Commercial Litigation UK

  • December 04, 2024

    PrivatBank Ex-Owner Can't Ease Freeze To Sell Stranded Jets

    A London court on Wednesday refused to allow an ex-owner of PrivatBank to sell aircraft stranded in Ukraine after Russia's invasion, concluding the sale may risk breaching a freezing order in a $4.2 billion fraud case.

  • December 04, 2024

    Aviation Biz Sued Over Crash Gear Patent In UK

    A company that makes ejection seats has been accused of infringing a rival's patent for a neck protection system by selling several pieces of crashworthy gear to stop fighter jet pilots from suffering neck injuries.

  • December 04, 2024

    Siemens Unit Beats Whistleblowing Claim Over Military Data

    A Siemens-owned company is off the hook for firing a design engineer after an employment tribunal ruled that his contract wasn't renewed because of performance issues rather than his concerns over the transfer of military data.

  • December 04, 2024

    Lawyers Warn Of Boozy Christmas Party Risks As Claims Fall

    Organizations are being warned to keep end-of-year work parties under control given a new legal duty on employers to prevent sexual harassment, but figures suggest fewer legal claims have emerged in recent years from December festivities.

  • December 04, 2024

    Samsung Says Eye Med Biosimilar Won't Flout Regeneron's IP

    Samsung Bioepis has argued in a London court that its planned eye medicine biosimilar will not infringe Regeneron's patents over the treatment, doubling down on plans to market its own version.

  • December 04, 2024

    Legal Director Wins £6K For Botched Redundancy

    An employment tribunal has ruled that a data management company must pay its former legal director £6,600 ($7,600), finding that the business failed to carry out a proper consultation before it made him redundant.

  • December 04, 2024

    US Immune From Embassy Staffer's Unfair Dismissal Claim

    A motor pool supervisor cannot pursue a claim that he was unfairly dismissed from an American Embassy annex at a Royal Air Force base, after a tribunal found that the U.S. is shielded by state immunity.

  • December 04, 2024

    JPMorgan Accused Of Unfair Firing Over Spoofing Allegations

    A former precious metals trader at JPMorgan has accused his former employer of unfair dismissal, as his lawyer argued on Wednesday that the bank dismissed him to appear tough on fraud after a criminal scandal in 2022.

  • December 04, 2024

    Puma Fails To Block 'Li Puma' Trademarks At EU Court

    Puma has lost its latest attempt to stop a company registering two "Li Puma" trademarks for recycling services, failing on Wednesday to persuade a European Union court that it could damage its sporting goods brand.

  • December 03, 2024

    Surgeon Wins £529K For Race Bias, Whistleblowing Breaches

    An Iraqi surgeon has won £529,000 ($670,000) after convincing a tribunal that a National Health Service trust racially discriminated against him and penalized him for blowing the whistle on alleged problems with the treatment of dozens of patients.

  • December 04, 2024

    Injury Lawyers 4U Hobbles Law Firms' Case In Ad Price Fight

    Injury Lawyers 4U has beaten most of a case brought by three law firms in a fight over prices for TV advertising, as a court ruled that the company did not breach a contract that gave them preferential rates.

  • December 03, 2024

    Consumers Settle £10B Mastercard Swipe Fees Class Action

    Representatives of more than 45 million U.K. consumers confirmed Tuesday that they had settled a multibillion-pound claim against Mastercard over its fees, which is likely to end one of the first cases to test the boundaries of Britain's collective proceedings regime.

  • December 03, 2024

    Makeup School Founder Wins £51K Over Madeup Redundancy

    The co-founder of a makeup school has won more than £51,000 ($65,000) after a tribunal upheld her claims that it unfairly dismissed her by using redundancy as a front to oust her from the company.

  • December 03, 2024

    Retailers Argue For Higher Damages Bill In Swipe Fees Trial

    Retailers suing Mastercard and Visa argued before the Court of Appeal on Tuesday that their damages bill from alleged unlawful overcharging by the card companies should incorporate continuing losses because the anticompetitive conduct has not yet stopped.

  • December 03, 2024

    Footballer Can't Revive £6M Charles Russell Negligence Case

    A former Premier League football player failed on Tuesday to revive his £6 million ($7.6 million) negligence case against Charles Russell Speechlys LLP over advice the law firm gave him in a multimillion-pound dispute with his brother.

