Commercial Litigation UK

  • May 29, 2026

    Energy Biz Can't Block South Sudan Oil Sales In £142M Battle

    An energy company has failed to block South Sudan from selling £142 million ($191 million) worth of crude it said it was promised after a court ruled on Friday that it wasn't sure specified shipments contained oil to which the company was entitled.

  • June 05, 2026

    Hogan Hires Paris Arbitration Team From Hughes Hubbard

    Hogan Lovells said Friday that it has boosted its international arbitration practice by hiring a team of four lawyers from Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP in Paris, led by Hughes Hubbard's office managing partner.

  • May 29, 2026

    Ambulance Driver Wins £34K Over Racial Profiling Incident

    An employment tribunal has ordered a healthcare transport service to pay a driver £34,380 ($46,000) for racially discriminating against him and making stereotypical assumptions that he threatened to shoot a woman without properly investigating the claims. 

  • May 29, 2026

    JCT Contract Didn't Extinguish Builder's Earlier Liabilities

    A court has ruled that the signing of a widely used construction industry standard contract did not overwrite a building company's liabilities under an earlier agreement, as it concluded that the business could not escape consequences for allegedly breaching its obligations.

  • May 29, 2026

    Insurer Denies Car Crash Caused Trader To Lose Profits

    A driver and her insurer have hit back against a £493,000 ($661,000) claim brought by a machinery business, disputing that the company suffered a loss of profits when the driver crashed her car onto its premises.

  • May 29, 2026

    Traffic Co. Buyer Says Seller Hid Looming Client Loss

    A traffic management company has stood firm on its £6.2 million ($8.3 million) claim for breach of warranty against the former owner of a business it acquired, arguing that he failed to disclose a decline in work from his company's largest customer.

  • May 29, 2026

    UK To Offer Guidance On Unfair Dismissal Changes

    The government has said it will issue guidance on planned changes to unfair dismissal rules and launch a new taskforce to examine reforms to the dispute resolution system before the measures take effect in 2027.

  • May 28, 2026

    Ex-Tesco CFO Says He Never Questioned Workers' Pay Gap

    Tesco's former chief financial officer said he had never questioned the widening gap between what workers in supermarkets and warehouses were paid as he gave evidence Thursday at a tribunal considering equal pay claims brought by thousands of mainly female shop workers.

  • May 28, 2026

    Ex-UBS Wealth Manager Sues Over Dismissal

    A former London-based wealth manager at UBS has sued the Swiss bank for unfair dismissal and discrimination.

  • May 28, 2026

    DHL Wins Rethink Of Order To Rehire Worker Fired For Posts

    DHL has won a second shot at avoiding the rehire of a warehouse worker dismissed for calling his managers "enemies" online, persuading an appellate tribunal that the judge should have considered additional abusive comments made during the litigation.

  • May 28, 2026

    MFS Boss Can Sell £1.6M Cars Amid £1.3B Fraud Case

    The owner of a now-collapsed mortgage lender accused of systematically plundering £1.3 billion ($1.75 billion) has been granted permission to sell cars including a Ferrari and several Rolls-Royces, according to a court order.

  • May 28, 2026

    Drugmaker Disputes Challenge To Pet Vomiting Treatment

    A Dechra unit has pushed back against rival drugmaker Krka's attempt to revoke its injectable formula for treating vomiting in cats and dogs, insisting the patent has remained valid from the outset. 

  • May 28, 2026

    Barrister To Sue Jolyon Maugham For Libel Over Trans Posts

    Gender-critical barrister Sarah Phillimore confirmed on Thursday that she is suing Good Law Project founder Jolyon Maugham KC for libel after he accused her of harassing a trans woman.

  • May 28, 2026

    Property Biz Sues Housing Assoc. For £13M In Contract Row

    A property management company has sued a housing association for more than an estimated £13 million ($17 million), alleging that the association withheld payments tied to contracts with two city councils and hid an agreement to renew one of the deals.

