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Commercial Litigation UK
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May 19, 2025
Shein Must Provide Photo Theft Case Documents In The UK
A London judge has ordered Shein to disclose documents in the English courts to prove it owns the copyright to a sample of photographs it has accused Temu of stealing, as part of an ongoing battle between the two ultra-fast-fashion rivals.
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May 19, 2025
Motorola Unit Says Home Office Breached Contract Over Fees
A Motorola Solutions subsidiary that has alleged the Home Office owes it £13.5 million ($18 million) urged a judge at the start of a trial on Monday to rule that the government department's defense was not based on the actual contract between them.
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May 19, 2025
Construction Co. Owes £27K To Worker Dismissed In Transfer
An employment tribunal has ordered Altrad Babcock Ltd. to pay £27,446 ($36,772) to an employee over a botched redeployment effort following an instance of "potential sexual harassment."
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May 19, 2025
Earl Can't Oust Trustees Of Country Estate Amid Family Feud
A London court on Monday rejected a bid by the eldest son of a British aristocratic family to oust the trustees of their multimillion-pound country estate after his father decided not to pass him the property amid a family feud.
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May 19, 2025
Phones 4u Fights Decision Clearing UK Networks Of Collusion
The administrators of Phones 4u urged an appeals court on Monday to overturn a finding that the U.K.'s biggest phone operators did not unlawfully collude when they pulled out of supplying the retail chain, which subsequently went out of business.
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May 19, 2025
Email Sealed DAZN-Coupang FIFA Broadcast Deal, Court Says
The e-commerce business Coupang won its case Monday against streaming platform DAZN, when a judge found the sports broadcaster had reached a deal to provide Coupang with a license to broadcast the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in South Korea.
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May 19, 2025
Associated British Foods Blames Storm For Malawi Flood
Associated British Foods PLC has denied claims from more than 1,700 Malawi citizens that embankments surrounding one of its plantations negligently diverted floodwater into a village, arguing "extraordinarily heavy" rainfall is to blame for the destruction.
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May 19, 2025
UK Aims To Recruit 1,000 Tribunal Judges, Panelists In 2025
The government is aiming to recruit 1,000 judges and panel members by the end of the year before a probable deluge of claims once the Employment Rights Bill comes into effect.
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May 19, 2025
Kelyn Bacon Named President Of Competition Appeal Tribunal
The government has appointed Kelyn Bacon to be president of the Competition Appeal Tribunal, naming a specialist in competition and EU law who has already helped the tribunal to take a tougher stance on the suitability of class action representatives.
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May 19, 2025
EY Accused Of Flawed Audits At NMC Health's £2B Fraud Trial
The administrator of NMC Health accused EY on Monday of "fundamentally flawed" auditing that allowed a major fraud against its business by principal shareholders to go undetected for more than seven years, as a multibillion-pound trial kicked off.
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May 19, 2025
Firm And Consultant Fined £10K Over Accounts Rules Breach
An English law firm and a consultant were each hit with a £5,000 ($6,700) fine by a disciplinary tribunal on Monday after the solicitors' regulator alleged that they allowed the company's client account to be used as a banking facility.
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May 16, 2025
State Immunity In England Needs Clarification, Judge Says
Investors in an Indian satellite communications company have been granted permission to challenge a ruling allowing India's sovereign immunity defense in English litigation to enforce a $217 million arbitral award, after a judge in London ruled Friday that the immunity issue raises broader questions.
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May 16, 2025
Solicitor Struck Off For £1M Fraudulent Transfers
A former owner of a now-defunct law firm has been banned from working as a solicitor after he allowed the firm's client account to receive and transfer more than £1 million ($1.3 million) for illegal purposes long after the business had stopped trading.
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May 16, 2025
Work Agency Loses VAT Deregistration Appeal Over Tax Fraud
An agency worker supply company has lost its latest bid to challenge a decision by the U.K. tax authority to cancel its VAT registration over its alleged links to a tax fraud scheme, as a London appeals court refused its bid on Friday.
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May 16, 2025
Coupang Accuses DAZN Of 'Seller's Remorse' Over FIFA Deal
Coupang accused streaming platform DAZN of experiencing "seller's remorse" and reneging on a deal to provide the e-commerce business with a license to broadcast the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in South Korea at the start of a High Court trial on Friday.