  • December 03, 2024

    Property Biz Sues Insurer Over Axiom Mishandling Of Deposit

    A real estate company has sued the insurer of Axiom Ince over the alleged failure of the law firm to safeguard a deposit of £950,000 ($1.2 million) from a property sale after it collapsed into administration in 2023.

  • December 03, 2024

    MoD Can Fight To Nix Female Cop's Fitness Test Sex Bias Win

    An appeals tribunal has given the Ministry of Defence a shot at overturning a ruling that it discriminated against a female police officer when it sacked her for failing a fitness test geared toward men.

  • December 03, 2024

    Microsoft Faces £1B Class Action Over Software Overcharging

    Microsoft was hit on Tuesday with a class action of more than £1 billion ($1.3 billion) brought on behalf of thousands of U.K. businesses alleging that it overcharged for licensing fees to its Windows Server, a software used in cloud computing.

  • December 03, 2024

    Motorists Reach £37M Settlement In Shipping Cartel Case

    Millions of motorists who allegedly overpaid for their cars have reached a £37.3 million ($47.3 million) settlement against two vehicle shipping companies in an opt-out class action before a trial in January, lawyers representing the group said Tuesday. 

  • December 02, 2024

    Russia Looks To 4 FSIA Cases In Bid To Stay $5B Award Suit

    Russia urged a D.C. federal judge to pause a case against it by a Yukos Oil Co. unit seeking to enforce $5 billion in arbitral awards, saying Monday that four parallel Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act cases are pending before the Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit that could affect the suit.

  • December 02, 2024

    Two Latham Lawyers In Paris Head To De Gaulle Fleurance

    Two international arbitration lawyers have departed Latham & Watkins Paris to join French firm De Gaulle Fleurance & Associes, where they plan to help launch an Ibero-American disputes practice.

  • December 02, 2024

    'Harry Potter' Actor Must Pay £1.8M Tax Bill, Tribunal Says

    Actor Rupert Grint, who portrayed Ron Weasley in the Harry Potter film series, faces a £1.8 million ($2.3 million) tax bill after the U.K.'s First-tier Tribunal ruled that tax avoidance was a primary purpose of an entity created to manage his career.

  • December 02, 2024

    Skat Settles With Ex-Barclays Director In £1.4B Fraud Case

    The Danish tax authority has settled its claim against a former Barclays Capital director and four companies that it sued alongside dozens of others over an alleged scheme to defraud it of £1.4 billion ($1.8 billion) in tax revenue.

  • December 02, 2024

    Sports Direct's Ashley Says HMRC Bungled His Data Request

    Sports Direct International PLC founder Michael Ashley argued in a London court Monday that the U.K.'s tax agency improperly handled his data request related to its probe into his 2012 sale of real estate assets, calling its alleged failings "significant, wide-spread and persistent."

  • December 02, 2024

    UK Top Court To Assess Whether AI Tech Can Be Patented

    The U.K.'s highest court will weigh in on whether an artificial intelligence company's invention constitutes a computer program, in a high-profile case that could set new patentability guidelines for the technology.

Expert Analysis

  • UK Courts Continue To Struggle With Crypto-Asset Cases

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    Although the common law has proved capable of applying established principles to crypto-assets, recent cases highlight persistent challenges in identifying defendants, locating assets and determining jurisdiction, suggesting that any meaningful development will likely come from legislative or regulatory change, say Emily Saunderson and Sam Mitchell at Quadrant Chambers.

  • Why Computer Evidence Is Not Always Reliable In Court

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    Recent challenges to the admissibility of encrypted communication from the messaging tool EncroChat highlight the flawed presumption in the U.K. common law framework that computer evidence is always accurate, and why a nuanced assessment of such evidence is needed, say Sam De Silva and Josie Welland at CMS Legal.

  • Lessons On Using 3rd-Party Disclosure Orders In Fraud Cases

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    The expansion of the gateway for service out of jurisdiction regarding third-party information orders has proven to be an effective tool against fraud since it was introduced in 2022, and recent case law offers practical tips on what applicants should be aware of when submitting such orders, says Rosie Wild at Cooke Young.

