-
April 16, 2026
Insurers of gas pipelines hit by explosions in 2022 said at the start of their trial on Thursday that exclusions in their policies prevent damages payouts of up to €580 million ($682 million) because the blasts were linked to the Russia-Ukraine war.
-
April 16, 2026
A Finnish pharmaceutical company has failed to convince a European court that it deserves to stamp painkillers with the trademark "Ibumax-Lysin" because it would confuse shoppers already accustomed to a Polish rival's Ibum-branded medicine.
-
April 16, 2026
A European Union court has overturned a successful challenge by Heineken against a Polish coffee company's "Leonhart" trademark application, ruling that shoppers would not confuse the mark with the brewery's earlier "El Leon" sign.
-
April 16, 2026
Glencore does not have to disclose internal communications whose primary purpose was to obtain legal advice in its legal battle with investors who said they were misled about wrongdoing, as a court held on Thursday that they were covered by legal privilege.
-
April 15, 2026
Romania has been hit with a third sanctions by a D.C. federal judge for its "continued defiance" of discovery requests aimed at enforcing a near 13-year-old arbitral award worth more than $331 million, bringing the total amount billed by the court up to $21 million.
-
April 15, 2026
Centrica's activities in a North Sea natural gas field amount to oil extraction, and therefore the company is liable for corporate tax bills totaling £5.3 million ($7.2 million) under the rules governing energy taxation, according to a London tribunal.
-
April 15, 2026
The former director of a defunct U.K. company is on the hook for taxes and penalties after he failed to report a canceled debt to tax authorities, a U.K. court ruled Wednesday.
-
April 15, 2026
A font designer told a London appeals court Wednesday that a judge wrongly struck out her claim against a type foundry for unpaid royalties as an abuse of process, arguing she was entitled to bring the case after settling earlier copyright litigation with the company.
-
April 15, 2026
Lawyers pursuing a £400 million ($542 million) million collective action against rail operator Govia Thameslink must appoint a new class representative and secure funding by July or the claim will be decertified, the Competition Appeal Tribunal said Wednesday.
-
April 15, 2026
A director of an ailing gold mining company has denied breaching an agreement to pay more than £17.5 million ($23.7 million) for shares in another mining business, arguing that he didn't have to pay because the price had not been determined.
-
April 15, 2026
A business intelligence company agreed on Wednesday to disclose to Oleg Deripaska the source of an allegedly forged report that the Russian oligarch's former business partner used in a bitter legal dispute between the two men.
-
April 15, 2026
A group of companies specializing in sustainable cups has sued a competitor, accusing it of infringing its marks in branding for its reusable cups and misusing its trade secrets to poach clients.
-
April 15, 2026
An aircraft lessor and a reinsurer have reached a settlement to pause part of a multimillion-dollar dispute over a plane stranded in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, while the wider case continues.
-
April 15, 2026
A Danish wind farm company cannot claim tax relief on pre-development costs for building wind farms, Britain's top court held Wednesday, ruling that the costs are not sufficiently connected to the provision of plants and machinery.
-
April 14, 2026
A London judge has ruled that a U.K. appliance company cannot use a clear error in a supply contract to win more than £100 million ($136 million) from a Chinese manufacturer for failing to deliver refrigerator cameras.
-
April 14, 2026
An NHS hospital has settled a Christian nurse's bias case over a decision to suspend her for almost a year after she refused to use a patient's preferred female pronouns, in a high-profile case that prompted discussion on social media and in Parliament.
-
April 14, 2026
The co-founders of a defunct online legal adviser failed to block a creditor's demand for a £920,000 ($1.25 million) loan repayment, as a London court on Tuesday rejected their "vague and unparticularized" claim that the debt would be converted into an investment in their company.
-
April 14, 2026
Unite the Union's former legal chief won permission on Tuesday to expand his appeal against his failed claim that he was unfairly disciplined and forced to quit amid suspicion he was involved in bribery, money laundering and fraud at the trade union.
-
April 14, 2026
The highest court for some independent Commonwealth countries has rejected a Mauritian bank's appeal against a former director's unfair dismissal payout of almost £1.4 million ($1.9 million), dismissing the bank's argument that the executive's 37 years' employment was not continuous.
-
April 14, 2026
The director of an American biotech company is entitled to a "substantial sum of money" after winning his $15 million claim against a Bahamian bank, a London court held Tuesday, finding that the lender breached the terms of a $3 million loan agreement.
-
April 14, 2026
The Ministry of Justice has launched a study to test whether its in-house artificial intelligence tool can accurately transcribe court hearings, a move officials say could cut costs and expand access to records.
-
April 14, 2026
The Solicitors Regulation Authority told a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday that a former Leigh Day lawyer tried to cover up missing a disclosure deadline by claiming he had written and sent a disclosure letter when he had not.
-
April 14, 2026
A Turkish aviation maintenance provider has denied owing an AAR Corp. subsidiary $25 million for allegedly failing to provide aircraft parts and repair services, saying it axed the agreements when the AAR unit refused to pay more than 1,000 invoices totaling roughly $14 million.
-
April 14, 2026
The National Crime Agency was granted permission on Tuesday to hold on to millions of pounds in assets that it seized from a lieutenant to a billionaire businessman allegedly behind Cambodia's scam centers.
-
April 14, 2026
Musicians may sample other works in their songs without explicit permission from the original creator in certain circumstances, the European Union's highest court held Tuesday following a 20-year spat over the sampling of a song by electronic music group Kraftwerk.