Commercial Litigation UK

  • April 25, 2025

    Deripaska Sues To Uncover Source Of Allegedly Forged Report

    A Russian oligarch has asked a London court to order a business intelligence company to divulge the source of an allegedly forged report used to back up a former business partner's bid to challenge a $95 million arbitration award.

  • April 25, 2025

    M&S Worker Fired Upon Disclosing Pregnancy Wins Claim

    A former Marks and Spencer worker has won her discrimination case after a tribunal concluded that she was dismissed because she disclosed she was pregnant.

  • April 25, 2025

    Management Co. Denies Claims By Angus And Julia Stone

    London-based music management company HNOE Ltd. has hit back at an AU$1.1 million ($690,000) counterclaim by Australian indie pop duo Angus and Julia Stone in their dispute over management agreement commission payments, saying that the band's case was "plainly false."

  • April 25, 2025

    Tycoon's Son Loses Challenge To £3M Howard Kennedy Bill

    The son of a diamond tycoon accused of swindling $1 billion from banks lost his bid for a court-ordered review of his legal bills from Howard Kennedy on Friday as the High Court said he knew of the climbing costs linked to his international fraud case.

  • April 25, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen pub operator Stonegate sue insurance broker Marsh, a human rights lawyer sued for defamation by Russian businessman Ovik Mkrtchyan, and British toy-maker The Character Group reignite an employment dispute with a former finance director. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • April 25, 2025

    Fashion Firm Beats Unfair Dismissal Claim From Ex-Employee

    A judge tossed an unfair dismissal claim on Friday brought by a former employee of a luxury fashion recruitment consultancy, saying the business made a fair decision to fire her based on poor performance.

  • April 25, 2025

    Crypto Firm Denies $5M Joint Venture Claim From Tether Unit

    A crypto trading firm has denied it has to hand cryptowallets and roughly $5 million in tokens and cash from a bitcoin mining joint venture to a unit of the blockchain company Tether, arguing it owns any assets or intellectual property generated by its investments.

  • April 25, 2025

    Aegon Defeats Worker's Contract Claim After Work Transfer

    Aegon has beaten an unfair dismissal claim brought by a former Nationwide employee who resigned after his job transferred to the insurer, arguing that changes to his work conditions left him no choice but to quit.

  • April 25, 2025

    MoD Supplier Says Ex-Worker Leaked Classified Warship Info

    An engineering firm has accused a former employee of handing a rival classified data linked to its supply of components for warships to the Royal Navy, telling a London court that his actions have damaged its relationship with the Ministry of Defence.

  • April 24, 2025

    SocGen Blames Clifford Chance For Failed $483M Gold Claim

    SocGen has told the High Court that Clifford Chance LLP was negligent in its advice to the bank over a gold bullion dispute worth $483 million, saying the poor advice caused the lender's claim to be struck out as an abuse of process.

  • April 24, 2025

    Bollywood Film Unit To Pay £84K To Ex-Exec Forced To Quit

    Bollywood media conglomerate Eros International Ltd. must pay its former chief strategy officer over £84,000 ($112,000) after an employment tribunal upheld his claim for constructive dismissal.

  • April 24, 2025

    IBM Rival Gets Sales Ban Stayed In Reverse-Engineering Fight

    A London court said Thursday it will delay an order banning a Swiss company's sales of technology that it unlawfully reverse-engineered from IBM's software, holding fire while awaiting the outcome of a potential appeal.

  • April 24, 2025

    Marine Co. Claims Axis Bank Misled It Into $21M Loan Scheme

    A marine energy company has sued the Dubai branch of India's Axis Bank for $41.7 million, alleging that the lender misled it into participating in a loan to a shipping company secured against ships that were later sold without its knowledge.

  • April 24, 2025

    Digital Pharma Biz Sues Lender Over CEO Loan Collusion

    A digital pharmacy company has accused a small business lender of knowingly working with its former CEO to funnel huge unauthorized loans into the firm, ignoring clear signs that the executive was acting dishonestly and beyond his powers.

  • April 24, 2025

    Peloton Discriminated Against Autistic Worker, Judge Says

    Peloton discriminated against a member of staff with autism by requiring him to work in public areas at its London studio, a tribunal has said as it ruled that it would have been a reasonable adjustment by the fitness business to trial a back-office job for his disability.

  • April 24, 2025

    Scaffolding Biz Denies Infringing Rival's Safety Gate Patent

    Brisko Scaffolding has denied claims from rival company National Tube Straightening Service that its "Stay Safe" gate infringed the rival's patent, and has also asked a London court to declare National Tube's patent invalid.

  • April 24, 2025

    Canfield Law Faces £4M Claim Over Alleged Property Fraud

    A Hong Kong businessman has accused a London law firm in a High Court claim of failing to ask questions in connection with a high-value property deal, which he says facilitated a fraud that cost him more than £4 million ($5.3 million).

