Commercial Litigation UK

  • April 22, 2025

    Academic Says Journal Infringed Nanotube Paper Copyright

    An American bioengineering researcher argued at the start of a London trial Tuesday that a scientific journal had wrongly published a paper related to carbon nanotubes without her consent, urging the judge to rule that it had infringed her copyright.

  • April 22, 2025

    Eye Doctor Can't Sue Over Unpaid Role Lost After Gaza Posts

    A tribunal has blocked an eye doctor's discrimination claim after she lost her role with a professional body over allegedly antisemitic social media posts on the Israel-Hamas war, ruling that she was not an employee.

  • April 22, 2025

    Bouygues UK Unit Wins Appeal To Ax Age Bias Claim

    A U.K. subsidiary of engineering firm Bouygues has won its bid to toss out an age discrimination claim brought by a former employee, with an appeal tribunal ruling that the ex-worker brought the claim too late without good reason.

  • April 22, 2025

    London Council Seeks £7M Over Leisure Center Blaze

    A London local authority has sued a leisure center operator and a construction company for £7.4 million ($9.9 million), arguing that inadequate fire safety measures led to a blaze in the center's sauna facilities.

  • April 22, 2025

    Schneider To Pay £35K For Racist Treatment Of Ex-Staffer

    An employment tribunal has ruled that Schneider Electric must pay £35,109 ($47,000) to a Black employee who had been set up to fail by his bosses because they preferred a white woman for the job. 

  • April 22, 2025

    Investment Biz Denies Liability In £12M Property Loan Dispute

    An investment company has hit back at a fund's £11.8 million ($15.8 million) High Court claim alleging that it caused the fund to lend money for property developments that were likely to fail.

  • April 22, 2025

    TUI Faces More Claims Over Gastric Illness Outbreak

    More than 100 holidaymakers have sued package holiday company TUI, alleging that they suffered gastric illnesses because of unhygienic conditions in a Cape Verde hotel, the latest in a string of similar claims brought by Irwin Mitchell LLP.

  • April 22, 2025

    Nyetimber Sues Distillery In 'Product Of England' TM Row

    English sparkling winemaker Nyetimber has hit a Devon distillery with a claim for trademark infringement, accusing the gin maker of benefiting from its established reputation by copying the wine producer's "Product of England" branding on its bottles and labels.

  • April 22, 2025

    Employers Must Answer Tribunal Claims Via Portal, Not Email

    Employers and their lawyers will have to respond to claims brought by workers at the Employment Tribunal through new online portals rather than email, according to new rules coming into force in May.

  • April 18, 2025

    Russia Loses Bid To Nix $219M Award Enforcement Suit

    Russia must face litigation filed by a subsidiary of one of Ukraine's largest privately owned energy distributors to enforce a $219 million arbitral award it won after its Crimean assets were seized, after a D.C. federal judge on Thursday rejected the country's sovereign immunity defenses.

  • April 17, 2025

    UK Says NY Convention Doesn't Kill Sovereign Immunity

    Ratifying the New York Convention isn't enough to strip away a state's right to plead sovereign immunity in a later dispute over a contract that might be subject to the convention's rules, a London court has ruled.

  • April 17, 2025

    Naftogaz Wins Enforcement Of $5B Russia Award In France

    A French court has signed off on a bid by Ukraine's state-owned oil and gas company to enforce a $5 billion arbitral award it won against Russia after the Kremlin seized its Crimean assets, the company said on Thursday.

  • April 17, 2025

    Pillsbury Seeks Help Finding Ex-Solicitor In Prison

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal agreed on Thursday to help Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP locate a solicitor in prison so she has a fair chance to pursue her appeals against her former firm.

  • April 17, 2025

    Coty Wins Bid To Block Gray Market Hugo Boss Perfume Sale

    Multinational beauty brand Coty has convinced a Hague court to block a Benelux cosmetics company from selling bottles of Hugo Boss perfume that were not permitted for sale in the European Union.

  • April 17, 2025

    Mishcon De Reya Must Pay £24K To Ex-Director For Dismissal

    Mishcon de Reya LLP must pay a former sales director £23,800 ($31,500) after it pushed him to quit by scrutinizing his performance even though there was nothing he could do to improve his output, a tribunal said in a decision published Thursday.

  • April 17, 2025

    Natural Gas Co. Loses Challenge To $233M Arbitration Award

    A Nigerian liquefied natural gas producer has lost its fight to escape having to indemnify a fellow Nigerian fossil fuel business for a $233 million arbitration award, with a London appeals court rejecting its case that the indemnity was unenforceable.

