Commercial Litigation UK

  • June 06, 2024

    Post Office Board Missed Clues, Former Chair Tells Inquiry

    A former chair of the Post Office Ltd. board told the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal on Thursday that the board did not act on a number of "clues" suggesting that the company was wrongly prosecuting innocent subpostmasters.

  • June 06, 2024

    Autoliv, ZF Must Share Expert Evidence In €734M Cartel Claim

    The Court of Appeal has blocked an attempt from two global technology groups to provide separate expert evidence in a €734 million ($799 million) cartel damages claim, finding no material conflict of interest preventing the co-defendants from relying on one joint expert.

  • June 06, 2024

    Fired Ikea Worker Loses COVID-19 Harassment Claim

    An ex-Ikea employee has lost his case that he was unfairly dismissed and harassed over his opposition to COVID-19 safety measures, as an employment tribunal ruled that his beliefs were not challenged, only his behavior.

  • June 06, 2024

    Solicitor Wins Worker Status In Unfair Dismissal Claim

    An employment judge has ruled that a consultant solicitor working on "flexible terms" for a U.K. law firm counts as a worker, rather than being self-employed, in her unfair dismissal claim against the firm.

  • June 06, 2024

    Patent Trial Over AstraZeneca Unit Soliris Drug Set For 2025

    A London judge Thursday agreed to list a quarrel among three pharmaceutical companies over Alexion's patent for a drug that treats rare blood diseases for trial in early 2025, finding there is "some degree of urgency" to resolve the dispute.

  • June 06, 2024

    Regeneron Sees Infringement In Rivals' Biosimilar Eye Meds

    Regeneron has defended the validity of its U.K. eye medicine patents in a London court amid a feud with a biosimilars specialist and its licensing partner, alleging that their plans to market an alternate version will infringe its exclusive right to produce the drug.

  • June 06, 2024

    Pharma Co. Should Get Hungarian Rebate, ECJ Adviser Says

    Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk's mandatory payments into the Hungarian health system should reduce the company's tax base for value-added tax payments, an adviser to the European Union's highest court said Thursday. 

  • June 06, 2024

    Stranded Plane Claims Belong In Ukraine, UK Judge Says

    A London judge ruled Thursday that a legal battle between insurers and aircraft lessors over planes that have been stranded in Ukraine after Russia's 2022 invasion should be heard in Ukraine rather than England.

  • June 06, 2024

    Imam Wins £20K From Mosque Over Religious Harassment

    A mosque in northern England must pay its former Sunni imam £20,000 ($25,570) after a tribunal ruled members of the place of worship accused him of following the beliefs of a rival branch of Islam, which left him with no choice but to quit.

  • June 06, 2024

    Artist Claims Royalties For Queen's Holographic Portrait

    The artist behind a holographic portrait of the queen has fought allegations of copyright infringement, accusing the arts charity that commissioned him of exhibiting some other works for over a decade without paying him.

  • June 06, 2024

    Rwanda Plan Forces Civil Servants To Break Law, Union Says

    Civil servants will be forced to violate international human rights law and their workplace code of conduct if the government requires them to process deportation flights to Rwanda against Strasbourg's rulings, a trade union argued at a London court on Thursday.

  • June 06, 2024

    HMRC Harassed Protesting Staffer With Relocation Ultimatum

    HM Revenue and Customs harassed an employee based on her race by asking her to withdraw a discrimination grievance in return for making her transfer to a new office permanent, a tribunal has ruled.

  • June 06, 2024

    Retailers Filing £1B Data Misuse Class Action Against Amazon

    Retailers said Thursday they are set to file a £1 billion ($1.3 billion) class action against Amazon in London, accusing it of illegally misusing their data to boost its sales and profits.

  • June 06, 2024

    Labour Drops Antisemitism Report Leak Claim On Ex-Staffers

    The Labour Party dropped on Thursday its legal claims against five former employees who it said conspired to leak a damning report on how its internal disciplinary body mishandled allegations of antisemitism and undermined its leader at the time, Jeremy Corbyn.

