Commercial Litigation UK

  • October 11, 2024

    Waste Co. Directors Hit Back At Energy Biz Buyer For £5.4M

    The directors of a waste management company have hit back with a £5.4 million ($7.1 million) counterclaim against a business that acquired their food waste processing plant, accusing the buyer of diverting waste away from the operation to minimize performance-based payments.

  • October 11, 2024

    Coca-Cola Driver Wins Bias Appeal Over Blackout Disorder

    A tribunal wrongly held that a Coca-Cola truck driver's coughing condition, which causes him to black out, did not render him disabled for the purpose of his claim of disability discrimination, a London appeals judge has ruled.

  • October 10, 2024

    Miner Liable To PE Firm Over Axed $1B Brazilian Mine Deal

    South African miner Sibanye-Stillwater is liable to pay damages to private equity firm Appian Capital Advisory LLP for withdrawing from a $1 billion deal to buy two Brazilian copper and nickel mines, a London court ruled Thursday.

  • October 10, 2024

    UK Exit Taxes OK When Paid Over Time, Upper Tribunal Says

    An exit tax on U.K. trusts leaving the country pre-Brexit interfered with their European Union right to free movement of capital, but is brought into compliance if trusts can pay the tax over at least a five-year period, the Upper Tribunal ruled.

  • October 10, 2024

    Exxon Suing Netherlands Over Gas Phaseout Plans

    An ExxonMobil unit has accused the Netherlands of reneging on its contractual obligations related to the phasedown of gas extraction activities in the country's earthquake-stricken Groningen oil field.

  • October 10, 2024

    Lawyers Call On EHRC To Promote Race Bias Claim Funding

    The U.K.'s equalities watchdog funded just 27 cases from 2022 to 2023, prompting calls from employment specialist GQ Littler on Thursday to better advertise its race discrimination legal support fund.

  • October 10, 2024

    Ex-Goldman Manager Claims £3.8M In Paternity Sex Bias Case

    A former Goldman Sachs compliance manager launched his sex discrimination case against the investment bank on Thursday, claiming £3.8 million ($5 million) and alleging that his bosses used redundancy as a smokescreen to sack him for taking paternity leave.

  • October 10, 2024

    HSBC Appeals To Throw Out Job Applicant's Race Bias Claim

    HSBC Bank PLC urged a London appeals court Thursday to dismiss a job applicant's discrimination claim that alleged it unfairly refused to hire her for a director role, arguing that an employment tribunal had made factual errors when it revived the case.

  • October 10, 2024

    Howden Seeks To Move Part Of Aon Poaching Case To Brazil

    Howden Group Thursday urged a court to stay parts of a claim by professional services firm Aon against the broker related to alleged staff poaching from Aon's Brazilian insurance business, saying the South American country is the right venue for the dispute.

  • October 10, 2024

    Risk Co. Can't Pursue Bankruptcy Against Guernsey Resident

    A risk management company lost its attempt to bring bankruptcy proceedings against a man in Guernsey that owes it around £2 million ($2.6 million), after a London court ruled the business couldn't meet the conditions to file outside England and Wales.

  • October 10, 2024

    Ex-CEO Wins £115K For Dismissal Before Meat Supplier's Sale

    The ousted chief executive of a meat supplier has won £115,352 ($150,802) after an employment tribunal ruled that administrators made him redundant in order to attract offers to buy his failing company.

  • October 10, 2024

    Top Takeaways From The Employment Rights Bill

    Proposals for the landmark Employment Rights Bill unveiled Thursday present a huge challenge for employers, and will force businesses to adapt quickly to meet confirmed plans to give workers new rights from their first day on the job and introduce new restrictions on employment contracts.

  • October 10, 2024

    Lebanese Bank Claims It Was Told Not To Repay $234M Debt

    Lebanon's largest private lender has claimed that the central bank of the Middle East state advised it not to repay foreign loans and interests totaling more than $234 million it owed to a member of the World Bank Group because of an economic crisis.

  • October 10, 2024

    Law Firm Owner Faces SDT Over Conflict Of Interest

    A law firm owner has been referred to a disciplinary tribunal to face allegations that he created a risk of a conflict of interest by acting for one client in a financial dispute with another client of the firm, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said.

