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Commercial Litigation UK

  • June 11, 2025

    Coinbase Loses 'Bad Faith' TM Clash With Rival At EU Court

    A European Union court tossed Coinbase's latest attempt to void a Japanese crypto exchange's "coinbase" trademark on Wednesday, ruling there was no proof the company acted in bad faith by registering the mark.

  • June 11, 2025

    EuroChem Fights Banks Over €212M Bonds In Sanctions Row

    A Russian subsidiary of fertilizer producer EuroChem accused two European banks of using the pretext of sanctions imposed after the invasion of Ukraine to "never" pay out on €212 million ($244 million) in bonds, on the first day of a High Court trial Wednesday.

  • June 11, 2025

    Academics Lose Bias Claim Over Gender-Critical Film

    The University and College Union has beaten allegations from two university academics and union members accusing the union of discrimination and harassment over its criticism that a film they directed was transphobic.

  • June 11, 2025

    UBS Sues Chelsea Group For $20.6M Over Greensill Deal

    UBS' asset management unit has brought a $20.6 million claim in an English court against three companies in a Cyprus-based group alleging unpaid debt resulting from a supply chain finance deal with the now-defunct Greensill Capital.

  • June 11, 2025

    Man Group Exec Loses Whistleblowing Retaliation Claim

    An employment tribunal has ruled that a former chief people officer at Man Group did not actually blow the whistle about email monitoring practices because she knew at the time that the system was legal.

  • June 11, 2025

    Ex-Yodel Director Can't Halt InPost Acquisition Transformation

    Companies controlled by the ex-director of Yodel on Wednesday lost their bid to block Yodel from transforming after its acquisition by InPost SA, with a London court refusing to stop changes pending a battle for control of the package delivery company.

  • June 11, 2025

    Accountant Gets Maternity Bias Payout Boosted To £32K

    A property development company must pay its former accountant £31,900 ($43,200) for maternity discrimination after she won her appeal against an initial figure of £5,000, a tribunal has ruled.

  • June 11, 2025

    Baklava Biz Denies Trying To Pass As Established Coffee Co.

    A London dessert shop has denied claims that it copied the trademarks of a 150-year-old Turkish coffee brand to mislead consumers into buying baklavas and other regional treats. 

  • June 11, 2025

    Michelle Mone-Linked PPE Firm Faces Trial Over £122M Deal

    The U.K. government said a medical equipment company linked to Conservative peer Michelle Mone should pay back £122 million ($164.6 million) for breaching a deal to supply surgical gowns during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, at the start of a trial Wednesday.

  • June 11, 2025

    Pogust Goodhead Denies Seladore's Bid For £2M Success Fee

    Pogust Goodhead has denied that it owes Seladore Legal more than £2.2 million ($3 million) amid an ongoing dispute over alleged unenforceable retainers and success fees stemming from litigation against mining giant BHP over the collapse of the Fundão dam.

  • June 11, 2025

    War Risk Insurers Held Liable For Jets Stranded In Russia

    Major insurers are liable to payout in a multibillion-dollar dispute over hundreds of aircraft stranded in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, after a London judge ruled on Wednesday that the jets and engines are officially lost.

  • June 10, 2025

    UK Refiner Wins A Round In $200M EU Energy Tax Dispute

    An international tribunal has ruled that a British oil refiner's claim challenging a €175 million ($200 million) windfall tax in Europe will proceed without bifurcation, concluding that jurisdictional objections lodged by Germany, Denmark and the European Union should be weighed concurrently with the merits.

  • June 10, 2025

    Yukos Says $5B Russia Award Suit Must Proceed

    Yukos Oil Co.'s financing arm has told a D.C. federal court that a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision rejecting the Ninth Circuit's outlier interpretation of a jurisdictional question moots Russia's request that the court pause enforcement of a $5 billion arbitral award against the country.

  • June 10, 2025

    Innsworth Seeks Review Of £200M Mastercard Settlement Split

    Litigation funder Innsworth announced Tuesday it was launching a High Court challenge to how the Competition Appeal Tribunal decided to distribute a £200 million ($270 million) settlement reached between Mastercard and Walter Merricks to end litigation over credit card fees.