  • June 05, 2024

    Saudi Investor Bids To Revive Legal Costs Claim Against RLS

    A Saudi Arabian property investor urged a London judge Wednesday to revive his claim against a law firm to recover the costs of investigating and litigating an alleged £35 million ($44.6 million) fraud by a former property business partner that settled mid-trial.

  • June 05, 2024

    Binance Fights To Ax Crypto Investors' £9B Delisting Claim

    The cryptocurrency exchange Binance asked a U.K. tribunal on Wednesday to strike out a £9 billion ($11.5 billion) claim brought by investors who say the exchange illegally colluded with other trading platforms to delist the Bitcoin Satoshi Vision cryptocurrency.

  • June 05, 2024

    Swiss Bank Escapes Investor's Unlawful Conspiracy Claim

    Lombard Odier has partially succeeded in blocking the claims of an investor who says the private bank withheld inside information about the merits of a British nanotech company's U.S. legal dispute with Samsung to convince him to buy shares in the company just before its price tanked.

  • June 05, 2024

    Alston & Bird Hires 2 Arbitration Pros In London

    Alston & Bird LLP has recruited two specialists in international arbitration from a law firm in Dubai in a move to strengthen its capabilities in commercial and construction disputes as well as investor-state cases.

  • June 05, 2024

    McDonald's Loses 'Big Mac' TM Rights Over Poultry In EU

    A European Union court on Wednesday stripped McDonald's of its right to use the "Big Mac" trademark on chicken sandwiches in the bloc, ruling that the fast food giant had failed to put the sign to proper use on poultry products in recent years.

  • June 05, 2024

    Slater And Gordon Fight Ex-Analyst's Redundancy Appeal

    Slater and Gordon LLP challenged on Wednesday an appeal by a former costs analyst, who claims that he was made redundant because he was mentally unwell and wrongly deprived of most of a £20,000 ($25,500) bonus.

  • June 05, 2024

    Trafigura Settles Nickel Fraud Suit With Reuben Brothers Co.

    Trafigura has settled a London legal claim allegedly linked to a major ongoing nickel fraud scandal, the commodities trader confirmed Wednesday.

  • June 05, 2024

    Enterprise Can't Drive 'Commute' TM Into EU Market

    Vehicle rental company Enterprise cannot register its "Commute With Enterprise" trademark in the European Union because consumers could confuse the sign with a transportation tech company's "Qommute" sign, a court in the bloc ruled Wednesday.

  • June 05, 2024

    Carer Wins £41K After Losing Job Over Racism Complaints

    A care worker has won £40,700 ($52,000) in damages after convincing a tribunal that his employer unfairly fired him following a complaint that bosses treated ethnic minorities less favorably in the workplace.

  • June 05, 2024

    Google Must Face £14B Class Action Over Advertising

    Google must face a £13.6 billion ($17.4 billion) class action brought on behalf of website publishers which run advertisements over alleged anticompetitive practices, Britain's antitrust tribunal said Wednesday.

  • June 04, 2024

    Russian Bank Threatens Ukraine With Expropriation Claim

    A Russian bank that operates mainly on the Crimean Peninsula on Monday began the process of filing an arbitration claim against Ukraine, accusing the smaller country of sending it into financial ruin by allegedly nationalizing its assets.

Expert Analysis

  • Tracing The History Of LGBTQ+ Rights In The Workplace

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    Pride History month is a timely reminder of how recent developments have shaped LGBTQ+ employees' rights in the workplace today, and what employers can do to ensure that employees are protected from discrimination, including creating safe workplace cultures and promoting allyship, say Caitlin Farrar and Jessica Bennett at Farrer.

  • Ruling In FCA Case Offers Tips On Flexible Work Requests

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    In Wilson v. Financial Conduct Authority, the Employment Tribunal recently found that the regulator's rejection of a remote work request was justified, highlighting for employers factors that affect flexible work request outcomes, while emphasizing that individual inquiries should be considered on the specific facts, say Frances Rollin, Ella Tunnell and Kerry Garcia at Stevens & Bolton.

  • Pension Scheme Ruling Elucidates Conversion Issues

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    In Newell Trustees v. Newell Rubbermaid UK Services, the High Court recently upheld a pension plan's conversion of final salary benefits to money purchase benefits, a welcome conclusion that considered several notable issues, such as how to construe pension deeds and when contracts made outside scheme rules can determine benefits, say Ian Gordon and Jamie Barnett at Gowling.

