Commercial Litigation UK

  • November 25, 2025

    Shipowner Says $11.5M Claim Over Ship Collision Is Inflated

    A shipowner has admitted that its vessel collided in Bangladesh with another and damaged cargo, but has denied owing almost $11.5 million in damages when the ship could have been repaired for a fraction of that cost.

  • November 25, 2025

    Taylor Wimpey Sues Vinci Unit For £33M Over Fire Defects

    Taylor Wimpey has hit French construction giant Vinci and a subsidiary with a £33 million ($43.5 million) negligence case, alleging the subsidiary installed flammable cladding and was responsible for other fire safety defects on a series of apartment blocks.

  • November 25, 2025

    Gap's Athleta Fights To Revive UK Trademark Protections

    The Gap Inc.'s sportswear brand Athleta urged the Court of Appeal on Tuesday to reinstate one of its trademark protections, arguing that the judge who revoked the trademark did not do a proper assessment of its genuine use or distinctiveness.

  • November 25, 2025

    Asda's Mutant Mandarins Breached IP Rights, French Co. Says

    Supermarket chain Asda infringed on the rights to a protected type of mandarin orange by selling a variety derived through irradiation, the French owner of the rights said at the start of a trial in London on Tuesday

  • November 25, 2025

    InterDigital Fights Amazon's Anti-Suit Block In UK Court

    InterDigital asked a judge Tuesday to lift an order blocking it from seeking anti-suit injunctions in foreign courts in its patent licensing dispute with Amazon, arguing there was no real threat to the e-commerce giant seeking final license terms in England.

  • November 25, 2025

    NCA Files Claim Against Withers, Tycoon Over £50M Trust

    The National Crime Agency has filed a High Court claim against a politician and tycoon and a subsidiary of Withers amid a dispute over his £50 million ($66 million) London property portfolio, which is held in trust by the law firm.

  • November 25, 2025

    Waste Co. Must Pay Fired Worker With Whistleblowing Claim

    A waste management company cannot overturn an order to continue paying one of its drivers, as an employment tribunal ruled it is likely he will win his claim that he was fired for raising health and safety concerns.

  • November 25, 2025

    CILEX Wins Permission To Challenge Mazur Ruling

    The Chartered Institute of Legal Executives has won permission to appeal against the ruling known as Mazur, which affirmed that legal executives and other unauthorized law firm staff could not conduct litigation, even with the supervision of a solicitor.

  • November 25, 2025

    Ex-Tesco Security Officer Wins 2nd Appeal To Amend Case

    A former Tesco security officer has revived his discrimination case against a contracting company after persuading an Edinburgh appeals judge for a second time that a lower tribunal was wrong to throw out his claim.

  • November 25, 2025

    Kuwait Pension Chief's Kids Fail To Escape $1B Bribery Case

    The children of a Kuwaiti pension authority director lost on Tuesday their bid to escape a case the organization has brought over an alleged $1 billion bribery scheme orchestrated by their father, who died in 2022. 

  • November 25, 2025

    Home Office Apologizes, Pays £225K Over War Crimes Libel

    The Home Office apologized "unreservedly" on Tuesday for publishing a report falsely alleging that a Bangladesh-born British citizen was guilty of war crimes and offered him £225,000 ($295,000) in damages — among the largest libel payouts made by the government to one of its citizens.

  • December 02, 2025

    Littleton Names Adam Solomon KC As Head Of Chambers

    Littleton Chambers said Tuesday that Adam Solomon KC has been elected as its new head of chambers, as the London-based employment and commercial set embarks on the next phase in its history under a new leader.

  • November 24, 2025

    $18B Spain Claim Was Nixed Over Investment Issue

    The international tribunal that threw out an $18 billion claim brought by a group of Filipinos who accused Spain of stymying their efforts to enforce a $14.9 billion arbitral award against Malaysia concluded that the claimants had not made a protected investment, according to a newly public award.

  • November 24, 2025

    InterDigital Defends Amazon's Attack On Video Patents

    InterDigital has defended the validity of its video-coding patents amid an ongoing licensing clash with Amazon, telling a London court that its intellectual property is both valid and essential to meeting crucial standards.

  • November 24, 2025

    Advanz Challenges Janssen Patents On Schizophrenia Drug

    A pharmaceuticals company has asked a court to revoke Janssen's two patents that cover how an injectable form of schizophrenia medication should be given to patients who miss a dose, arguing that the regimens were obvious when they were registered.