  • June 10, 2025

    Virgin Atlantic Beats Flight Attendant's Disability Bias Claims

    An employment tribunal has tossed a flight attendant's suite of disability discrimination and harassment claims against Virgin Atlantic Airways, finding no evidence that her rare genetic condition caused her day-to-day issues.

  • June 10, 2025

    CMS Faces £10M Negligence Claim Over Investec Debt Advice

    A property developer has alleged that law firm CMS owes him at least £10 million ($14 million) for negligent advice concerning a debt-restructuring plan that he says he never would have agreed to if he had been given proper warning.

  • June 10, 2025

    Mass Litigation Could Cost UK Economy £18B, Report Warns

    A think tank has called on U.K. policymakers to urgently regulate the litigation funding sector, publishing a report Tuesday warning that a trend of increasing group litigation could eventually cost the British economy up to £18 billion ($24.3 billion).

  • June 10, 2025

    DHL British Unit On Hook For £3M In Duties, Court Says

    A tax tribunal did not err when it upheld HM Revenue & Custom's decision to deny about £3 million ($4 million) in duty relief to cargo aircraft operated by DHL's British affiliate, a U.K. court said, dismissing the company's appeal.

  • June 10, 2025

    Gambling Watchdog Faces Challenge To £70M Lottery Subsidy

    Publishing group Northern & Shell PLC has asked a London appeals tribunal to bin a decision by Britain's gambling regulator to give Camelot UK Lotteries Ltd. more than £70 million ($94 million) to help with marketing and promoting the National Lottery.

  • June 10, 2025

    Greensill Says He Was Trapped In Katerra Restructuring Deal

    Lex Greensill said Tuesday that he was "between a rock and a hard place" in a restructuring deal involving his eponymous firm and SoftBank, a Japanese investment company, as the former banker gave evidence in a $440 million trial in London of a claim brought by a collapsed Credit Suisse fund.

  • June 10, 2025

    IBM Seeks £1.6M After Winning Reverse-Engineering Claim

    IBM has said that LzLabs must pay over £1.6 million ($2.2 million) in damages for reverse-engineering its software products in order to build a rival platform, adding to the Swiss company's £20 million bill.

  • June 10, 2025

    Apple, Sony Fight Class Reps Over New Legal Funding Deals

    Apple, Visa, Mastercard and Sony told the Court of Appeal Tuesday that funding agreements driving multiple competition class action claims in the U.K. are unlawful and unenforceable.

  • June 10, 2025

    Amazon Whistleblower Gets Second Shot At Unfair Firing Claim

    A disabled Amazon whistleblower won a second shot at his unfair dismissal claim against the tech giant on Tuesday, after an appellate judge agreed that a lower tribunal jumped the gun by tossing his case.

  • June 10, 2025

    Gay Mexican Chef Harassed With Deportation Threats

    An employment tribunal has ruled that a British restaurant owner harassed a gay Mexican chef by stereotyping him as unreliable and threatening to tell the Home Office that he was sexually harassing colleagues.

  • June 10, 2025

    J&J Spinoff Had 'Shoddy' Process But Didn't Discriminate

    Johnson & Johnson spinoff Kenvue did not discriminate against a Black manager when it overlooked him for a promotion, even though the process was a "sham," a tribunal said in a ruling released Tuesday.

Expert Analysis

  • Takeaways From World Uyghur Congress Forced Labor Ruling

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    The Court of Appeal’s recent judgment in the World Uyghur Congress' case against the National Crime Agency confirms that companies dealing in goods that they suspect to be products of forced labor are potentially liable to criminal prosecution, presenting significant legal risks that cannot always be mitigated through conducting supply chain due diligence, say lawyers at King & Spalding.

  • Emissions And Extraction: Unpacking The Finch Ruling

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    In Finch v. Surrey County Council, the U.K. Supreme Court recently found that the council's authorization of an oil field expansion was unlawful for failing to consider its greenhouse gas effects, potentially leading to major implications for planning decision processes, say lawyers at Hausfeld.

