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Commercial Litigation UK
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July 23, 2025
Liquidators Win Bid To Enforce £102M Award Over Hotel Fraud
A businessman will be bound by a £102 million ($138 million) damages bill after he helped a property investor swindle secret profits, Britain's highest court ruled on Wednesday, rejecting his argument that the scheme had not caused financial harm to the defrauded company.
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July 23, 2025
Simmons & Simmons Nixes Ex-Worker's Disability Bias Claim
Simmons & Simmons LLP has persuaded a London judge to throw out a former employee's disability discrimination claim, proving that she was not disabled under U.K. equality laws.
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July 22, 2025
Racecourses Lose Early Fight In £80M COVID Cover Battle
A racecourse business shuttered during the COVID-19 pandemic on Tuesday lost its case that £2.5 million ($3.4 million) insurance limits applied to every canceled race, with a London court ruling that each event was not a separate point of loss.
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July 22, 2025
UKIPO Warns AI Patent Appeal Is A 'Recipe For Disaster'
Counsel for the U.K.'s intellectual property authority lambasted an AI company's bid to replace the country's established tests for determining whether an invention is patentable, as a high-profile AI patent trial before the U.K. Supreme Court draws to a close.
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July 22, 2025
Artist Can't Appeal Fake 'Fishrot' Apology Copyright Breach
A performance artist can't appeal a decision that he infringed the copyright of Iceland's largest fishing company by creating a spoof corruption apology about the company's involvement in bribing Namibian officials, a London court ruled Tuesday.
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July 22, 2025
VTB Sues Investment Biz In Sanctions Dispute Over Trades
VTB Capital PLC has sued an investment firm for $3.4 million over unsettled trades of Russian securities, arguing that the other company did not have the right to terminate the trades due to sanctions imposed after the invasion of Ukraine.
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July 22, 2025
Nigerian Domestic Worker Wins Case Over Exploitation
A Nigerian domestic worker has successfully brought a claim against her British employers for unpaid wages, denial of rest periods and constructive dismissal, after an employment tribunal found that she was systematically exploited and misled.
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July 22, 2025
Bristol Airport Takes Legal Action Over £205M Cardiff Subsidy
Bristol Airport is launching a legal challenge at the Competition Appeal Tribunal after the Welsh government granted a £205 million ($276 million) public funding package to Cardiff Airport, according to a claim form published Tuesday.
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July 22, 2025
Golf Adviser Reaped $2M In Secret Commissions, Court Rules
A former consultant to a U.K. golf retailer engaged in deceit, breach of trust and breach of fiduciary duty to reap over $2 million in secret commissions related to sales of golf equipment, a London court ruled Tuesday.
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July 22, 2025
Russian Magnate's Bankruptcy Trustee Can't Stop Share Move
The bankruptcy trustee of the founder of a Russian bank on Monday lost his bid to halt the release of shares to companies alleged to be owned by the businessman, with a London court ruling that they should not be withheld.
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July 22, 2025
DWF Beats Data Privacy Challenge In Injury Fraud Evidence
A London court tossed claims Tuesday that DWF Law LLP broke data protection laws when it analyzed and shared health information from three former personal injury claimants in a bid to expose alleged fraud patterns in road traffic accident cases.
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July 22, 2025
Bayer Challenges Generics' Profit Claims In Xarelto Dispute
Bayer argued at a London court Tuesday that a request from Sandoz that it hand over its profits from an invalidated blood-thinning patent should be rejected because this would go beyond what the two pharmaceutical giants had agreed.
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July 22, 2025
GDPR Whistleblower Wins Bid To Be Paid Until Full Trial
An employment tribunal has ordered a luxury car dealership to keep paying the salary of an employee it recently fired, ruling that she had a strong case that the company had punished her for speaking out over data protection breaches.
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July 22, 2025
HP Owed More Than £730M From Autonomy Fraud Case
Hewlett Packard Enterprise is owed more than £730 million ($985 million) from the estate of Mike Lynch and his former business partner, a London judge ruled on Tuesday, almost a year after the technology entrepreneur died when a yacht he was aboard sank in the Mediterranean Sea.