  • April 23, 2025

    Russia Seeks Stay In $5B Award Stemming From Loan Dispute

    The Russian Federation asked a D.C. federal court to pause enforcing a $5 billion arbitration award compensating Yukos Capital for Russia's alleged expropriation of loans while litigation plays out in a U.S. Supreme Court case involving the jurisdiction of American courts over international arbitration agreements. 

  • April 23, 2025

    Lawyers Face Misconduct Case For Letting Trainee Run Firm

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority told a disciplinary tribunal on Wednesday that a group of lawyers were guilty of misconduct for allowing a trainee to buy and run a firm, leading to accounts rules breaches and a mishandled case.

  • April 23, 2025

    Qatari Exec Sues Ackroyd For £4.5M Over Botched Hotel Deal

    A Qatari executive and his sister are suing their solicitor and his firm, Ackroyd Legal, after the lawyers allegedly failed to warn the siblings about a dangerous property deal and allowed them to lose up to £4.5 million ($6 million) when the deal soured.

  • April 23, 2025

    Aspiring Solicitor Defends 'Fraudster' Review Of Former Firm

    An aspiring solicitor has hit back against a claim that she posted defamatory online reviews labeling her former boss a "fraudster," telling a London court that the reviews were true.

  • April 23, 2025

    UKIPO Not Corrupt For Rejecting Patent, Judge Rules

    A judge has dismissed a case against the head of the U.K. Intellectual Property Office, finding that an inventor had waited years after his patent was rejected to bring baseless claims of malice and corruption.

  • April 23, 2025

    Trustee Sues Adviser Over Loan To Insolvent Housing Firm

    A trustee is suing an adviser for alleged fraudulent misrepresentation over claims they caused a family trust to loan £5.75 million ($7.65 million) to a company the adviser partially owned, which later fell into insolvency.

  • April 23, 2025

    Visa Settles With Retailers After Swipe Fees Pass-On Trial

    Lawyers representing more than 1,800 businesses said Wednesday that they have reached a settlement with Visa over allegations the company imposed excessively high credit card fees — weeks after the conclusion of a trial over whether overcharges were passed on.

  • April 23, 2025

    Heathrow Guard Unfairly Fired Over Alleged Racist Video

    A tribunal has held that Heathrow Airport unfairly fired a security officer after he showed his colleague a video allegedly portraying India as dirty, ruling that his actions did not justify dismissal.

Expert Analysis

  • UK Top Court Charts Limits Of Liability In Ship Explosion Case

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    A recent U.K. Supreme Court ruling, capping a ship charterer's damages for an onboard explosion, casts a clarifying light upon the murky waters of maritime liability, particularly concerning the delicate operation of limitation under the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • What Latest VC Model Document Revisions Offer UK Investors

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    Recent updates to the British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association model documents, reflecting prevailing U.K. market practice on early-stage equity financing terms and increasing focus on compliance issues, provide needed protection for investors in relation to the growth in global foreign direct investment regimes, say lawyers at Davis Polk.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Precision In Jurisdiction Clauses

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    The High Court recently held that a contract requiring disputes to be heard by U.K. courts superseded arbitration agreements between long-time business affiliates, reinforcing the importance of drafting precise jurisdiction clauses that international commercial parties in multiagreement relationships will use to resolve prior disputes, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • What Age Bias Ruling Means For Law Firm Retirement Policies

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    The recent employment tribunal age discrimination decision in Scott v. Walker Morris demonstrates that while law firms may implement mandatory retirement schemes, the policy must pursue a legitimate aim via proportionate means to pass the objective justification test, says Chris Hadrill at Redmans Solicitors.

  • Acas Guide Shows How To Support Neurodiverse Employees

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    A new guide on neurodiversity in the workplace from the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service reminds employers of the duty to make reasonable adjustments that will effectively alleviate any disadvantage an employee may experience at work, say lawyers at Withers.

  • UK's Arbitration Act Is More A Revision Than An Overhaul

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    The recently enacted U.K. Arbitration Act 2025 represents the most significant update to English arbitration law since 1996, and while it reinforces many strengths that made London the leading arbitral seat, its failure to address certain key areas means the legislation missed the opportunity to truly be a benchmark, say lawyers at RPC.

  • Google Win Illustrates Hurdles To Mass Data Privacy Claims

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    The Court of Appeal's December decision in Prismall v. Google, holding each claimant in a mass data privacy suit must demonstrate an individualized and sufficiently serious injury, demonstrates the difficulty of using representative action to collect damages for misused private information, say lawyers at Seladore Legal.

  • How New EU Product Liability Directive Will Affect Tech And AI

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    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.

  • EU Hybrid Venue Ruling Doesn't Ensure Local Enforceability

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    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.

  • New CMA Powers Will Change Consumer Protection Regime

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    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.

  • A Look At Current Challenges In Whistleblowing Practice

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    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.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Fiscal Liability Vs. Int'l Investment

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    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.

  • How UK Supreme Court May Assess Russia Sanctions Cases

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    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.

  • How EU Digital Act Could Shape UK Technology Disputes

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    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.

  • How EU's Anticoercion Tool May Counter New US Tariffs

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    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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