  • May 28, 2026

    Unauthorized Red Bull Sales Did Little Harm, Wholesaler Says

    A wholesaler has partially admitted that it infringed Red Bull's trademark over its name by selling the energy drinks without authorization abroad, but told a London judge that the scale of the infringement was being exaggerated and the damages awarded should be minimal. 

  • May 28, 2026

    Jellycat Hits Next, Hamleys With String Of Passing-Off Claims

    Jellycat has hit three retailers, including High Street giants Next and Hamleys, in a series of trademark infringement and passing-off claims at the High Court.

  • May 27, 2026

    Abraaj Units Sued For Commercial Fraud By Former Lender

    Mashreq, a former major lender to the collapsed private equity giant Abraaj Group, has sued three Abraaj entities after a London court upheld the bank's claim to a disputed $37 million debt assigned as security for a 2017 loan extension.

  • May 27, 2026

    Exec Kept On Sabbatical For 'Erratic' Behavior Wins Bias Case

    A company director has convinced an employment tribunal that he was discriminated against based on his autism and ADHD, with a judge finding that managers placed him on a sabbatical over erratic behavior linked to his disabilities. 

  • May 27, 2026

    Property Co. Says 'Praxis' TM Confusion Led To Bad Reviews

    A real estate management company has accused a rival of infringing its "Praxis" trademark, telling a London court that unhappy apartment block residents were confused by the brands and had written negative online reviews against the wrong company about rats and damp. 

  • May 27, 2026

    Oil Trader Denies Owing $23M For Diesel Cargo

    Spanish energy investment company Icosium Investment SL has denied it was liable to pay a Swiss oil trader $23 million for the purchase of a shipment of oil.

  • May 27, 2026

    Azeri State Oil Co. Wins $4.5M For Ditched Diesel Deals

    The Swiss arm of Azerbaijan's state oil company has been awarded more than $4.5 million by a London judge over diesel sales contracts breached by a trader, ruling that it was not entitled to break the deals because they "worked out badly."

  • May 27, 2026

    Consumers Seek To Widen £1.5B Apple Overcharge Claim

    A group of consumers urged the Competition Appeal Tribunal on Wednesday to extend their successful class action claim against Apple to the date of the ruling that found the technology giant had abused its dominant position by charging excessive and unfair prices.

  • May 27, 2026

    Tesco HR Boss Denies Turning Blind Eye To Equal Pay

    A senior Tesco executive denied on Wednesday that the supermarket chain turned a blind eye to equal pay concerns as she gave evidence at a tribunal hearing equal pay claims brought by thousands of mainly female shop workers.

  • May 27, 2026

    Saudi Investor Sues Irish Finance Co. Over $5M Loan Default

    A Saudi investor has sued an Irish consumer loan and microfinancing company over an unpaid $5 million convertible loan.

  • May 26, 2026

    Trump Wants Magistrate Judge Off $10B Defamation Suit

    President Donald Trump wants a Florida federal magistrate judge to recuse herself from overseeing discovery in his $10 billion defamation suit against the BBC because she previously represented a U.K.-based company Trump sued over the dissemination of the Steele dossier, a controversial intelligence document claiming Trump had ties to Russia.

Expert Analysis

  • Saxon Woods Ruling Tightens Rules On Director Good Faith

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    The recent Court of Appeal judgment in Saxon Woods v. Costa departs from the High Court's ruling, clarifying that a director's sincere belief they have acted in the company’s best interests is not sufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement to act in good faith, say lawyers at Covington.

