Commercial Litigation UK

  • December 01, 2025

    Takeda Defends UK Patent Protection For ADHD Drug Elvanse

    Takeda has swung back after a German rival asked a London court to call time on its extended patent protections for the ADHD treatment Elvanse, arguing that its U.K. supplementary protection certificate covering the drug is valid.

  • December 01, 2025

    AmTrust Fights Sompo For £59M At Trial Over Legal Funding

    AmTrust argued on the first day of trial on Monday that the insurer of two defunct law firms is liable to pay it £59 million ($78 million), in the latest development in the battle of who should cover the costs of a failed litigation-funding scheme.

  • December 01, 2025

    Brett Wilson Denies Mishandling Ex-IT Exec's Defense

    Brett Wilson has rejected claims that it provided negligent advice and failed to properly defend a former chief technology officer in criminal and civil proceedings over a cyberattack at his employer.

  • December 01, 2025

    Judicial Proceedings Immunity Can't Stop Whistleblower Claim

    A London appeals court revived on Monday a former charity worker's claim that his employer launched arbitration proceedings against him in retaliation for blowing the whistle on alleged verbal and physical abuse of staff.

  • December 01, 2025

    Sony Settles Enforcement Action Over $49M Share Dispute

    Sony Pictures has settled enforcement action against a Chinese conglomerate after a London court ruled the Chinese business had been contractually obliged to purchase $49 million worth of shares in a production company that owns the "Octonauts" children's TV show.

  • November 28, 2025

    Regeneron Claims Biocon Drug Mimics Its Patented Medicine

    Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has countersued Biocon to block it from infringing on its patents upholding its medication to treat macular degeneration, denying that the Indian pharmaceutical group's formulation would not infringe on its intellectual property in the U.K.

  • November 28, 2025

    Building Cladding Co. Hits Back At Bid To Nix Fire Safety IP 

    A building facade supplier has asserted that a cladding specialist is infringing its patent and design rights, pointing out that the rival's director had toured its factory years ago and received a demonstration of the products he later copied. 

  • November 28, 2025

    Loft Supplies Co. Takes Aim At Rival's UK Patents

    A loft supplies company has denied infringing a rival's flooring system patents, telling a London court that the U.K. registrations are not valid because they contain nothing inventive.

  • November 28, 2025

    ECJ Allows Portugal's Tax Checks On Foreign Pension Funds

    Portugal could impose stricter requirements on non-resident pension funds that claim a tax exemption when proportionate, despite the European Union's rules on freedom of movement for capital, the bloc's top court has ruled.

  • November 28, 2025

    LetterOne Denied Compensation Over Forced Broadband Sale

    An investment group backed by Russian oligarchs failed on Friday to secure the "fair market value" for its shares in a regional broadband provider that the U.K. government forced it to sell over national security concerns.

  • November 28, 2025

    Financial Analysts' Body Suffers Blow In Fight Over 'CEFA' TM

    The European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies has lost its bid to register a trademark for "CEFA EFFAS Certified European Financial Analyst" as a European court ruled that examiners had correctly found it was too similar to an existing sign. 

  • November 28, 2025

    Private Prosecutors Eye Victims' Assets Amid SFO Probe

    Lawyers and a fintech claims manager said Friday that they have begun efforts to help victims of an alleged $28 million fraud recover their money after a fraud-enforcement agency opened a criminal investigation into the "crypto hedge fund" scheme.

  • November 28, 2025

    Odey Libel, Sex Assault Claims To Reach Trial In June

    Former hedge fund manager Crispin Odey's £79 million ($104 million) libel claim against the Financial Times, alongside claims from five women accusing him of sexual abuse, will reach trial in 2026, a judge said at a London court on Friday.

  • November 28, 2025

    PrivatBank Pursues $3B Fraud Judgment Against Ex-Owners

    PrivatBank has said that its former owners have failed to pay more than $3 billion ordered by a London court after it found that they had orchestrated an elaborate money-siphoning scheme of sham loans tied to fictitious commodity trades.

