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Commercial Litigation UK
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March 21, 2025
Property Boss' Brother Faces Prison In Fraud Recovery Case
A London court has ruled that the brother of a property tycoon who funneled £13 million ($16 million) out of his family business will face a year in prison if he continues to withhold information about the family's assets to frustrate attempts to recover the money.
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March 21, 2025
Royal Mail Workers' Anti-Strike Bonus Claim Tossed
An employment tribunal has thrown out a claim brought by more than 1,800 Royal Mail workers who allege that the postal service unlawfully tried to discourage them from striking over Christmas by offering bonuses.
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March 27, 2025
CORRECTED: FA Exits Referee's Gender Bias Claim
The Football Association won its bid Thursday to strike out a claim against it by a referee who alleged that the body played a role in her unfair dismissal and victimization based on her gender. Correction: An earlier version of this article misidentified the party that was granted a strike-out. The error has been corrected.
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March 20, 2025
Dutch Bioscience Giant Loses 2 Infant Formula Patents
A London court on Thursday rejected the bulk of Dutch bioscience giant DSM's claim that its rivals infringed its microbial oil patents in the U.K., ruling that two of its patents over the infant formula ingredient are invalid.
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March 20, 2025
Gallagher Hits Back At Former CEO's £1.5M Claim For Losses
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.'s benefits and consulting arm denies that it owes a former chief executive of a company it acquired £1.55 million ($2 million) on his claim that it failed to manage the business correctly, as legal wrangling over the acquisition continues.
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March 20, 2025
Ex-HKA Partners Sue Over 'Unreasonable' Noncompete
Two former HKA Global partners have sued to block the dispute resolution consultancy from pursuing them for millions of dollars in damages after they jumped to a competitor, arguing the noncompete clauses in their contracts were unenforceable.
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March 27, 2025
Vedder Price Hires A&O Pro To Launch UK Litigation Team
Vedder Price has recruited an experienced litigator from A&O Shearman to head up its new U.K. litigation practice as the firm expands its dispute resolution and arbitration offerings in London and beyond.
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March 20, 2025
Australian Folk Singers Countersue In Unpaid Fees Dispute
Australian musical duo Angus and Julia Stone have hit back against a claim by their former management company seeking unpaid commissions, saying the business concealed the conflict of interest that arose from being bought from Live Nation.
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March 20, 2025
Prudential's £9.3M Fees To Silverfleet Taxable, HMRC Argues
Prudential's payments of £9.3 million ($12 million) to an investment firm are taxable even though the fees were for services the firm carried out when the two companies were part of the same group, the tax authority's counsel told the U.K. Supreme Court on Thursday.
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March 20, 2025
PE Firm Says Ex-Exec Stole Data, Poached Staff And Clients
A mining private equity firm has sued a former vice president for £140,000 ($181,000) in a London court, alleging that the executive stole confidential documents, and tried to take the company's business and poach its staff after he left the company.
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March 20, 2025
Zaha Hadid Can't Renew Bid To Exit IP Licensing Deal
Zaha Hadid's architectural firm cannot revive its bid to escape a deal signed before her death in 2016 that gave the practice a license to use her trademarks, as a judge ruled Thursday that it had no prospect of succeeding.
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March 19, 2025
BT And Paralegal Co. Deny Conspiring In £8.75M Spat
A paralegal firm and British Telecommunications PLC have hit back at a retired real estate lawyer's £8.75 million ($11.4 million) London claim for allegedly conspiring to exclude him from a system he created to find real estate asset risks, saying it is "entirely speculative."
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March 19, 2025
Oatly Heads To UK's Top Court With Battle Over 'Post Milk' TM
The U.K.'s top court will weigh in on whether oat drink maker Oatly AB should be barred from registering the trademark "Post Milk Generation" under retained European Union law that restricts certain uses of the word "milk" to dairy products.
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March 19, 2025
KPMG Must Face Whistleblower's Discrimination Claim
KPMG LLP must face a former Highways England employee's claim alleging the Big Four audit firm forced her out of her job, as an appellate judge has ruled that KPMG could still be responsible for discrimination even though it didn't employ her.
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March 19, 2025
Group Status Prohibits VAT, Prudential Tells UK Top Court
Prudential disputed a value-added tax claim on £9.3 million ($12.1 million) in performance fees at the U.K. Supreme Court on Wednesday on the grounds that the business providing the services was a part of the same group as Prudential for tax purposes.
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March 19, 2025
Ex-Postmaster Sues Post Office, Fujitsu Over Horizon Scandal
A former sub-postmaster has become the first person to bring legal action against The Post Office and Fujitsu for withholding evidence about faulty software in the Horizon IT system, his lawyers at Simons Muirhead Burton LLP said Wednesday.
