Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Commercial Litigation UK
-
May 09, 2025
Businessman Says $43M Debt Claim Is Plot To Seize Shares
A businessman can intervene in a 194 million Romanian leu ($43 million) debt claim he alleges is part of a fraudulent scheme to acquire his shares in a scrap-metal trading company for free, an appeals court has ruled.
-
May 09, 2025
Arbitration Pro Joins Outer Temple In Move To Bar Full-Time
Outer Temple Chambers has strengthened its international arbitration team with the arrival of a solicitor advocate-turned barrister with a growing reputation in investor-state and complex commercial disputes
-
May 09, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a subsidiary of State Street Corp. sue British sports betting giant Entain, Manolete Partners and HSBC tackle action just weeks after signing a £17 million revolving credit facility agreement, and a commercial fraud claim launched by EFG Bank against Mirabaud & CIE.
-
May 09, 2025
Tesco Loses Appeal Against Lidl Store Approval
Tesco has failed in its bid to bring a challenge against an English local authority to allow Lidl to build a new store, after an appeals court ruled Friday that the authority did not misinterpret planning regulations when it granted the German retailer permission.
-
May 09, 2025
Caterpillar Fails To Bulldoze Challenge To UK Dumping Probe
A subsidiary of Caterpillar has failed to challenge U.K. government decisions over an anti-dumping investigation, after a London judge ruled Friday that the Texan construction equipment giant's legal challenge had become "plainly academic."
-
May 09, 2025
Appeals Court Blocks Attack On UK Design 'Cloned' From EU
A London appeals court said Friday that a fencing company cannot attempt to void a rival's U.K. design protection because it is a "clone" of a European Union community design right that it has already tried to revoke.
-
May 09, 2025
Dyson Loses Bid To Take Forced Labor Claim To UK Top Court
Dyson will fight claims in England that it did nothing about allegations of forced labor at Malaysian factories making components for the appliance manufacturer after the U.K.'s highest court refused it permission to challenge jurisdiction in the case any further.
-
May 09, 2025
Exec Fired For Sharing Info In Divorce 'Proxy War' Loses Case
A former executive at a green energy company has lost his claim that he was unfairly fired for sharing information about the finances of the business's owner with the owner's wife during the couple's divorce.
-
May 09, 2025
Nigeria Can Argue £15M Award Was Obtained By Fraud
Nigeria can attempt to set aside a $15 million award in favor of a businessman who was the target of an undercover operation by the country's state security, after a London judge dismissed his bid to strike the case out.
-
May 16, 2025
Akin Hires Another White & Case Disputes Pro In London
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP has recruited an international arbitration expert for its London office from White & Case LLP as it continues to expand its global disputes and energy practices.
-
May 09, 2025
AIG Wins COVID-19 Loss Payout Row With Cornish Hotels
A judge ruled on Friday that AIG does not have to pay the two owners of bars and hotels in Cornwall for losses suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic because the policy did not specifically cover the coronavirus disease.
-
May 08, 2025
Court Upholds CMA's £99M Thyroid Drug Price Fines
A U.K. appellate court has not only upheld a finding that drug company Advanz excessively inflated the price of its thyroid tablets for the National Health Service but also reimposed fines against the company's former owner that a lower tribunal had cut by almost a third.
-
May 08, 2025
Ex-Shell Unit Faces Legal Demand To Clean Up $600M Oil Spill
A rural Nigerian community urged a London judge on Thursday to force a former arm of oil giant Shell to finish the cleanup of two huge oil spills, which they said will affect the region's entire ecosystem.
-
May 08, 2025
Broker Denies Negligence In £2M Fire Coverage Claim
An insurance broker argues that it does not owe a property developer £2 million ($2.7 million) for allegedly mishandling its policy because the developer failed to disclose that a building had suffered break-ins and vandalism, which ultimately caused the property's insurer to refuse a payout after a fire.