  • ICSID Annulment Proceedings Carry High Stakes For System

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    The annulment proceedings brought by Freeport-McMoRan before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, seeking to redress a glaring and prejudicial oversight in its arbitral award against Peru, are significant for delimiting the boundaries of procedural fairness within the ICSID's annulment framework, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Key Takeaways As EU And UK Impose New Russia Sanctions

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    The European Union and U.K.’s new sanctions on Russia, designating increasing numbers of non-Russian companies in the defense and shipping sectors, mean that organizations must examine from the outset whether a transaction has any nexus with the EU or the U.K., say lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Prestige's Jurisprudential Legacy

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent denial of appeal ended Spain's decades-long quest to enforce an €855 million arbitral judgment against a London insurer, throwing into stark relief the increasingly complex relationship between arbitral sovereignty, foreign state immunity and the shifting terrain of post-Brexit private international law, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • German Ruling Further Restrains Intra-EU Bilateral Arbitration

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    The German Federal Court of Justice recently issued a notable ruling that pushes the invalidation of intra-European Union bilateral investment treaty arbitration into the realm of stand-alone cost decisions, strengthening the EU's legal framework while increasing uncertainty for investors in the region, say attorneys at Linklaters.

  • High Court Ruling Shows Firm Stance On Procedural Integrity

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    The recent High Court decision in Qatar Investment v. Phoenix Ancient Art demonstrates its zero tolerance of procedural failure, serving as a reminder that the financial burden associated with document disclosure will not excuse a party’s failure to comply with court orders, say lawyers at Quillon Law.

  • A Shifting Landscape Of Greater Scrutiny After Data Breaches

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    Recent Information Commissioner's Office fines for personal data breaches and a Home Office consultation signal a shift in the U.K. regulatory landscape, and with an increase in mass actions and resulting exposure, organizations should prepare for potential third-party claims from those incurring consequential losses, say lawyers at Atheria.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: An Update On ICSID Annulment

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    The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes' recent decision in Peteris Pildegovics and SIA North Star v. Kingdom of Norway offers a reasoned and principled contribution to annulment jurisprudence, effectively balancing the competing imperatives of fairness, finality and institutional coherence, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • UK Data Disputes Could Become Competition Class Actions

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    While mass data protection claims have chafed against the procedural restrictions that apply to class actions under U.K. law, it is possible these claims will be brought into the fold of the rapidly growing Competition Appeal Tribunal scene, says Aislinn Kelly-Lyth at Blackstone Chambers.

  • Russia Sanctions Spotlight: Divergent Approaches Emerge

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    With indications of greater divergence and uncertainty in Russia sanctions policy between the U.K., European Union and U.S., there are four general principles and a range of compliance steps that businesses should bear in mind when assessing the impact of a potentially shifting landscape, says Alexandra Melia at Steptoe.

  • Opinion

    UK Court Of Appeal's FRAND Ruling Is Troubling

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    The U.K. Court of Appeal's recent decision in Optis v. Apple disregards a lower court's extensive factual findings and contradicts its own precedent regarding fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms for cellular patents, says Enrico Bonadio at the University of London.

  • What Santander Fraud Ruling Means For UK Banking Sector

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    A London court's recent judgment in Santander v. CCP Graduate School held that a bank does not owe any duty to third-party victims of authorized push payment fraud, reaffirming the steps banks are already taking to protect their own customers from sophisticated fraud mechanisms, say lawyers at Charles Russell.

  • Arbitral Ruling In EU Fisheries Clash Clarifies Post-Brexit Pact

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    The Permanent Court of Arbitration's recent ruling marks a pivotal moment in the evolving jurisprudence surrounding the Trade and Cooperation Agreement, concluded between the U.K. and the EU after Brexit, and sets an important precedent for interpretation and enforcement of trade and environment clauses in cross-border disputes, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Apple Ruling Provides Clarity For UK Litigation Funders

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    The Court of Appeal's recent Gutmann v. Apple decision that litigation funders can take a fee before class action members are paid helps relieve the concerns of insufficient funding returns that followed news of a broad sector review and a key high court ruling, says Matthew Lo at Exton Advisors.

  • FCA Update Eases Private Stock Market Disclosure Rules

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recently updated proposals for the Private Intermittent Securities and Capital Exchange System would result in less onerous disclosure obligations for businesses, reflecting ongoing efforts to balance an attractive trading venue for private companies while maintaining sufficient investor protections, say lawyers at Debevoise.

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