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March 19, 2025
Huawei Loses Bid To Move MediaTek Patent Dispute To China
A London court has refused to pause a patent dispute between Huawei and MediaTek, ruling that parallel proceedings in China were too narrow to justify pausing MediaTek's bid for a global license.
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March 19, 2025
Ex-Glencore Exec Fights £150M Tax On Offshore Shares
Glencore's former head of oil urged an appeals court Wednesday to overturn a finding he was liable for income tax on nearly £150 million ($194 million) in share distributions from the Jersey company, in a case that could have wide implications on U.K. shareholders of offshore businesses.
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March 19, 2025
Swiss Bank Accused Of Ignoring $1B Kuwaiti Bribery Scheme
A Swiss bank turned a blind eye to a scheme of corrupt payments orchestrated by the former director of Kuwait's pensions authority by failing to make reasonable inquiries into suspicious accounts, lawyers for the body told a court on Wednesday.
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March 19, 2025
Ex-CBA Chief Jo Sidhu Disbarred For Sexual Misconduct
A disciplinary tribunal disbarred the former head of the Criminal Bar Association, Jo Sidhu KC, on Wednesday after concluding that he was guilty of sexual misconduct toward a young aspiring lawyer who he invited to his hotel room during a mini-pupillage.
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March 19, 2025
Justices Uphold Profit-Stripping Order Against Ex-Employees
Britain's top court refused on Wednesday to overturn an order that three former employees of two asset recovery companies must pay their ex-employers for pursuing its business after quitting, rejecting their case that the order was "too harsh."
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March 19, 2025
Energy Co. Accuses Ex-Lead Of Taking Secrets To Rival Outfit
An energy tech company has sued a former senior employee in a London court for breaching his contract, alleging he took confidential information about its software to help build a rival product at a competitor.
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March 19, 2025
Betting Biz Denies $19M Claim Over Brazilian Football Deals
An online sports betting operator has hit back at a claim of almost $19 million from a marketing agency, telling a London court that it denies allegations that it cut the business out of Brazilian football sponsorship deals.
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March 18, 2025
Danish Wind Farm Co. Wins UK Tax Relief For Study Costs
A Danish wind farm company can claim expenditures on studies and designs associated with constructing wind farms for tax relief purposes, a London appeals court ruled.
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March 18, 2025
Umbro Says TM Fights Should Factor In Confusion After Sale
The owners of the Umbro trademark told the U.K.'s top court Tuesday that judges should take into account real world situations when determining if one brand can be confused for another, closing a high-profile appeal on how far trademark protections stretch.
Expert Analysis
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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.
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Key Litigation Funding Rulings Will Drive Reform In 2024
Ground-breaking judgments on disputes funding and fee arrangements from 2023 — including that litigation funding agreements could be damages-based agreements, rendering them unenforceable — will bring legislative changes in 2024, which could have a substantial impact on litigation risk for several sectors, say Verity Jackson-Grant and David Bridge at Simmons & Simmons.
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How Data Privacy Law Cases Are Evolving In UK, EU And US
To see where the law is heading in 2024, it is worth looking at privacy litigation and enforcement trends from last year, where we saw a focus on General Data Protection Regulation regulatory enforcement actions in the U.K. and EU, and class actions brought by private plaintiffs in the U.S., say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.
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Misleading Airline Ads Offer Lessons To Avoid Greenwashing
Following the Advertising Standards Authority's recent decision that three airlines' adverts misled customers about their environmental impact, companies should ensure that their green claims comply with legal standards to avoid risking reputational damage, which could have financial repercussions, say Elaina Bailes and Olivia Shaw at Stewarts.
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Supreme Court Ruling Is A Gift To Insolvency Practitioners
As corporate criminal liability is in sharp focus, the Supreme Court's recent decision in Palmer v. Northern Derbyshire Magistrates' Court that administrators are not company officers and should not be held liable under U.K. labor law is instructive in focusing on the substance and not merely the title of a person's role within a company, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.
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Major EU AI Banking Ruling Will Reverberate Across Sectors
Following the European Court of Justice's recent OQ v. Land Hessen decision that banks' use of AI-driven credit scores to make consumer decisions did not comply with the General Data Protection Regulation, regulators indicated that the ruling would apply broadly, leaving numerous industries that employ AI-powered decisions open to scrutiny, say lawyers at Alston & Bird.
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English Could Be The Future Language Of The UPC
While most Unified Patent Court proceedings are currently held in German, the recent decisions in Plant-e v. Arkyne and Amgen v. Sanofi potentially signal that English will be the preferred language, particularly in cases involving small and medium enterprises, say lawyers at Freshfields.