  • April 17, 2025

    Music Royalties Co. Hipgnosis Revives UK Fight With Manilow

    British music royalties firm Hipgnosis can forge ahead with its unpaid royalties case against singer Barry Manilow in the U.K., after an appellate panel on Thursday overturned a pause imposed because of parallel proceedings in Los Angeles.

  • April 17, 2025

    Litigation-Funders Breathe Sigh Of Relief After Apple Ruling

    Litigation-funders say that an appellate decision confirming they can be paid first in opt-out collective actions has steadied the ship after court setbacks and government inaction prompted questions about the financial viability of backing big claims.

  • April 17, 2025

    Israeli Makes Final Bid To Block US Hacking Extradition

    Lawyers for an Israeli private investigator fighting extradition to face hacking charges in the U.S. urged a London judge Friday to reject diplomatic assurances about conditions at a New York prison, saying that violence was "endemic" there.

  • April 17, 2025

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

    The past week in London has seen the producers of West End show "Elf the Musical" face a contract dispute, Korean biotech company ToolGen Inc. bring a fresh patents claim against pharma giant Vertex, and ousted car tycoon Peter Waddell bring a claim against the private equity firm that backed his business. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • April 17, 2025

    Booking Agency Revives Claim Over Coldplay Gigs Payout

    An appeals court has rekindled a concert booking agency's claim that a former employee must hand over the commission from arranging a set of Coldplay gigs, ruling in a split decision Thursday that an earlier judge was too quick to toss the case.

  • April 17, 2025

    Worker Wins 2nd Shot At Claim Over Vetting Concerns

    A systems designer can have a second shot at arguing that she wasn't hired by a digital services consultancy because she questioned its vetting practices, after an appeals tribunal said Thursday that she made whistleblowing claims.

  • April 17, 2025

    Ex-Pandora Boss Sues Trustee Over £3.3M Tax Bill

    The former president of jewelry giant Pandora has sued a tax adviser for allegedly mismanaging his retirement trust and negligently exposing him and the company to significant liabilities and financial loss tied to a €2.2 million ($2.5 million) French property deal.

  • April 17, 2025

    VietJet Must Pay Investor $180M In Plane Lease Dispute

    A Vietnamese budget airline must pay the subsidiary of an international private investment company more than $180 million for failing to return its planes, as a judge ruled Thursday that a termination clause in the lease agreement was not a penalty provision.

  • April 17, 2025

    Ex-Burberry Designer Can Expand ADHD Discrimination Case

    A Burberry fashion design school graduate who alleged that having meetings in his workplace was disability discrimination because he has ADHD was granted permission on Thursday to expand his case — but only if he provides more details.

Expert Analysis

  • BT Case May Shape UK Class Action Landscape

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    The first opt-out collective action trial commenced in Le Patourel v. BT in the U.K. Competition Appeal Tribunal last month, regarding BT's abuse of dominance by overcharging millions of customers, will likely provide clarification on damages and funder returns in collective actions, which could significantly affect the class action regime, say lawyers at RPC.

  • Key Points From EC Economic Security Screening Initiatives

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    Lawyers at Herbert Smith analyze the European Commission's five recently announced initiatives aimed at de-risking the EU's trade and investment links with third countries, including the implementation of mandatory screening mechanisms and extending coverage to investments made by EU companies that are controlled subsidiaries of non-EU investors.

  • Following The Road Map Toward Quantum Security

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    With the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent publication of a white paper on a quantum-secure financial sector, firms should begin to consider the quantum transition early — before the process is driven by regulatory obligations — with the goal of developing a cybersecurity architecture that is agile while also allowing for quantum security, say lawyers at Cleary.

  • Why EU Ruling On Beneficial Ownership May Affect The UK

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    Following the EU judgment in Sovim v. Luxembourg that public access to beneficial ownership information conflicts with data protection rights, several British overseas territories and dependencies have recently reversed their commitment to introduce unrestricted access, and challenges to the U.K.’s liberal stance may be on the cards, says Rupert Cullen at Allectus Law.

  • Opinion

    Labour Should Reconsider Its Discrimination Law Plans

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    While the Labour Party's recent proposals allowing equal pay claims based on ethnicity and disability, and introducing dual discrimination, have laudable intentions and bring some advantages, they are not the right path forward as the changes complicate the discrimination claim process for employees, say Colin Leckey and Tarun Tawakley at Lewis Silkin.

  • AI Is Outpacing IP Law Frameworks

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    In Thaler v. Comptroller-General, the U.K. Supreme Court recently ruled that artificial intelligence can't be an inventor, but the discussion on the relationship between AI and intellectual property law is far from over, and it's clear that technology is developing faster than the legal framework, says Stephen Carter at The Intellectual Property Works.

  • 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.

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