  • October 10, 2024

    Advisers Say Council's 'Extreme' Risk Appetite Lost It £20M

    Laven Advisors LLP has denied that one of its representatives made fraudulent misrepresentations about high-risk bonds to an English local authority, claiming the £20 million ($26.1 million) investment loss incurred by the council was a result of its own "extreme" risk appetite.

  • October 09, 2024

    Bank Of Scotland Forced £18.5M Hotel Asset Sale, Court Hears

    The Bank of Scotland acted in bad faith by forcing a high-end hotel group it partly owns to sell valuable premises at a reduced price, a lawyer for the hospitality chain said on the first day of trial Wednesday.

  • October 09, 2024

    Litigation Funder Sues After-The-Event Insurer For £61M

    A legal loans company has sued an insurer for around £61.4 million ($80.3 million) over its alleged failure to pay out under a litigation funding arrangement.

  • October 09, 2024

    State Immunity Blocks Harassment Case Against Ambassador

    The former advisor to Ivory Coast's U.K. ambassador cannot bring claims of unfair dismissal and sexual harassment against a government unit after an employment tribunal ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the case.

  • October 09, 2024

    Nigerians Fight 'All-Or-Nothing' Ruling In Shell Oil Spill Case

    Lawyers representing thousands of Nigerian villagers urged the Court of Appeal on Wednesday to reverse a ruling that requires them to prove that Shell is responsible for all the chronic oil pollution in their claim against the energy giant.

  • October 09, 2024

    Tech Co. Denies Claim That Plasma Reactor Was Never Built

    A developer of graphene-based materials has denied misusing money that a Chinese businessman invested in the British company in the belief that it would build a so-called plasma reactor.

  • October 09, 2024

    Law Firms Sued For Botched Advice In £5M Ponzi Scheme

    Property investors have claimed two law firms failed to warn them of the dangers of sinking their savings into a building project that turned out to be an alleged £5.4 million ($7 million) Ponzi scheme.

  • October 09, 2024

    Mozambique Targets Heirs Over 'Tuna Bond' Bribery Award

    Mozambique urged a London court on Wednesday to hold the heirs of shipbuilding magnate Iskandar Safa liable for the French-Lebanese billionaire's involvement in a bribery scheme as the country seeks to enforce a $1.9 billion damages award.

  • October 09, 2024

    London University Careers Director Loses Equal Pay Claim

    A tribunal has ruled that a London university did not pay a female director less than her male counterparts based on her sex — but the judge hinted that a fresh claim based on a more recent time period might succeed.

  • October 08, 2024

    Poland Must Pay $330M In Coal Mining Fight

    Australian critical minerals company GreenX Metals said Tuesday that it's won some $330 million following four years of arbitration against Poland after the country blocked two of its coal mining projects.

  • October 08, 2024

    AI And Geopolitics Top Concerns For Employers In 2024

    British businesses are early adopters of artificial intelligence, especially in recruitment and human resources, but a dearth of policies about how to use the technology in the workplace leaves companies at risk of discrimination and data privacy claims, Littler's annual survey of European employers published on Wednesday shows.

Expert Analysis

  • Construction Ruling Clarifies Key Payment Mechanism Issue

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    The English Technology and Construction Court's recent decision in Lidl v. Closed Circuit Cooling, clarifying when construction contracts' payment mechanisms must be fixed as a set period of time, should encourage both paying parties and payees to ensure that their contracts' payment deadlines are unambiguous, say Rebecca Williams and Jack Moulder at Watson Farley.

  • Key Findings From Law Commission Review Of Arbitration Act

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    The U.K. law reform body's recent arbitration standards recommendations to the government include a clarification of governing law, leave many areas unchanged, and include a surprise on discrimination, say Poonam Melwani and Claire Stockford at Quadrant Chambers.

  • Bitcoin Case Highlights Advanced Age Of UK's IP Law

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    An appellate court's recent decision in a case involving the copyright of bitcoin's file format emphasizes the role of copyright protection in software, and also the challenges of applying decades-old laws to new technologies, say Marianna Foerg and Ben Bell at Potter Clarkson.