  • New Fraud Prevention Offense May Not Make Much Difference

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    By targeting only large organizations, the Economic Crime Act's new failure to prevent fraud offense is striking in that, despite its breadth, it will affect so few companies, and is therefore unlikely to help ordinary victims, says Andrew Smith at Corker Binning.

  • Aldi Design Infringement Case Highlights Assessment Issues

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    The forthcoming English Court of Appeal decision in Marks and Spencer v. Aldi, regarding the alleged infringement of design rights, could provide practitioners with new guidance, particularly in relation to the relevant date for assessment of infringement and the weight that should be attributed to certain design elements in making this assessment, say Rory Graham and Georgia Davis at RPC.

  • Generative AI Raises IP, Data Protection And Contracts Issues

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    As the EU's recent agreement on the Artificial Intelligence Act has fueled businesses' interest in adopting generative AI tools, it is crucial to understand how these tools utilize material to generate output and what questions to ask in relation to intellectual property, data privacy and contracts, say lawyers at Deloitte Legal.

  • Decoding UK Case Law On Anti-Suit Injunctions

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    The English High Court's forthcoming decision on an anti-suit injunction filed in Augusta Energy v. Top Oil last month will provide useful guidance on application grounds for practitioners, but, pending that ruling, other recent decisions offer key considerations when making or resisting claims when there is an exclusive jurisdiction clause in the contract, says Abigail Healey at Quillon Law.

  • Litigation Funding Implications Amid Post-PACCAR Disputes

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    An English tribunal's recent decision in Neill v. Sony, allowing an appeal on the enforceability of a litigation funding agreement, highlights how the legislative developments on funding limits following the U.K. Supreme Court's 2023 decision in Paccar v. Competition Appeal Tribunal may affect practitioners, say Andrew Leitch and Anoma Rekhi at BCLP.

  • EU Product Liability Reforms Represent A Major Shakeup

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    The recent EU Parliament and Council provisional agreement on a new product liability regime in Europe revises the existing strict liability rules for the first time in 40 years by easing the burden of proof to demonstrate that a product is defective, a hurdle that many had previously failed to overcome, say Anushi Amin and Edward Turtle at Cooley.

  • Zimbabwe Ruling Bolsters UK's Draw As Arbitration Enforcer

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    An English court's recent decision in Border Timbers v. Zimbabwe, finding that state immunity was irrelevant to registering an arbitration award, emphasizes the U.K.'s reputation as a creditor-friendly destination for award enforcement, say Jon Felce and Tulsi Bhatia at Cooke Young.

  • Building Safety Ruling Offers Clarity On Remediation Orders

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    The First-tier Tribunal's recent decision in Triathlon Homes v. Stratford Village Development, holding that it was just and equitable to award a remediation contribution order, will undoubtedly encourage parties to consider this recovery route for building defects more seriously, say lawyers at Simmons and Simmons.

  • How AI Inventorship Is Evolving In The UK, EU And US

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    While the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision in Thaler v. Comptroller-General is the latest in a series of decisions by U.K., U.S. and EU authorities that artificial intelligence systems cannot be named as inventors in patents, the guidance from these jurisdictions suggests that patents may be granted to human inventors that use AI as a sophisticated tool, say lawyers at Mayer Brown.

  • EU Report Is A Valuable Guide For Data Controllers

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    The European Data Protection Board recently published a study of cases handled by national supervisory authorities where uniform application of the General Data Protection Regulation was prioritized, providing data controllers with arguments for an adequate response to manage liability in case of a breach and useful insights into how security requirements are assessed, say Thibaut D'hulst and Malik Aouadi at Van Bael.

  • UK Court Ruling Reinforces CMA's Info-Gathering Powers

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    An English appeals court's recent decision in the BMW and Volkswagen antitrust cases affirmed that the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority can request information from entities outside the U.K., reinstating an important implement in the CMA's investigative toolkit, say lawyers at White & Case.

  • UK Ruling Revitalizes Discussions On Harmonizing AI And IP

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    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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