-
May 08, 2025
Crypto Traders Seek To Revive Part Of £10B Binance Claim
A group of investors asked the Court of Appeal on Thursday to revive their claims against Binance on the basis that its delisting of a cryptocurrency caused them damage, saying a lower tribunal was wrong to toss out its "loss of chance" argument.
-
May 08, 2025
Ex-Man United Goalkeeper Saves 'DDG' Trademark
Former Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea Quintana has kept his hands on a trademark bearing his initials "DDG," despite attempts by a German board games company to convince a European court it is too much like its "DOG" mark.
-
May 08, 2025
The Times Pays Pogust Goodhead Damages Over BHP Article
The Times newspaper has apologized to Pogust Goodhead for falsely suggesting that the law firm had pressured clients to reject a settlement offer in their £36 billion ($48 billion) Brazilian dam collapse claim against global mining giant BHP.
-
May 08, 2025
Aon Sued For $1.3M By Ex-Exec Over 'Unpaid' Bonus, Stock
Aon's former insurance consulting chief has sued for more than $1.3 million worth of bonus and stock options, accusing the company of failing to live up to the original deal he negotiated when he joined from Willis Towers Watson.
-
May 08, 2025
HKA Argues It Can Sue Ex-Partners Who Left For Rival
HKA Global LLC has told a London court that two former partners it is pursuing in Delaware for millions of dollars after they moved to a competitor are bound by noncompete clauses which protect the company's "obviously" legitimate business interests.
-
May 08, 2025
Franco Manca Owner Settles COVID-Cover Fight With QIC
The owner of popular high-street pizzeria Franco Manca has agreed to settle its dispute with QIC Europe Ltd. over losses the restaurant chain claimed to have suffered after it temporarily closed sites at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
-
May 07, 2025
AmTrust Hit With £11.7M Claim Over Post-Grenfell Repairs
A social housing provider has sued AmTrust Europe Ltd. for over £11.7 million ($15.6 million) for allegedly refusing to pay out to fix issues the provider uncovered during an investigation prompted by the deadly Grenfell fire in 2017.
-
May 07, 2025
UK Supreme Court Boosts Creditor Protection In Fraud Cases
Britain's highest court has handed administrators more power to pursue businesses that turn a blind eye to fraud, with a ruling on Wednesday that will bolster protection for creditors and could raise the stakes for companies flying too close to the wind, lawyers say.
-
May 07, 2025
Leigh Day Can't Ax £26M Negligence Claim Over Clinical Case
Leigh Day can't strike out a former client's £26 million ($34.7 million) professional negligence claim after failing to convince a London court that the allegations are time-barred and have no real prospect of succeeding.
-
May 07, 2025
Construction Biz Denies Owing Costs For Rival's Lost Sales
A construction product company has told a London court that its rival deserves only minimal compensation for its infringement of a wall paneling patent, claiming the competitor licensed the patent but never sold the product itself.
-
May 07, 2025
Solicitor Wins Unpaid Wages From Shuttered Ex-Firm
An employment tribunal has awarded a former solicitor at a defunct law firm in northwest England more than £4,000 ($5,346) in unpaid wages and other entitlements.
Expert Analysis
-
Regulating Digital Platforms: What's Changing In EU And UK
Lawyers at Mayer Brown assess the status of recently enacted EU and U.K. antitrust regulation governing gatekeeper platforms, noting that the effects are already being felt, and that companies will need to avoid anti-competitive self-preferencing and ensure a higher degree of interoperability than has been required to date.
-
Dyson Decision Highlights Post-Brexit Forum Challenges
The High Court's recent decision in Limbu v. Dyson, barring the advancement of group supply chain claims against Dyson subsidiaries in the U.K. and Malaysia, suggests that, following Brexit, claims concerning events abroad may less frequently proceed to trial in England, say lawyers at Debevoise.
-
9 Takeaways From The UPC's First 6 Months In Session
Six months after its opening, the Unified Patent Court has established itself as an appealing jurisdiction, with its far territorial reach, short filing deadlines and extremely quick issuance of preliminary injunctions showing that it is well-prepared to provide for rapid legal clarity, says Antje Brambrink at Finnegan.
