Thursday, arguing that Staley told no "direct or deliberate" lies.
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April 03, 2025
Trump Must Pay £626K Legal Costs In Steele Dossier Case
President Donald Trump was ordered by a London judge Thursday to pay about £626,000 ($820,000) to cover the legal costs for the defense of the authors of the infamous "Steele dossier" against his data protection claim, which was thrown out of court last year.
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April 03, 2025
FCA Pleads For Quick Motor Finance Decision From Top Court
The U.K. financial regulator urged Britain's highest court Thursday to deliver its decision on motor finance commissions "as soon as possible" so that hundreds of thousands of open complaints can be dealt with in an "orderly, consistent and efficient way."
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April 03, 2025
Property Co. Sues Broker For £2M Over Fire Claim Refusal
A property developer has sued an insurance broker for almost £2 million ($2.6 million) for its allegedly bungled handling of an insurance policy that resulted in Aviva refusing to cover for a fire that destroyed a Grade II listed building.
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April 03, 2025
Antique Shop To Pay £56K For Mistreating Part-Timer
An employment tribunal has ordered an antiques shop to pay £56,022 ($73,816) to a sales assistant after it wrongly refused to give her employment rights because she was a part-time worker.
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April 03, 2025
Lenovo, Ericsson End Patent Spat With Cross-Licensing Deal
Lenovo has settled all ongoing litigation with Swedish telecoms giant Ericsson after the two companies struck a cross-licensing deal for their respective standard-essential patents, Lenovo said Thursday.
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April 03, 2025
Door Maker Denies Design Infringed Rival's Copyright
A door manufacturer has admitted copying the design of a rival's bottom roller for sliding doors, but denied infringing any copyright because the product had no original features.
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April 03, 2025
GP Surgery Must Rehire Clinician Fired After Whistleblowing
A National Health Service doctors' surgery must reinstate a clinician who lost her job soon after she blew the whistle on the surgery for offering some services without authorization, a tribunal has ruled.
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April 02, 2025
Ex-Metro Bank CFO Followed Legal Advice Over £900M Error
Metro Bank PLC's former chief financial officer, David Arden, said at a London tribunal Wednesday that he had followed legal advice when preparing to publish a market announcement at the center of a £900 million ($1.1 billion) reporting scandal, arguing he and the bank's former chief executive officer should not face "career-ending allegations" for doing so.
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April 02, 2025
Consumers Tell UK Justices Car Dealers Owe Transparency
Consumers bringing a test case on motor finance commissions told the U.K. Supreme Court in a hearing Wednesday that car dealers arranging financing for the purchase of vehicles were acting as "classic" credit brokers and owed a duty to act in borrowers' best interest.
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April 02, 2025
Hospital Operator To Pay £54K For Firing Disabled Worker
An employment tribunal has ruled that U.K. hospital operator Circle Health must pay its former pathology coordinator over £54,000 ($70,000) after it found that her former employer sacked her without attempting to accommodate her postpartum health condition.
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April 02, 2025
Royal Mail Database IP Claim Gets Off To Rocky Start
Royal Mail Group and the operator of an address search website argued Wednesday that software firm Codeberry Ltd. copied millions of addresses from the courier's postcode data without permission, as the High Court case opened without counsel for defendants.
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April 02, 2025
Safestand Wins Appeal To Protect Scaffolding Design
An appellate judge on Wednesday reinstated a scaffolding manufacturer's three registered designs for builders' trestles, ruling that its many components all formed a single product rather than several alternative goods.
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April 02, 2025
Enablers In The Spotlight As First Al-Fayed Claims Emerge
Employers that allow sexual misconduct to go unpunished in the workplace are increasingly likely to be held liable, lawyers warn, as five women who worked for the late billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed launch claims against his estate.
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April 02, 2025
Ex-Ryanair Pilot Fights 'Fiction' Of Contractor Status In Appeal
A former pilot for Ryanair told the Court of Appeal on Wednesday that his contractor status was a "fiction" as he fought efforts from the airline and a staffing company to overturn rulings that he is entitled to equal conditions with Ryanair's directly employed staff.
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April 02, 2025
Class Rep Says Appeal Court Entitled To Allow £2.7B FX Claim
A class representative said Wednesday that the Court of Appeal was entitled to allow a £2.7 billion ($3.5 billion) foreign exchange claim to go ahead as an opt-out class action, arguing Britain's specialist competition tribunal was wrong to effectively end the proceedings.
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April 02, 2025
Taxing School Fees Doesn't Restrict Choice, Gov't Tells Court
The U.K. did not break human rights law by imposing 20% value-added tax on private school fees because families can still access education through other options, the government told a London court.
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April 02, 2025
Management Biz. Loses Costs Bid Over Consultant's Theft
An employment tribunal has refused to force a director to pay the £12,060 ($15,645) that a workforce management firm incurred in defending his claims of unfair dismissal, ruling he didn't sue vexatiously.
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April 02, 2025
Apple Challenges Funding Deal In £853M Battery Class Action
Apple sought on Wednesday to ax an £853 million ($1.1 billion) collective action accusing the tech giant of concealing problems with batteries, arguing that the class representative had unlawfully agreed to prioritize paying the litigation-funder over the other claimants.