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July 21, 2025
UK Co. Faces £1M Penalty For Failing To Report Tax Scheme
HM Revenue & Customs was right to determine that a company had promoted a contractor loan tax scheme, a London tribunal ruled, finding the Manchester-based business liable for up to £1 million ($1.3 million) in penalties.
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July 21, 2025
Family Claims Bad Tax Advice Led To Costly HMRC Bills
The trustees of family trusts accused a U.K. accounting firm of giving them negligent advice that led to unexpected inheritance taxes and penalties owed to HM Revenue & Customs, according to a claim filed in a London court.
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July 21, 2025
AI Should Qualify For Patent Protection, Developer Argues
Counsel for Emotional Perception urged the U.K.'s top court Monday to upend a ruling that its artificial intelligence invention could not be protected by a patent, opening a landmark appeal that could set the parameters for whether AI can be patented going forward.
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July 21, 2025
Wimbledon Served Court Win Over £200M Expansion Plan
Campaigners have lost their bid to stop a £200 million ($270 million) expansion of Wimbledon tennis ground, with the High Court ruling Monday that the local authority had properly considered all aspects of the proposal and was entitled to approve the expansion plan.
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July 21, 2025
Ex-Execs Sue Telecom Biz Over Alleged £8M Share Sale Loss
Two former directors of a telecom technology company are suing their successors for over £8 million ($10.7 million), alleging they were tricked into selling their shares at a fraction of their true value.
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July 21, 2025
Trader Blames Deutsche Bank For Spoofing Conviction
A former Deutsche Bank trader convicted of tricking market competitors through a "spoofing" scheme has sued the bank in a London court, alleging it trained him to use an illegal trading strategy and then "scapegoated" him when he faced prosecution.
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July 21, 2025
Kession Fights Liability In £1.7M Collective Investment Case
A finance company urged the U.K.'s top court Monday to partly override a judgment that found it liable for botched property investments worth approximately £1.7 million ($2.3 million), arguing that its liability to investors should have been limited.
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July 21, 2025
Oracle Sues Data Center Firm For Infringing 'Sun' Trademark
Oracle International Corporation and the U.S. arm of the software business have sued a hardware maintenance company, accusing it of selling products bearing its trademarks in the U.K. without authorization.
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July 28, 2025
Disputes Pro Joins Lewis Silkin From Rosenblatt
A Rosenblatt Law Ltd. commercial litigation expert with extensive experience in the banking sector has jumped to Lewis Silkin LLP as a partner in its London dispute resolution practice.
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July 21, 2025
Police Officer Launches Legal Challenge Against Union Ban
A police officer is taking the home secretary to court over a century-old law that bans officers from unionizing, arguing the restriction violates human rights and leaves officers with no credible form of independent representation, lawyers at Leigh Day confirmed Monday.
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July 21, 2025
MPs Call For Review To Fix 'Dysfunctional' County Courts
U.K. parliamentarians called on Monday for an "urgent and comprehensive, root-and-branch" review of the County Court system after a scathing report warned of unacceptable levels of delays, rat infestations in buildings and outdated operations.
Expert Analysis
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How EU Digital Act Could Shape UK Technology Disputes
Noncompliance with the recently effective European Union Digital Operational Resilience Act will add layers of complexity to disputes and litigation for U.K.-based firms servicing EU entities, but international standards may serve as a bridge between jurisdictional and contractual misalignments, says Siobhan Forster at Alvarez & Marsal.
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How EU's Anticoercion Tool May Counter New US Tariffs
The never-before-used anticoercion instrument could allow the European Union to respond to the imposition of U.S. tariffs, potentially effective March 12, and gives EU companies a voice in the process as it provides for consultation with economic operators at different steps throughout the procedure, say lawyers at Crowell & Moring.