  • November 24, 2025

    University Staffer Overturns Whistleblowing Claim Strikeout

    A University of Leeds Beckett program director has won his bid to overturn an order striking out a claim against Warwick University, with an appeals tribunal ruling that a judge failed to give enough notice before tossing parts of the case.

  • November 24, 2025

    Regeneron, Bayer Lose Eye Med Biosimilar Battle

    A London court on Monday refused Regeneron and Bayer's attempt to stop a biosimilar company infringing their extended patent protections for eye medicine aflibercept by producing a replica version in the U.K., ruling that the manufacturing fell under an export exemption.

  • November 24, 2025

    Consultancy Denies Wrong Pricing Lost Housing Co. £29M

    A construction consultancy has denied owing a housing association £28.8 million ($37.7 million) over allegedly negligent advice on the value for money of a London property development, claiming its figures were reasonable, even if they were partly wrong.

  • November 24, 2025

    Ex-Trafigura Exec Denies Devising $600M Nickel Fraud

    Trafigura's former head of nickel trading denied conspiring with Prateek Gupta to defraud the company out of $600 million through a sham nickel trade deal, as he gave evidence at the trial on Monday.

  • November 24, 2025

    Sheikh Held Liable For €67M Shares Breach By Top UK Court

    Britain's highest court ruled on Monday that a business tycoon breached his fiduciary duties when he transferred shares out of his wound-up company, and ordered him to hand over €67 million ($77 million) in damages.

  • November 24, 2025

    Pogust's Brazil Shipwreck Case Stalls Over Authority Doubts

    Pogust Goodhead's ability to litigate on behalf of around 18,000 Brazilians following a shipwreck has been thrown into doubt after the 5-year-old case was stayed pending questions over whether the firm is authorized, recently published court documents have revealed.

  • November 24, 2025

    Dozens More Ex-Footballers Join FA Brain Injury Case

    A further 62 former football players have sued three of the sport's administrative bodies for negligence, telling a London court that they developed brain damage because of repeated impacts to the head during their careers.

  • November 24, 2025

    Ex-Georgia PM Wins $607M Appeal Over Credit Suisse Fraud

    The Bermudan life insurance arm of Credit Suisse lost its challenge on Monday to a $607 million damages bill it owes to the former prime minister of Georgia as the top court for overseas U.K territories rejected its arguments.

  • November 24, 2025

    Ex-Investments Head Wins £40K Over Redundancy Clash

    The former head of investments at Kimura Management Services has been awarded almost £40,000 ($52,000) in compensation by a London employment tribunal, which found the defunct trade finance company liable for multiple breaches during its redundancy process.

  • November 22, 2025

    Apple, Amazon Face Renewed £500M Collusion Class Action

    Apple and Amazon are set to face a refreshed £500 million ($654 million) price-fixing class action case in the U.K., with a new class representative reviving a case accusing the two technology giants of illegally colluding.

Expert Analysis

  • EU's AI Act May Lead To More M&A Arbitration

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    With the EU's Artificial Intelligence Act and its stiff penalties beginning to take effect, companies acquiring AI targets should pay close attention to the provisions in the dispute resolution clauses of their deal documents, say Nelson Goh at Pallas Partners and Benjamin Qiu at EKLJ.

  • 2 Cases May Enlighten UK Funds' Securities Litigation Path

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    Following recent nine-figure settlements in securities class actions against Apple and Under Armour, U.K. pension funds may increasingly lead U.S. shareholder derivative suits, advocating for transparency, better risk management and stronger governance practices, say lawyers at Labaton Keller.

  • 7 Pitfalls To Watch In Tech Referral Fee Programs

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    The recent attempt by FluidStack to recover $10 million in referral fees allegedly promised by software vendor Denvr Dataworks should alert potential participants in so-called partnership programs to seven signs that a proposed technology referral agreement may not equally benefit all sides, says Chris Wlach at Huge Inc.

  • Takeaways On Freezing Injunctions After Dos Santos Ruling

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in dos Santos v. Unitel moved the needle in favor of applicants for freezing injunctions in two ways, say lawyers at Cooke Young.

  • How The Wirecard Judge Addressed Unreliability Of Memory

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    In a case brought by the administrator of Wirecard against Greybull Capital, High Court Judge Sara Cockerill took a multipronged and thoughtful approach to a common problem with fraudulent misrepresentation claims — how to assess the evidence of what was said at a meeting where recollections differ and where contemporaneous documentation is limited, says Andrew Head at Forsters.

  • 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.

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