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Commercial Litigation UK
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December 05, 2024
Catering Biz Denies Infringing F1-Inspired Fridge Maker's IP
A catering equipment company has denied it infringed a rival's patents and trademarks that covered a line of Formula One-inspired energy-efficient fridges, asking a London court to declare the patents invalid.
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December 05, 2024
Recruiter Accused Of Withholding £629K, WhatsApp Chats
A recruitment company has accused a third-party consultancy in a London court of failing to disclose key WhatsApp conversations with its clients, also alleging that it owes £629,000 ($803,000) in fees after ending their agreement.
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December 05, 2024
UAE Petrol Co. Denies Owing Bank For Unpaid Debt Advice
A United Arab Emirates state-owned petrol company has denied owing an investment bank almost $6.7 million for advice on debt restructuring, claiming the company only needed to pay the lender if it acted on the advice, which it didn't.
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December 05, 2024
Mail On Sunday Pays Damages To Settle 'Statin Deniers' Claim
The publisher of the Mail on Sunday newspaper has paid "very substantial damages" to settle libel claims brought by two doctors it had branded "pernicious liars" who made knowingly false statements about cholesterol-lowering drugs, a lawyer for the doctors told a London court Thursday.
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December 05, 2024
Solaris Says Binance Can't Use AML Gaps To Exit €144M Deal
Online banking group Solaris has rejected Binance's defense to its €144 million ($152 million) claim over a collapsed cryptocurrency debit card scheme, arguing that any alleged breaches of anti-money laundering rules did not entitle the global exchange operator to end the deal.
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December 04, 2024
Cerberus Liable For €358M Payment To Sabadell, Judge Rules
One of Spain's largest banks won €358.5 million ($376.5 million) from Cerberus when a London judge ruled Wednesday that the private equity giant wrongly interpreted investment agreements linked to the bank's Spanish real estate portfolios.
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December 04, 2024
Russian Boat Leaser Sues Charter Guarantors For $60M
A Russian state-owned boat leasing company has sued four Cypriot businesses for more than $60 million, claiming they promised to cover the cost of charters that were wrongfully terminated in the wake of sanctions on Russian companies.
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December 04, 2024
Law Firm Is Withholding £1.5M Trust Fund, Says Businessman
A Dubai-based businessman has alleged that a sports law firm has refused to return £1.5 million ($1.9 million) and deliberately not acknowledged that it held the money on trust for him.
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December 04, 2024
Mastercard Settlement Spat Will Test Class Action Regime
The U.K.'s collective action regime will face a new test after the financial backer of a claim against Mastercard over credit card fees criticized a proposed £200 million ($254 million) settlement that would end nine years of hard-fought litigation.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
Expert Analysis
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How Generative AI Can Enhance Disclosure Review Processes
As recent developments show that implementing artificial intelligence in legal processes remains a critical challenge, the disclosure process — one of the most document-intensive legal exercises — presents itself as a prime use-case, illustrating how generative AI can supplement traditional technology-assisted review, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: The Benefits Of Non-EU Venues
In Spain v. Triodos, a Swedish appeal court recently annulled an intra-EU investment treaty award, reinforcing a growing trend in the bloc against enforcing such awards, and highlighting the advantages of initiating enforcement proceedings in common law jurisdictions, such as the U.K., says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn Square.
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Experian Ruling Helps Cos. Navigate GDPR Transparency
In Information Commissioner v. Experian, the Upper Tribunal recently reaffirmed the lawfulness of the company's marketing practices, providing guidance that will assist organizations in complying with the GDPR’s transparency obligations, say lawyers at Jenner & Block.
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Salvaging The Investor-State Arbitration System's Legitimacy
Recent developments in Europe and Ecuador highlight the vulnerability of the investor-state arbitration framework, but arbitrators can avert a crisis by relying on a poorly understood doctrine of fairness and equity, rather than law, to resolve the disputes before them, says Phillip Euell at Diaz Reus.
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UK Trademark Law May Further Diverge From EU Standards
The recently enacted Retained EU Law Act, which removes the principle of EU law supremacy, offers a path for U.K. trademark law to distance itself even further from EU precedent — beyond the existing differences between the two trademark examination processes, say David Kemp and Michael Shaw at Marks & Clerk.
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Clarity Is Central Theme In FCA's Greenwashing Guidance
Recent Financial Conduct Authority guidance for complying with the U.K. regulator's anti-greenwashing rule sends an overarching message that sustainability claims must be clear, accurate and capable of being substantiated, say lawyers at Cadwalader.
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How Clinical Trials Affect Patentability In US And Europe
A comparison of recent U.S. and European patent decisions — concerning the effect of disclosures in clinical trials on the patentability of products — offers guidance on good practice for companies dealing with public use issues and prior art documents in these commercially important jurisdictions, say lawyers at Finnegan.
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ECHR Ruling May Pave Path For A UK Climate Damage Tort
In light of case law on the interaction between human rights law and common law, the European Court of Human Rights' recent ruling in KlimaSeniorinnen v. Switzerland, finding the country at fault for failures to tackle global warming, could tip the scales toward extending English tort law to cover climate change-related losses, say lawyers at Cleary.
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Disciplinary Ruling Has Lessons For Lawyers On Social Media
A recent Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal judgment against a solicitor for online posts deemed antisemitic and offensive highlights the serious sanctions that can stem from conduct on social media and the importance of law firms' efforts to ensure that their employees behave properly, say Liz Pearson and Andrew Pavlovic at CM Murray.
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The Art Of Corporate Apologies: Crafting An Effective Strategy
Public relations challenges often stop companies from apologizing amid alleged wrongdoing, but a recent U.K. government consultation seeks to make this easier, highlighting the importance of corporate apologies and measures to help companies balance the benefits against the potential legal ramifications, says Dina Hudson at Byfield Consultancy.
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What UK Supreme Court Strike Ruling Means For Employers
Although the U.K. Supreme Court recently declared in Mercer v. Secretary of State that part of a trade union rule and employees' human rights were incompatible, the decision will presumably not affect employer engagement with collective bargaining, as most companies are already unlikely to rely on the rule as part of their broader industrial relations strategy, say lawyers at Baker McKenzie.
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Taking Stock Of The Latest Criminal Court Case Statistics
The latest quarterly statistics on the type and volume of cases processed through the criminal court illustrate the severity of the case backlog, highlighting the need for urgent and effective investment in the system, say Ernest Aduwa and Jessica Sarwat at Stokoe Partnership.
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Hugh Grant Case Raises Questions About Part 36 Offers
Actor Hugh Grant's recent decision to settle his privacy suit by accepting a so-called Part 36 offer from News Group — to avoid paying a larger sum in legal costs by proceeding to trial — illustrates how this legal mechanism can be used by parties to force settlements, raising questions about its tactical use and fairness, says Colin Campbell at Kain Knight.
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Accounting For Climate Change In Flexible Working Requests
Although the U.K. government's recent updates to the country's flexible working laws failed to include climate change as a factor for evaluating remote work requests, employers are not prohibited from considering the environmental benefits — or drawbacks — of an employee's request to work remotely, say Jonathan Carr and Gemma Taylor at Lewis Silkin.
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Opinion
New Property Category Not Needed To Regulate Digital Assets
The U.K. Law Commission's exploration of whether to create a third category of property for digital assets is derived from a misreading of historical case law, and would not be helpful in resolving any questions surrounding digital assets, says Duncan Sheehan at the University of Leeds.