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May 16, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Linklaters and EY face negligence claims from a fintech investment firm, property developer Sir John Ritblat bring legal action against a Guernsey-registered company, and fresh equal pay litigation filed against Morrisons and Safeways. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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May 16, 2025
Ex-BGC Tax Adviser Jailed For Breaching Asset Freeze Order
A former BGC Partners employee was sentenced to 16 months committal in prison Friday for contempt by a London judge Monday after admitting he breached restrictions the court imposed after he committed a £23.5 million ($31.1 million) fraud against a subsidiary.
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May 16, 2025
Steel Biz Says Ex-Exec Must Repay £574K Of Bonus
A British steel supplier has sued its former managing director, alleging he wrongfully retained more than half a million pounds of a conditional bonus following his early departure from the company.
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May 16, 2025
Guardian Story On Murder Of Gay Student Can't Be Libel
The Guardian defeated a claim that it had defamed a man by suggesting he was gay after a court ruled Friday that there is no longer any scope for arguing that right-thinking individuals would think less of someone because of their sexual orientation.
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May 16, 2025
Gov't, EHRC Face Legal Challenge Over Toilet Use Guidance
A group of transgender and intersex individuals launched a legal challenge against the equalities watchdog and a government minister on Friday, arguing that guidance issued following the U.K. Supreme Court's watershed ruling on the legal definition of a woman violates human rights law.
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May 16, 2025
Tycoon Claims PE Firm Unfairly Forfeited €1.5M Investment
Peter Waddell has sued a private equity firm for €1.5 million ($1.7 million) over an investment the tycoon claims was wrongfully forfeited when the company saw him as a "nuisance" following a court battle connected with funding for his car supermarket group.
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May 15, 2025
Clifford Chance Adds Arbitration Expert From Pinsent Masons
Clifford Chance LLP has boosted its international arbitration practice by hiring a lawyer from Pinsent Masons LLP, saying she has broad experience in matters involving Spain and has been appointed to serve as a partner on the global law firm's litigation and dispute resolution team.
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May 15, 2025
HMRC Fights To Keep £261M In Overseas Dividends Tax Battle
The British High Court was wrong to find BAT Industries PLC could have discovered that its tax payments on foreign dividends were made by mistake, HM Revenue & Customs told an appeals court Thursday, urging it to overturn the ruling.
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May 15, 2025
Judge Sidelined Over Bias Concerns In Business Taxes Feud
A London court on Thursday removed a district judge from a dispute over the payment of business taxes, citing a risk of bias amid his "sensitive" response to a challenge of his decision in an earlier linked case.
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May 15, 2025
Software Biz Boss Defends 'Wise' Rebrand In TM Dispute
The chief executive of a software business said he didn't believe that rebranding his business to use the name "Wise" would lead customers to confuse it with digital payments company Wise, as he gave evidence to the trademark infringement trial Thursday.
Expert Analysis
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How New EU Product Liability Directive Will Affect Tech And AI
While the European Union’s new defective product liability directive, effective from December 2026, primarily provides clarifications rather than significant changes, it reflects the EU's commitment to addressing consumer protection and accountability challenges presented by the digital economy and artificial intelligence, say lawyers at Latham.
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EU Hybrid Venue Ruling Doesn't Ensure Local Enforceability
A recent decision from the European Union's top court, affirming that contracts may grant one party greater control over litigation venue, is encouraging for similarly asymmetrical arbitration agreements, but local enforceability rules within the EU and beyond mean that such contracts' validity may still be determined individually, say lawyers at Signature Litigation.
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New CMA Powers Will Change Consumer Protection Regime
The Competition and Markets Authority’s imminent broadened powers to impose penalties on organizations for unethical or misleading practices are likely to transform the U.K.’s consumer protection regime, and may lead to a rise in private litigation and increased regulatory scrutiny, say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.
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A Look At Current Challenges In Whistleblowing Practice
Consensus on the status of reforming Great Britain's whistleblowing framework is currently difficult to discern, and thorny issues revealed by recent cases highlight undesirable uncertainties for those pursuing and defending whistleblowing claims, says Ivor Adair at Fox & Partners.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Fiscal Liability Vs. Int'l Investment
The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes' award in Amec Foster Wheeler USA v. Colombia, upholding the country's jurisdictional objections, exemplifies the growing tension between domestic regulatory measures and international investment protections, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn Square Chambers.
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How UK Supreme Court May Assess Russia Sanctions Cases
In two recent U.K. Supreme Court cases challenging the U.K. Russia sanctions regime, the forthcoming judgments are likely to focus on proportionality and European Convention on Human Rights compatibility, and will undoubtedly influence how future challenges are shaped, says Leigh Crestohl at Zaiwalla.
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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.