  • November 28, 2025

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen the National Crime Agency target an Azerbaijan politician and a subsidiary of Withers over a disputed £50 million ($66 million) property portfolio, the eldest son of a British aristocratic family challenge the trustees of their multimillion-pound estate, and a sports lawyer suspected of dishonesty face action by the Solicitors Regulation Authority following his firm's closure.

  • November 28, 2025

    Guardian Can't Defend 'Alt-Right' Agitator Remark As Opinion

    A court ruled in a preliminary decision on Friday that the publisher of The Guardian was making a statement of fact when its articles described a journalist an "'alt-right' agitator," preventing the newspaper from defending the defamatory remark as an opinion.

  • November 28, 2025

    Gupta Denies Hiding $600M Nickel Fraud From Trafigura

    A businessman told the High Court on Friday that he did not attempt to hide the true contents of metal sold to Trafigura in an alleged $600 million nickel fraud, arguing that the trading firm could have inspected the shipments at any time without his involvement.

  • November 27, 2025

    Gorgon Music Hits Back Over Bunny Lee Reggae Catalog

    Gorgon Music has asserted that two subsidiaries of German media giant BMG failed to promote the music of dead reggae producer Bunny "Striker" Lee and therefore breached their licensing deals, meaning they were no longer enforceable. 

  • November 27, 2025

    TV Personality Hit With Gag Order For Special Forces Podcast

    A judge has ordered television personality Ant Middleton not to repeat "highly sensitive" accounts made in a podcast of his time in the U.K Special Forces, ahead of his trial for breaching a confidentiality contract.

  • November 27, 2025

    Osborne Pro Fights To Reverse SDT's Zahawi SLAPPs Ruling

    An Osborne Clarke partner urged a court on Thursday to overturn a ruling by a disciplinary tribunal that he had wrongly attempted to prevent a tax policy journalist from disclosing that he was being threatened with a defamation claim by former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi.

  • November 27, 2025

    US Designer Sues Furniture Village Over 'Alaska' Line Theft

    A furniture designer has accused a manufacturer of commissioning a series of designs and then stealing them, arguing that significant features of its protected "Alaska" concept range could be seen in the U.K. company's products. 

  • November 27, 2025

    Citibank Sues Santander Over $90M Mozambique Bond Row

    The London branch of Citibank N.A. and a company behind the development of a major energy project in Mozambique are seeking declarations from the High Court that Santander owes $90 million under two bond contracts.

  • November 27, 2025

    Barrister Says Hacker's Negligence Claims Are Baseless

    A barrister has denied claims that he negligently gave advice to a former chief technology officer who was found guilty of hacking a previous employer, arguing that the cyberattacker's arguments were simply bad law and weren't going to succeed. 

  • November 27, 2025

    Trader Hid Fraud As Nickel Prices Soared, Trafigura Says

    A metals trader denied allegations on Thursday that he tried to cover up his alleged nickel fraud against Trafigura when prices shot up in 2022, repeating his accusation that the commodities supplier knew it was trading in sham metal and was in on the scheme.

  • November 27, 2025

    Court Ends Block On South Sudan Oil Amid £142M Battle

    A London court ended on Thursday an injunction that prevented South Sudan from dealing with a shipment of oil amid claims that the country has refused to hand over £142 million ($188 million) of the fuel to an energy company.

Expert Analysis

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Cross-Border Contract Lessons

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    A U.K. court's decision this month in Banco De Sabadell v. Cerberus provides critical lessons for practitioners involved in drafting and litigating cross-border investment agreements, and offers crucial insight into how English courts apply foreign law in complex cross-border disputes, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn. 

  • Rowing Machine IP Loss Waters Down Design Protections

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    The Intellectual Property Enterprise Court's recent judgment dismissing WaterRower's claim that its wooden rowing machines were works of artistic craftsmanship highlights divergence between U.K. and European Union copyright law, and signals a more stringent approach to protecting designs in a post-Brexit U.K., say lawyers at Finnegan.

