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Commercial Litigation UK
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January 21, 2026
Music Promoters Fight Free Music Giant's £4M Royalty Claim
Two music promotion companies have denied owing £4.1 million ($5.5 million) in license fees and other royalties to a royalty-free record label, arguing that the disputed deal ended in 2017 and the label had previously agreed to accept payment in installments.
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January 21, 2026
MoD Pushes Back Deadline For Military Hearing Loss Claims
The Ministry of Defence has handed armed forces personnel an extra six months to join a cohort of thousands of servicemen and women who are taking legal action over their hearing loss.
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January 21, 2026
Prince Harry Tells Court Daily Mail 'Commercialized' His Life
Prince Harry said Wednesday that his private life had been "commercialized" as he made a visibly emotional appearance at the trial of his and six other public figures' privacy claims against the publisher of the Daily Mail.
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January 21, 2026
Software Co. Sues Rival For Alleged Data Scraping Attacks
A technology company has sued the owner of the OnlyMonster platform over an alleged series of data-scraping cyberattacks, accusing the rival company and its affiliates of stealing sensitive client and business information.
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January 21, 2026
US Performers Lose Challenge Over UK Royalties Legislation
Trade unions representing more than 230,000 U.S. singers and performers can't overturn secondary legislation that restricts their right to fair royalty payments, as a London court found Wednesday it lacks the power to decide whether the law violated unincorporated international treaties.
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January 21, 2026
Selling Stolen Bikes Counts As Work To Bar Benefit Claim
An appeals court said Wednesday that a man imprisoned for selling stolen bikes "at scale" was not entitled to claim Employment Support Allowance while he did so, ruling that the criminal activity he engaged in counted as work.
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January 21, 2026
White Ethiopian Airlines Manager Wins Discrimination Case
A tribunal has ruled that Ethiopian Airlines racially discriminated against its only senior white British employee by showing a "distinct bias or preference" toward staff from Africa.
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January 20, 2026
Boston Consulting Loses UK Tax Fight Over Partner Pay
Payments to partners made by the U.K. arm of Boston Consulting Group are taxable under rules aimed at preventing avoidance since profit shares were routed through a corporate group and carelessness by the firm caused a loss of tax, a London court ruled Tuesday.
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January 20, 2026
Court Backs HMRC Over Healthcare Co.'s Late VAT Appeal
A private healthcare company has to meet strict conditions to appeal HM Revenue & Customs' value-added-tax assessments and a penalty of over £1 million ($1.3 million) after filing its appeal late, a London court ruled.
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January 20, 2026
Ex-Entain Execs Lose Privacy Claim Against Watchdog
Two former executives at the predecessor of betting giant Entain have lost their claim that Britain's gambling regulator wrongly published private and confidential information about them in its announcement of regulatory review.
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January 20, 2026
Mail Says Celebs 'Clutching At Straws' In Privacy Trial
The publisher of the Daily Mail newspaper said Tuesday that Prince Harry and other public figures were "clutching at straws" in their case alleging that its journalists had paid for and used unlawfully-obtained information for decades.
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January 20, 2026
Bar Council Appoints 1st Commissioner To Fight Misconduct
The Bar Council said Tuesday that it has appointed a former government minister as its first commissioner for conduct to tackle what an independent review described as an "unsustainable" situation of bullying and sexual harassment in the profession.
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January 20, 2026
Brazil Dam Contempt Case Has No Legal Authority, BHP Says
BHP urged the Court of Appeal Tuesday to grant it permission to appeal against an order allowing Brazilian municipalities bringing litigation over the collapse of a dam to continue criminal contempt proceedings because it raises issues of "general public importance."
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January 20, 2026
'Mortgage Prisoners' Fight To Revive Core Of £800M TSB Case
Hundreds of former customers of Northern Rock suing TSB for £800 million ($1.1 billion) challenged on Tuesday a ruling that TSB did not breach their mortgage contracts by charging higher interest rates for loans the lender took over after Northern Rock's collapse.