-
How Boards Can Mitigate Privacy, Cybersecurity And AI Risks
In 2023, data privacy, cybersecurity and AI persist as prominent C-suite concerns as regulators stepped up enforcement, and organizations must develop a plan for handling these risks, in particular those with a global footprint, say lawyers at Latham.
-
The Year In FRAND: What To Know Heading Into 2024
In 2023, there were eight significant developments concerning the fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory patent licensing regime that undergirds technical standardization, say Tom Millikan and Kevin Zeck at Perkins Coie.
-
The Outlook For UK Restructuring Plans At Home And Abroad
The U.K. continues to be a center for large-cap, cross-border restructurings, though its competitive edge over the EU in this regard may narrow, while small and medium-sized enterprises are already likely to avoid costly formal processes by reaching out to their secured lenders for restructuring solutions, say Paul Keddie and Timothy Bromley-White at Macfarlanes.
-
Foreign Assets Ruling Suggests New Tax Avoidance Approach
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling in His Majesty's Revenue & Customs v. Fisher, which found that the scope of the transfer of foreign assets is narrow, highlights that the days of rampant tax avoidance have been left behind, and that the need for wide-ranging and uncertain tax legislation is lessening, says James Austen at Collyer Bristow.
-
Class Action-Style Claims Are On The Horizon In 2024
Following the implementation of an EU directive enabling consumers to bring actions for collective redress, 2024 will likely see the first serious swathe of class action-style cases in Europe, particularly in areas such as cyber exposures, ESG and product liability, says Henning Schaloske at Clyde & Co.
-
Cos. Must Monitor Sanctions Regime As Law Remains Unclear
While recent U.K. government guidance and an English High Court's decision in Litasco v. Der Mond Oil, finding that a company is sanctioned when a designated individual is exercising control over it, both address sanctions control issues, disarray in the law remains, highlighting that practitioners should keep reviewing their exposure to the sanctions regime, say lawyers at K&L Gates.
-
The Top 7 Global ESG Litigation Trends In 2023
To date, ESG litigation across the world can largely be divided into seven forms, but these patterns will continue developing, including a rise in cases against private and state actors, a more complex regulatory environment affecting multinational companies, and an increase in nongovernmental organization activity, say Sophie Lamb and Aleksandra Dulska at Latham.
-
Proposed Amendment Would Transform UK Collective Actions
If the recently proposed amendment to the Digital Markets Bill is enacted, the U.K.'s collective action landscape will undergo a seismic change that will likely have significant consequences for consumer-facing businesses, say lawyers at Linklaters.
-
EU GDPR Ruling Reiterates Relative Nature Of 'Personal Data'
The Court of Justice of the European Union recently confirmed in Gesamtverband v. Scania that vehicle identification number data can be processed under the General Data Protection Regulation, illustrating that the same dataset may be considered "personal data" for one party, but not another, which suggests a less expansive definition of the term, say lawyers at Van Bael.
-
Employment Law Changes May Increase Litigation In 2024
As we enter 2024, significant employment law updates include changes to holiday pay, gender equality and flexible working, but the sector must deal with the unintended consequences of some of these changes, likely leading to increased litigation in the coming year, says Louise Taft at Jurit.
-
How 'Copyleft' Licenses May Affect Generative AI Output
Open-source software and the copyleft licenses that support it, whereby derivative works must be made available for others to use and modify, have been a boon to the development of artificial intelligence, but could lead to issues for coders who use AI to help write code and may find their resulting work exposed, says William Dearn at HLK.
-
UK Compulsory Mediation Ruling Still Leaves Courts Leeway
An English Court of Appeal recently issued a landmark decision in Churchill v. Merthyr Tydfil County, stating that courts can compel parties to engage in alternative dispute resolution, but the decision does not dictate how courts should exercise this power, which litigants will likely welcome, say lawyers at Herbert Smith.