Commercial Litigation UK

  • October 15, 2024

    ENRC Settlement Shows SFO Ready To Draw Line Under Past

    The Serious Fraud Office's recent settlement ending litigation with Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. over alleged misconduct by its officials sidesteps weeks of awkward testimony to free the agency to pursue its growing caseload while drawing another line under its blighted investigation into the miner.

  • October 15, 2024

    Barclays Challenges UK Motor Finance Ruling In Test Case

    Barclays launched a legal challenge Tuesday against a decision that found it had treated a consumer unfairly by paying a commission to a car finance broker, in a test case with potential implications for future complaints over motor financing arrangements.

  • October 14, 2024

    RAF Officer Can't Challenge Military Complaints Process

    The Ministry of Defence won its bid on Monday to block claims by a squadron leader that it mishandled her sex discrimination and harassment allegations, after an appellate judge ruled that employment tribunals could not hear a challenge to the military's internal complaints process.

  • October 14, 2024

    Lloyd's Insurers Reject £43M Claim Over Solar Station Flaws

    Seven Lloyd's of London underwriters have denied that they are liable for £43.3 million ($56.5 million) sought by two companies over losses that stem from deals to buy solar generating stations, saying the businesses were aware of the problems with the sites they acquired. 

  • October 14, 2024

    Ex-Director Hits Back At Simply Natural 'Hostile' TM Claim

    A former director of Simply Naturals has denied signing a deal that transferred trademarks he owned for "Sizzling Minerals" over to the vitamin company, claiming that he is the target of a "hostile campaign" waged by two of its current directors.

  • October 14, 2024

    Eye Doc Can't Claim Whistleblowing Led To Unfair Treatment

    An employment tribunal has dismissed an orthoptist's claims that a hospital treated her unfairly after she raised concerns about poor care of patients, because the information she revealed did not amount to whistleblowing.

  • October 21, 2024

    Covington Hires ICO's General Counsel For London Office

    Covington & Burling LLP has recruited the head of the legal service at the Information Commissioner's Office to join its competition team in London amid growing challenges for clients that operate in digital markets.

  • October 14, 2024

    Employee Sacked Over Alleged Aggressive Email Wins Claim

    An administrative manager at a one-on-one education service has won almost £10,000 ($13,000) after a tribunal found that her boss did not follow protocol to fire her after she sent an allegedly aggressive and intimidating email to a colleague.

  • October 14, 2024

    New Sexual Harassment Law To Alter Work Safety For Good

    Employers must assess the risk that staff will be sexually harassed and ensure they have preventative policies and procedures in place as they prepare for an incoming duty which, lawyers say, will be a watershed in workplace health and safety provision.

  • October 14, 2024

    Toy Co. Founder Denies Copying Bratz Doll Maker's Design

    The founder of a toy company denied on Monday that his product was a copy of "LOL Surprise" dolls by MGA Entertainment Inc. as he accused the Bratz maker giant of killing his product with baseless patent infringement claims.

  • October 14, 2024

    African Bank Sues Engineering Biz For $111M In Unpaid Debt

    One of Africa's largest trade banks has sued Kaztec Engineering Ltd. for $111 million, accusing the Nigerian business of failing to pay back a loan it used to acquire oil assets in the country.

  • October 14, 2024

    Photo Print Co. Denies Infringing Nail-Free Frame Patent

    The company behind a photo printing app has hit back at allegations that it is selling a copycat version of a sticky-back picture frame which is protected by patent, alleging that the rival design does not meet the criteria for such protection.

  • October 14, 2024

    Rockhopper Insures Against Italy Annulling €190M Award

    British energy company Rockhopper Exploration PLC said Monday that it has penned an insurance policy to cover the potential annulment of the €190 million ($207 million) arbitral award it won against Italy after the country banned oil and gas projects off its coastline.

  • October 14, 2024

    Quinn Emanuel Must ID Source Of Forged Deripaska Report

    Quinn Emanuel must reveal the source of the middleman that provided it with a forged report suggesting that Russian industrialist Oleg Deripaska misled arbitrators during a dispute with a former business partner, a judge ruled on Monday. 

  • October 14, 2024

    Nigerians Win Appeal Over All-Or-Nothing Shell Oil Spill Claim

    The Court of Appeal has lowered the bar for two Nigerian communities seeking to hold Shell responsible for environmental damage, ruling that residents do not have to prove that the company is to blame for all the oil spills in the region.

  • October 11, 2024

    Sandoz Gets Biogen Neurological Treatment Patent Tossed

    A London court on Friday tossed Biogen MA Inc.'s patent underpinning its method of assessing whether a rare neurological disorder was valid, following a series of challenges from rival Sandoz.

  • October 11, 2024

    Robertson Pugh Boosts Sanctions Offering With MoFo Hire

    Boutique law firm Robertson Pugh Associates LLP has hired a sanctions expert as a consultant, a move that comes at a time of intense demand to manage the risks of global conflicts, the former Morrison Foerster LLP partner told Law360.

  • October 11, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen billionaire Lakshmi Mittal sue steel magnate Sanjeev Gupta in a long-running clash to claw back €140 million ($153 million) of debt, a high-profile AI researcher take action against the Intellectual Property Office to register his software as a listed patent inventor and troubled housing trust Home Reit face a claim by a real estate developer. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • October 11, 2024

    Courier Biz Rebukes EasyGroup TM Claim Over 'EasyCargo'

    Courier price comparison website EasyCargo has told a London court that its company trademark does not infringe two of easyGroup's trademarks, after the easyJet owner launched its latest bid to stop what it calls "brand thieves."

  • October 11, 2024

    Day 1 Unfair Dismissal Right Risks Diversity And Justice Aims

    Abolishing the two-year qualifying period to bring an unfair dismissal claim will trigger an impossible deluge of tribunal cases and a more cautious approach to recruitment that risks turning back the clock on diversity in the workforce, lawyers warned about the headline proposal in the Employment Rights Bill.

  • October 11, 2024

    Company Director Says £1M Payments Were Legit Expenses

    A former director of a supply chain company and his wife have hit back at allegations that they covertly authorized payments worth more than £1.2 million ($1.6 million) unconnected to its business, claiming that expenditure decisions were legitimately made at their discretion.

  • October 11, 2024

    Care Home Chef Unfairly Sacked After GDPR Breach

    An assistant chef has won her claim that her care home employer unfairly fired her for sending an email containing confidential information about a vulnerable resident — but failed to convince the tribunal that she faced discrimination and harassment from staff.

  • October 11, 2024

    Ex-Footballer Apologizes To TV Host For 'Bike Nonce' Posts

    Former professional footballer Joey Barton apologized to Jeremy Vine at a London court on Friday over an online posting campaign "of unprecedented scale and intensity," in which he labeled the media personality a "bike nonce," as he responded to the broadcaster's successful libel claim.

  • October 11, 2024

    Art Dealer's Ex-Wife Denies Liability For His Loan

    The former wife of Andrew Valmorbida, an art dealer to the stars who was involved in a multi-million dollar art fraud, has said she should not pay back an investment firm part of $33.4 million taken by her then-husband, arguing the business can pursue other assets first.

  • 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.

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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