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January 20, 2026
Paddington Bear Owner Denies Claim For Digital Royalties
The owner of the rights to Paddington Bear told a London court Tuesday that its modern royalty distribution deal formalized a gentlemen's agreement struck by the bear's creator in the 1970s and doesn't entitle another company to claim income from online merchandising.
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January 20, 2026
Chubb Rejects Investor's Negligent Property Advice Claim
Chubb has denied that it must pay out around £259,000 ($348,200) to cover a now-insolvent conveyancing firm accused of negligence by a Saudi investor, arguing the dissolved business acted within its legal remit during the purchase of student accommodation in the U.K.
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January 20, 2026
Osborne Clarke Pro Overturns SDT's Zahawi SLAPP Ruling
An Osborne Clarke partner has overturned a disciplinary tribunal's finding of misconduct over his attempts to prevent a blogger from disclosing a defamation threat by former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, as a London court found on Tuesday the decision lacked sufficient reasons and was "unfair."
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January 19, 2026
Top Court Asked To Review Precedent In Whistleblower Case
Lawyers for an employer appealing a landmark case want the U.K. Supreme Court to clarify if a precedent enabling whistleblowers to bring a detriment dismissal claim against their employer alongside a separate dismissal case could still stand since it left the law "in a most undesirable state."
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January 19, 2026
Samsung Says ZTE Hopes To Hike Patent Value In 5G Case
Samsung kicked off London court proceedings in a global patent spat with ZTE on Monday, claiming that the Chinese tech giant is overestimating the value of its 5G patent portfolio.
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January 19, 2026
Celebs Accuse Daily Mail Of 'Systematic' Privacy Intrusions
Prince Harry, Elton John and other public figures accused the publisher of the Daily Mail of having a "culture of unlawful information-gathering" at the start of the High Court trial over their blockbuster privacy claim on Monday.
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January 19, 2026
Wimbledon Owner Says Group Can't Fault £200M Expansion
The owner of the venue that hosts the Wimbledon tennis championships told a trial Monday that it can forge ahead with a 38-court expansion project, arguing the golf course it intends to build is not on public land.
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January 19, 2026
Virgin Settles $200M Train Brand Feud With US Rail Operator
Virgin has settled its dispute with Brightline in a London court over the U.S. rail company's early exit from their train branding deal, ending its quest for the full $200 million exit fee, having already won $115 million.
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January 19, 2026
BHP To Pay £43M Over Mariana Dam Case As It Seeks Appeal
BHP will have to pay £43 million ($58 million) of costs on account after it was found liable for the deadly collapse of a Brazilian dam, a London court ruled Monday as it rejected the mining giant's request to appeal against the decision.
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January 19, 2026
Legal Aid Charity To Distribute £3.9M After Stagecoach Case
A legal advice funding charity revealed Monday that it will issue £3.9 million ($5.2 million) in grants funded with an award from the U.K.'s competition court after the distribution of a rail operator's £25 million class action settlement.
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January 19, 2026
Nomura Denies Overcharging Investor $3.8M To Cover Tax
The U.K. securities brokering arm of Nomura has rejected a claim that it owes an India-based asset manager more than $3.8 million, denying that it deducted too much money from trades to cover capital gains tax.
Expert Analysis
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EU Product Liability Reforms Represent A Major Shakeup
The recent EU Parliament and Council provisional agreement on a new product liability regime in Europe revises the existing strict liability rules for the first time in 40 years by easing the burden of proof to demonstrate that a product is defective, a hurdle that many had previously failed to overcome, say Anushi Amin and Edward Turtle at Cooley.
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Zimbabwe Ruling Bolsters UK's Draw As Arbitration Enforcer
An English court's recent decision in Border Timbers v. Zimbabwe, finding that state immunity was irrelevant to registering an arbitration award, emphasizes the U.K.'s reputation as a creditor-friendly destination for award enforcement, say Jon Felce and Tulsi Bhatia at Cooke Young.
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Building Safety Ruling Offers Clarity On Remediation Orders
The First-tier Tribunal's recent decision in Triathlon Homes v. Stratford Village Development, holding that it was just and equitable to award a remediation contribution order, will undoubtedly encourage parties to consider this recovery route for building defects more seriously, say lawyers at Simmons and Simmons.