  • Accountability Is Key To Preventing Miscarriages Of Justice

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    The wrongful conviction of Andrew Malkinson and other recent cases show that in order to avoid future miscarriages of justice, there needs to be a fundamental reevaluation of how investigators, prosecutors and the Criminal Cases Review Commission operate, prioritizing stronger penalties and increased funding, say Thomas Walford at Expert Evidence International and policy analyst Gerald Frost.

  • UN Code Likely To Promote Good Arbitration Practices

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    The arbitrator code of conduct recently adopted by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law should help reinforce standards of good practice and improve public perception of investor-state dispute settlement, though its effectiveness may be limited by the code's voluntary nature, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • 6 Key Factors For Successful Cross-Border Dispute Mediation

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    The European landscape of cross-border disputes diverges markedly from the U.S. experience and presents unique challenges, including the amalgamation of diverse cultures and legal systems, but there are several practical steps that practitioners can take to effectively navigate the process, says Peter Kamminga at JAMS.

  • EU Ruling Highlights Strategic Benefits Of Patent Appeals

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    The European Patent Office board of appeal recently reversed the examining board's ruling in an application by LG Electronics, highlighting how applicants struggling to escape conflicting objection traps at the examination level can improve their chances of a positive outcome with an appeal, says Andrew Rudhall at Haseltine Lake.

  • UK Tech Cases Warn Of Liability Clause Drafting Pitfalls

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    The recent U.K. High Court cases Drax Energy Solutions v. Wipro and EE v. Virgin Mobile Telecoms indicate a more literal judicial approach to construing limitations of liability, even when this significantly limits a claimant's recoverable damages, highlighting the importance of carefully drafted liability provisions, say Helen Armstrong and Tania Williams at RPC.

  • Series

    In A 'Barbie' World: Boosting IP Value With Publicity Machines

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    Mattel's history of intellectual property monitoring, including its recent challenge against Burberry over the "BRBY" trademark ahead of the "Barbie" film, shows how IP enforcement strategies can be used as publicity to increase brand value and inform potential collaborations, says Carly Duckett at Shepherd and Wedderburn.

  • EU Directive Implementation Facilitates Class Action Shift

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    Lawyers at Faegre Drinker discuss the increase in class and consumer action filings leading up to the implementation of the EU's Collective Redress Directive, and predict that certain aspects of the directive will result in a pro-claimant landscape that may mirror that of the U.S. and other common law countries.

  • Swiss Privacy Law Reforms Present Divergences From GDPR

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    The differences between Switzerland’s recently reformed Federal Act on Data Protection and the EU's General Data Protection Regulation, particularly around data breach reporting and the liability of company officers, will need to be carefully managed by multinationals that may have competing obligations under different laws, say Kim Roberts and Vanessa Alarcon Duvanel at King & Spalding.

  • EU Antitrust Rules Set To Pose Challenges To US Businesses

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    With stark differences between U.S. and European Union antitrust regimes, and potential for the forthcoming EU guidelines to turbocharge the commission's appetite for intervention, it is important that U.S. businesses with activities in the region take note of the reforms, say Andrea Pomana and Sarah Wilks at Mayer Brown.

  • Navigating The Rising Threat Of Greenwashing Enforcement

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    Recent high-profile cases before the Danish Consumer Ombudsman are a signal that authorities are ready to take robust action against greenwashing, and with a likely increase in the stringency of laws and severity of penalties, it is vital that businesses promoting their sustainable credentials do so in a compliant manner, says Lars Karnøe at Potter Clarkson.

  • New Legislation May Not Be Needed For Recovery Of Crypto

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    The recent seizure of cryptocurrency under a civil recovery order raises the issue of whether extended powers under the forthcoming Economic Crime Bill are necessary, with the ability to seize crypto-related items that may be the subject of a search order more likely to be of assistance, says Nicola McKinney at Quillon Law.

  • Opinion

    Russia Ruling Should Lead UK To Review Sanctions Policy

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    The High Court's recent dismissal of the first-ever court challenge to Russian sanctions in Shvidler v. Secretary of State sets a demanding standard for overturning designation decisions, highlighting the need for an independent review of the Russia sanctions regime, says Helen Taylor at Spotlight on Corruption.

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