  • 10 Ways To Manage AI Risks In Service Contracts

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    With the European Union Artificial Intelligence Act coming into force on Aug. 1 and introducing a new regulatory risk, and with AI technology continuing to develop at pace, parties to services arrangements should employ mechanisms now to build in flexibility and get on the front foot, says James Longster at Travers Smith.

  • Unpacking The New Concept Of 'Trading Misfeasance'

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    In addition to granting one of the largest trading awards since the Insolvency Act was passed in 1986, the High Court recently introduced a novel claim for misfeasant trading in Wright v. Chappell, opening the door to liability for directors, even where insolvent liquidation or administration was not inevitable, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Don't Wing Settlements: Lessons From Morley's TM Ruling

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    In Morley's v. Sivakumar, the sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ Enterprise Court recently found that a fast-food franchiser had breached a fried chicken franchise's trademark rights, despite a prior settlement agreement, offering lessons on drafting express terms to ensure IP protection, say Nessa Khandaker and Clare Cornell at Finnegan.

  • Analyzing The Merits Threshold In Interim Injunction Ruling

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    In Kuznetsov v. War Group, the High Court recently dismissed an interim injunction application, reminding practitioners to be mindful of the possibility that they may be required to meet a higher threshold merits test, say Mark Cooper and Tom Parry at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Use Or Lose It: European TM Ruling Stresses 'Genuine Use'

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    The European Union General Court recently dismissed an action to revoke trademark protections for a lack of use in Sta Grupa v. EU sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ Office, offering significant insight into the intricacies of assessing evidence of genuine use in revocation actions, says Sumi Nadarajah at FRKelly.

  • Decoding Plans To Simplify The Transfer Of Undertakings Law

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    The prior Conservative government's proposed reforms to the Transfer of Undertakings Regulations to simplify processes protecting employee rights have generally been welcomed, but the fact that Labour is now in power casts significant doubt on whether they will be pursued, says Robert Forsyth at Michelmores.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Intra-EU Enforcement Trends

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    Hungary recently declared a distinct stance on the European Court of Justice's 2021 ruling in Moldavia v. Komstroy on intra-EU arbitration under the Energy Charter Treaty, highlighting a critical divergence in the bloc on enforcing investment awards and the complexities of balancing regional uniformity with international obligations, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Adjudication Dispute Ruling Elucidates Merit Of Cross-Claims

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    In Morganstone v. Birkemp, the High Court recently found that an adjudicator's refusal to consider cross-claims outside the scope of an interim payment breached natural justice, highlighting inherent risks in the adjudication process, including that not all decisions will be enforced automatically, say Ryland Ash and Jonathan Clarke at Watson Farley.

  • Employer Lessons From Teacher's Menopause Bias Win

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    A Scottish employment tribunal’s recent decision to award a teacher over £60,000 ($77,829) for unfair dismissal is a reminder that menopausal symptoms can amount to a disability, and together with potentially stronger measures from the new Labour government, should prompt all employers to implement effective menopause support policies, say Ellie Gelder and Kelly Thomson at RPC.

  • Why Ukraine Aircraft Insurance Case Failed To Take Off In UK

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    In Aercap v. PJSC Insurance, the High Court decided the claimants could not avoid an exclusive jurisdiction clause and advance their case in England rather than Ukraine, and the reasoning is likely to be of relevance in future jurisdiction disputes, say Abigail Healey and Genevieve Douglas at Quillon Law.

  • What UK Digital Markets Act Will Mean For Competition Law

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    The new Digital Markets Act’s reforms will strengthen the Competition and Markets Authority's investigatory and enforcement powers across its full remit of merger control and antitrust investigations, representing a seismic shift in the U.K. competition and consumer law landscape, say lawyers at Travers Smith.

  • UK Supreme Court Confirms Limits To Arbitration Act Appeals

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    Every year, disappointed parties come out of U.K.-seated arbitrations and try to seek redress in the English courts, but the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision in Sharp v. Viterra serves as a reminder of the strict restrictions on appeals brought under the Arbitration Act, says Mark Handley at Duane Morris.

  • Examining The EU Sanctions Directive Approach To Breaches

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    In criminalizing sanctions violations and harmonizing the rules on breaches, a new European Union directive will bring significant change and likely increase enforcement risks across the EU, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.

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