Expert Analysis
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UK Courts Continue To Struggle With Crypto-Asset Cases
Although the common law has proved capable of applying established principles to crypto-assets, recent cases highlight persistent challenges in identifying defendants, locating assets and determining jurisdiction, suggesting that any meaningful development will likely come from legislative or regulatory change, say Emily Saunderson and Sam Mitchell at Quadrant Chambers.
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Why Computer Evidence Is Not Always Reliable In Court
Recent challenges to the admissibility of encrypted communication from the messaging tool EncroChat highlight the flawed presumption in the U.K. common law framework that computer evidence is always accurate, and why a nuanced assessment of such evidence is needed, say Sam De Silva and Josie Welland at CMS Legal.
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Lessons On Using 3rd-Party Disclosure Orders In Fraud Cases
The expansion of the gateway for service out of jurisdiction regarding third-party information orders has proven to be an effective tool against fraud since it was introduced in 2022, and recent case law offers practical tips on what applicants should be aware of when submitting such orders, says Rosie Wild at Cooke Young.
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Bias Ruling Offers Guidance On Disqualifying Arbitrators
An English court's recent decision in H1 v. W, removing an arbitrator due to bias concerns, reaffirms practical considerations when assessing an arbitrator's impartiality, and highlights how ill-chosen language by an arbitrator can clear the high bar for disqualification, say Andrew Connelly and Ian Meredith at K&L Gates.
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Employer Lessons From Ruling On Prof's Anti-Zionist Views
In Miller v. University of Bristol, an employment tribunal recently ruled that a professor's anti-Zionist beliefs were protected by the Equality Act 2010, highlighting for employers why it’s important to carefully consider disciplinary actions related to an employee's political expressions, says Hina Belitz at Excello Law.
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Design Rights Can Build IP Protection, EU Lego Ruling Shows
The EU General Court's recent ruling in Delta Sport v. EU Intellectual Property Office — that Lego's registered community design for a building block was valid — helps clarify when technically dictated designs can enjoy IP protection, and demonstrates how companies can strategically use design rights to protect and enhance their market position, says Christoph Moeller at Mewburn Ellis.
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ECJ Ruling Clarifies Lawyer Independence Questions
The European Court of Justice's recent ruling in Bonnanwalt v. EU Intellectual Property Office, finding that a law firm had maintained independence despite being owned by its client, serves as a pivotal reference point to understanding the contours of legal representation before EU courts, say James Tumbridge and Benedict Sharrock-Harris at Venner Shipley.
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Unpacking The Law Commission's Digital Assets Consultation
The Law Commission recently published a consultation on recognizing a third personal property category to accommodate the development of digital assets, highlighting difficulties with current models of property rights and the potential consequences of considering digital assets as personal property, say Andrew Tsang and Tom Bacon at BCLP.
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1st Appellate Ruling On Digital Terms Sets Tone For Disputes
The Court of Appeal's recent ruling in Parker-Grennan v. Camelot, the first appellate decision to consider how online terms and conditions are publicized, provides, in its tone and verdict on incorporation, an invaluable guide for how to approach similar disputes in the digital space, says Eddy Eccles at Covington.
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Insurance Policy Takeaways From UK Lockdown Loss Ruling
An English court's recent decision in Unipolsai v. Covea, determining that insurers' losses from COVID-19 lockdowns were covered by reinsurance, highlights key issues on insurance policy wordings, including how to define a "catastrophe" in the context of the pandemic, says Daniel Healy at Brown Rudnick.
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How Employers Should Respond To Flexible Work Requests
U.K. employees will soon have the right to request flexible working arrangements from the first day of employment, including for religious observances, and refusing them without objective justification could expose employers to indirect discrimination claims and hurt companies’ diversity and inclusion efforts, says Jim Moore at Hamilton Nash.
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What COVID Payout Ruling Means For Lockdown Loss Claims
While the High Court's recent COVID-19 payout decision in Gatwick v. Liberty Mutual, holding that pandemic-related regulations trigger prevention of access clauses, will likely lead to insurers accepting more business interruption claims, there are still evidentiary challenges and issues regarding policy limits and furlough, say Josianne El Antoury and Greg Lascelles at Covington.
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Spartan Arbitration Tactics Against Well-Funded Opponents
Like the ancient Spartans who held off a numerically superior Persian army at the Battle of Thermopylae, trial attorneys and clients faced with arbitration against an opponent with a bigger war chest can take a strategic approach to create a pass to victory, say Kostas Katsiris and Benjamin Argyle at Venable.
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Opinion
PACCAR Should Be 1st Step To Regulating Litigation Funders
Rather than reversing the U.K. Supreme Court's well-reasoned judgment in PACCAR v. Competition Appeal Tribunal, imposing a regulatory regime on litigation funders in parity with that of lawyers, legislators should build upon it to create a more transparent, competitive and fairer funding industry, says Rosa Curling at Foxglove.
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Patent Plausibility Uncertainty Persists, EPO Petition Shows
While a recent petition for review at the European Patent Office — maintaining that the Board of Appeal misapplied the Enlarged Board of Appeal's order on whether a patent is "plausible" — highlights the continued uncertainty surrounding the plausibility concept, the outcome could provide useful guidance on the interpretation of orders, say lawyers at Finnegan.