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How AI Inventorship Is Evolving In The UK, EU And US
While the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision in Thaler v. Comptroller-General is the latest in a series of decisions by U.K., U.S. and EU authorities that artificial intelligence systems cannot be named as inventors in patents, the guidance from these jurisdictions suggests that patents may be granted to human inventors that use AI as a sophisticated tool, say lawyers at Mayer Brown.
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EU Report Is A Valuable Guide For Data Controllers
The European Data Protection Board recently published a study of cases handled by national supervisory authorities where uniform application of the General Data Protection Regulation was prioritized, providing data controllers with arguments for an adequate response to manage liability in case of a breach and useful insights into how security requirements are assessed, say Thibaut D'hulst and Malik Aouadi at Van Bael.
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UK Court Ruling Reinforces CMA's Info-Gathering Powers
An English appeals court's recent decision in the BMW and Volkswagen antitrust cases affirmed that the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority can request information from entities outside the U.K., reinstating an important implement in the CMA's investigative toolkit, say lawyers at White & Case.
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UK Ruling Revitalizes Discussions On Harmonizing AI And IP
The U.K. Supreme Court's decision in Thaler v. Comptroller-General last month has reinvigorated ongoing discussions about how the developments in artificial intelligence fit within the existing intellectual property legislative landscape, illustrating that effective regulation will be critical as the value and influence of this sector grows, say Nick White and Olivia Gray at Charles Russell.
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Employers Can 'Waive' Goodbye To Unknown Future Claims
The Scottish Court of Session's recent decision in Bathgate v. Technip Singapore, holding that unknown future claims in a qualifying settlement agreement can be waived, offers employers the possibility of achieving a clean break when terminating employees and provides practitioners with much-needed guidance on how future cases might be dealt with in court, says Natasha Nichols at Farrer & Co.
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AI Inventorship Patent Options After UK Supreme Court Ruling
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling in Thaler v. Comptroller-General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks that an AI system cannot be an inventor raises questions about alternative approaches to patent protection for AI-generated inventions and how the decision might affect infringement and validity disputes around such patents, says David Knight at Brown Rudnick.
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Ruling Elucidates Tensions In Assessing Employee Disability
An employment tribunal's recent decision, maintaining that dermatitis was not a disability, but stress was, illustrates tensions in the interaction between statutory guidance on reasonable behavior modifications and Equality Act measures, says Suzanne Nulty at Weightmans.
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What Extending Corporate Liability Will Mean For Foreign Cos.
Certain sections of the Economic Crime Act enacted in December 2023 make it easier to prosecute companies for economic crimes committed abroad, and organizations need to consider their exposure and the new ways they can be held liable for the actions of their personnel, say Dan Hudson at Seladore Legal and Christopher Coltart at 2 Hare Court.
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Cos. Should Weave Metaverse Considerations Into IP Strategy
In light of the increasing importance of intellectual property protection in digital contexts, including a growing number of court rulings and recent updates to the classification of digital assets, companies should include the metaverse as part of their trademark strategy to prevent potential infringements, says Gabriele Engels at D Young & Co.
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ECJ Ruling Triggers Reconsiderations Of Using AI In Hiring
A recent European Court of Justice ruling, clarifying that the General Data Protection Regulation could apply to decisions made by artificial intelligence, serves as a warning to employers, as the use of AI in recruitment may lead to more discrimination claims, say Dino Wilkinson and James Major at Clyde & Co.
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Economic Crime Act Offers Welcome Reform To AML Regime
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act exemption for mixed-property transactions that came into force on Jan. 15 as part of the U.K.'s anti-money laundering regime is long overdue, and should end economic harm to businesses, giving banks confidence to adopt a more pragmatic approach, say Matthew Getz and Joseph Fox-Davies at Pallas Partners.
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What Venice Swaps Ruling Says About Foreign Law Disputes
The English appeals court's decision in Banca Intesa v. Venice that the English law swaps are valid and enforceable will be welcomed by banks, and it provides valuable commentary on the English courts' approach toward the interpretation of foreign law, say Harriet Campbell and Richard Marshall at Penningtons Manches.