  • Preparing For The Next 5 Years Of EU Digital Policy

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    The new European Commission appears poised to build on the artificial intelligence, data management and digital regulation groundwork laid by President Ursula von der Leyen's first mandate, with a strong focus on enforcement and further enhancement of previous initiatives during the next five years, say lawyers at Steptoe.

  • Hawaii Climate Insurance Case Is Good News For Energy Cos.

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    The Hawaii Supreme Court's recent ruling in a dispute between an oil company and its insurers, holding that reckless conduct in the context of activities that can cause climate harms is covered by liability policies, will likely be viewed by energy companies as a positive development, say attorneys at Fenchurch Law.

  • Can Romania Escape Its Arbitral Award Catch-22?

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    Following a recent European Union General Court decision, Romania faces an apparent stalemate of conflicting norms as the country owes payment under an International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes award, but is prohibited by the European Commission from making that payment, say attorneys at Orrick.

  • Key Takeaways From EU's Coming Digital Act

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    The European Union's impending Digital Operational Resilience Act will necessitate closer collaboration on resilience, risk management and compliance, and crucial challenges include ensuring IT third-party service providers meet the requirements on or before January 2025, says Susie MacKenzie at Coralytics.

  • State Immunity Case Highlights UK's Creditor-Friendly Stance

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    The English Court of Appeal's decision in a conjoined case involving Spain and Zimbabwe, holding that the nations cannot use state immunity to escape arbitral award enforcement, emphasizes the U.K.'s reputation as a creditor-friendly and pro-arbitration jurisdiction, says Jon Felce at Cooke Young.

  • Looking Back On 2024's Competition Law Issues For GenAI

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    With inherent uncertainties in generative artificial intelligence raising antitrust issues that attract competition authorities' attention, the 2024 uptick in transaction reviews demonstrates that regulators are vigilant about the possibility that markets may tip in favor of large existing players, say lawyers at McDermott.

  • When Investigating An Adversary, Be Wary Of Forged Records

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    Warnings against the use of investigators who tout their ability to find an adversary’s private documents generally emphasize the risk of illegal activity and attorney discipline, but a string of recent cases shows an additional danger — investigators might be fabricating records altogether, says Brian Asher at Asher Research.

  • New Offense Expands Liability For Corporate Enviro Fraud

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    The Economic Crime Act's new corporate fraud offense — for which the Home Office recently released guidance — underscores the U.K.'s commitment to hold companies accountable on environmental grounds, and in lowering the bar for establishing liability, offers claimants a wider set of tools to wield against multinational entities, say lawyers at Bracewell.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: State Immunity And ICSID Awards

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    In a landmark decision in cases involving Spain and Zimbabwe, the English Court of Appeal grappled with the intersection of state immunity and the enforcement of arbitration awards, setting a precedent for future disputes involving sovereign entities in the U.K, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Inside The Premier League's Financial Regulation Dilemma

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    The Premier League's arbitration award in its dispute with Manchester City Football Club has raised significant financial governance concerns in English football, and a resolution may set a precedent in regulatory development, say consultants at Secretariat.

  • What UK Procurement Act Delay Will Mean For Stakeholders

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    The Procurement Act 2023’s delay until February 2025 has sparked debate among contracting authorities and suppliers, and the Labour Party’s preference for a broader reform package demonstrates the challenges involved in implementing legislative changes where there is a change in government, say lawyers at Shoosmiths.

  • 2 Highlights From Labour's Notable Employment Rights Bill

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    The Labour government’s recently unveiled Employment Rights Bill marks the start of a generational shift in U.K. employment law, and its updates to unfair dismissal rights and restrictions on fire-and-rehire tactics are of particular note, say lawyers at Covington.

  • Inspecting The New Int'l Arbitration Site Visits Protocol

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    The International Bar Association's recently published model protocol for site visits is helpful in offering a standardized, sensible approach to a range of typical issues that arise in the course of scheduling site visits in construction, engineering or other types of disputes, say attorneys at V&E.

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