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How 2025 Act Refines The UK's Arbitral Framework
The U.K.'s Arbitration Act 2025 marks the regime's first significant reform since 1996 and aligns the nation's approach more closely with international principles, which means practitioners should take note of key procedural and strategic adjustments, including the explicit power of summary disposal, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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Leaked Docs In Man City Case Raise Admissibility Questions
The Premier League’s claims that Manchester City Football Club fell foul of financial fair play regulations are partly based on documents unlawfully obtained by an activist, which means the independent commission deciding the case will need to weigh whether the evidence is permissible against the principle of open justice, says Stuart Southall at KANGS Solicitors.
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Rethinking 'No Comment' For Clients Facing Public Crises
“No comment” is no longer a cost-free or even a viable public communications strategy for companies in crisis, and counsel must tailor their guidance based on a variety of competing factors to help clients emerge successfully, says Robert Bowers at Moore & Van Allen.
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EU Paper Urges Data Protection And Competition Law Unity
A recent European Data Protection Board position paper calls for closer cooperation among data protection and competition authorities, and provides valuable insight for businesses seeking to ensure compliance across an increasingly complex regulatory landscape, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.
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Key Points From Gov't Consultation On Copyright And AI
The U.K. government’s current consultation on mitigating artificial intelligence input and output risks to copyright holders seeks to facilitate copyright holders in bringing actions against AI developers that make unauthorized use of protected works and mandate consistent labeling of AI-generated content, say lawyers at Deloitte.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Equal Rights Limit State Immunity
The Court of Appeal of England and Wales' recent determination that Spain’s London embassy could not dodge a former U.K.-based employee’s discrimination claims by invoking sovereign immunity reaffirms its position that employment and human rights should come before the privileges of foreign powers, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn.
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What To Expect As CAT Considers Mastercard Settlement
It is expected that the Competition Appeal Tribunal will closely scrutinize the proposed collective settlement in Merricks v. Mastercard, including the role of the case’s litigation funder, as the CAT's past approach to such cases shows it does not treat the process as a rubber stamp exercise, say lawyers at BCLP.
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Managing Transatlantic Antitrust Investigations And Litigation
As transatlantic competition regulators cooperate more closely and European antitrust investigations increasingly spark follow-up civil suits in the U.S., companies must understand how to simultaneously juggle high-stakes multigovernment investigations and manage the risks of expensive new claims across jurisdictions, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.
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What 2025 Holds For UK, EU Restructuring And Insolvency
European Union and U.K. restructuring developments in 2024, with a new era of director accountability, the use of cramdown tools and the emergence of aggressive liability management exercises, mean greater consideration of creditors' interests and earlier engagement in restructuring discussions can be expected this year, says Inga West at Ashurst.
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How GCs Can Protect Cos. From Geopolitical Headwinds
Geopolitical uncertainty is perceived by corporate leaders as the biggest short-term threat to global business, but many of the potential crises are navigable if general counsel focus on what is being said about a company and what the company is doing, says Juliet Young at Schillings.
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What BT Ruling Will Mean For UK Class Actions
The Competition Appeal Tribunal’s recent dismissal of a £1.3 billion mass consumer claim against BT, the first trial decision for a U.K. collective action, reminds claimants and funders of the high bar for establishing an abuse, and provides valuable insight into how pending mass consumer cases may be resolved, say lawyers at Ashurst.
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Exam Board Ruling Expands Scope Of 'Newcomer Injunctions'
The High Court's recent decision granting AQA Education a digital "newcomer injunction" prevents anonymous internet users from distributing unlawfully obtained exam materials, and extends the scope of such injunctions from issues of trespass to the protection of confidential information, say lawyers at Fieldfisher.
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UK Lawyers Can Access Broad US Discovery To Win Cases
Given its breadth, U.S. discovery can be a powerful tool in litigation in the U.K. and other jurisdictions outside the U.S., and a survey of recent cases indicates that discovery requests made in the U.S. are likely to be granted — with many applications even proceeding without contest, say lawyers at Miller & Chevalier.