  • Bias Ruling Offers Guidance On Disqualifying Arbitrators

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    An English court's recent decision in H1 v. W, removing an arbitrator due to bias concerns, reaffirms practical considerations when assessing an arbitrator's impartiality, and highlights how ill-chosen language by an arbitrator can clear the high bar for disqualification, say Andrew Connelly and Ian Meredith at K&L Gates.

  • Employer Lessons From Ruling On Prof's Anti-Zionist Views

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    In Miller v. University of Bristol, an employment tribunal recently ruled that a professor's anti-Zionist beliefs were protected by the Equality Act 2010, highlighting for employers why it’s important to carefully consider disciplinary actions related to an employee's political expressions, says Hina Belitz at Excello Law.

  • Design Rights Can Build IP Protection, EU Lego Ruling Shows

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    The EU General Court's recent ruling in Delta Sport v. EU Intellectual Property Office — that Lego's registered community design for a building block was valid — helps clarify when technically dictated designs can enjoy IP protection, and demonstrates how companies can strategically use design rights to protect and enhance their market position, says Christoph Moeller at Mewburn Ellis.

  • ECJ Ruling Clarifies Lawyer Independence Questions

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    The European Court of Justice's recent ruling in Bonnanwalt v. EU Intellectual Property Office, finding that a law firm had maintained independence despite being owned by its client, serves as a pivotal reference point to understanding the contours of legal representation before EU courts, say James Tumbridge and Benedict Sharrock-Harris at Venner Shipley.

  • Unpacking The Law Commission's Digital Assets Consultation

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    The Law Commission recently published a consultation on recognizing a third personal property category to accommodate the development of digital assets, highlighting difficulties with current models of property rights and the potential consequences of considering digital assets as personal property, say Andrew Tsang and Tom Bacon at BCLP.

  • 1st Appellate Ruling On Digital Terms Sets Tone For Disputes

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    The Court of Appeal's recent ruling in Parker-Grennan v. Camelot, the first appellate decision to consider how online terms and conditions are publicized, provides, in its tone and verdict on incorporation, an invaluable guide for how to approach similar disputes in the digital space, says Eddy Eccles at Covington.

  • Insurance Policy Takeaways From UK Lockdown Loss Ruling

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    An English court's recent decision in Unipolsai v. Covea, determining that insurers' losses from COVID-19 lockdowns were covered by reinsurance, highlights key issues on insurance policy wordings, including how to define a "catastrophe" in the context of the pandemic, says Daniel Healy at Brown Rudnick.

  • How Employers Should Respond To Flexible Work Requests

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    U.K. employees will soon have the right to request flexible working arrangements from the first day of employment, including for religious observances, and refusing them without objective justification could expose employers to indirect discrimination claims and hurt companies’ diversity and inclusion efforts, says Jim Moore at Hamilton Nash.

  • What COVID Payout Ruling Means For Lockdown Loss Claims

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    While the High Court's recent COVID-19 payout decision in Gatwick v. Liberty Mutual, holding that pandemic-related regulations trigger prevention of access clauses, will likely lead to insurers accepting more business interruption claims, there are still evidentiary challenges and issues regarding policy limits and furlough, say Josianne El Antoury and Greg Lascelles at Covington.

  • Spartan Arbitration Tactics Against Well-Funded Opponents

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    Like the ancient Spartans who held off a numerically superior Persian army at the Battle of Thermopylae, trial attorneys and clients faced with arbitration against an opponent with a bigger war chest can take a strategic approach to create a pass to victory, say Kostas Katsiris and Benjamin Argyle at Venable.

  • Opinion

    PACCAR Should Be 1st Step To Regulating Litigation Funders

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    Rather than reversing the U.K. Supreme Court's well-reasoned judgment in PACCAR v. Competition Appeal Tribunal, imposing a regulatory regime on litigation funders in parity with that of lawyers, legislators should build upon it to create a more transparent, competitive and fairer funding industry, says Rosa Curling at Foxglove.

  • Patent Plausibility Uncertainty Persists, EPO Petition Shows

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    While a recent petition for review at the European Patent Office — maintaining that the Board of Appeal misapplied the Enlarged Board of Appeal's order on whether a patent is "plausible" — highlights the continued uncertainty surrounding the plausibility concept, the outcome could provide useful guidance on the interpretation of orders, say lawyers at Finnegan.

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