Commercial Litigation UK

  • July 09, 2024

    UK Vape Maker Takes Swing At Chinese Rival

    Vapepen has fought back against claims that it sells units identical to SKE Crystal Bar, arguing that its Chinese rival is picking a fight with the wrong company.

  • July 09, 2024

    Supermarket Chain Iceland Fights To Nix Kebab Supplier's TM

    Grocery giant Iceland has hit back at a trademark infringement claim from a kebab meat supplier, saying the meat company's logo is too vague and its trademark protection should be revoked.

  • July 09, 2024

    Sony Music Unit Says Infringement Of TikTok Hit An Error

    A Sony Music unit has told a U.K. record label that its version of a remake of the 2008 hit "Ride It" unintentionally infringed the original track and that the label's damages claim is "excessive and unjustified."

  • July 09, 2024

    Lawyer Accused Of Making False Mishcon Claims On Iran TV

    The solicitors' watchdog told a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday that a high-profile criminal defense lawyer recklessly made false statements about Mishcon de Reya LLP while appearing on an antisemitic show on an Iranian state-owned media channel.

  • July 09, 2024

    Chief Constable Loses Sex Bias Case Over Work Vendetta

    A senior police officer in northwest England discriminated against a personal assistant by making her collateral damage in a vendetta he had against a rival female officer, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • July 09, 2024

    Ex-Axiom Ince Staff Win Claims Over Missing Payments

    A tribunal has ordered Axiom Ince to hand over a total of £11,500 ($14,700) in redundancy and unclaimed holiday payments to three former members of staff after the law firm collapsed in October.

  • July 09, 2024

    Malaysian Investor Fights To Block €36M Claim At Top Court

    A Malaysian businessman urged the U.K.'s top court on Tuesday to rule that a creditor should be blocked from bringing a €36 million ($39 million) claim against him because it already won a declaration in an earlier action pursuing the debts. 

  • July 09, 2024

    LetterOne Fights National Security Sale Of Broadband Firm

    An investment group backed by Russian oligarchs has launched the first legal challenge to a decision under the National Security and Investment Act, claiming on Tuesday that the government unfairly forced the sale of a regional broadband provider at a "substantial financial loss."

  • July 09, 2024

    BBC Rebuffed In Effort To Cut Costs Of £20B Pension Scheme

    An attempt by the British Broadcasting Corp. to reduce benefits for employees enrolled in its £19.8 billion ($25.4 billion) pension scheme has been rebuffed as the Court of Appeal ruled in favor of members on Tuesday.

  • July 09, 2024

    Sports Broadcaster Sued For Fraud In Failed Streaming Deal

    Liquidators of a licensing company have sued a broadcasting chief after their autosport streaming deal turned sour, telling a court he lied about his ability to sell streaming subscriptions in U.S. prisons to entice the company to hand over the licensing rights.

  • July 09, 2024

    Justices Trim Scope Of Warranties In Construction Contracts

    The U.K. Supreme Court found on Tuesday that a collateral warranty given by a building contractor to the tenant of a care home was not a "construction contract" and therefore cannot be subject to adjudication.

  • July 09, 2024

    Thomas Cook Creditors To Get Back £280M After Asset Sale

    Creditors of Thomas Cook will receive a total of £280 million ($358 million) before the end of September after the senior civil servant overseeing the liquidation sold all available assets owned by the collapsed travel giant, according to the Insolvency Service.

  • July 08, 2024

    Mining Co. Looks To Annul Romania's Arbitration Fees

    Canadian mining company Gabriel Resources Ltd., which is facing a major cash crunch after losing its $4.4 billion arbitration against Romania, said Monday it has filed an application requesting the annulment of a tribunal's costs award to the country.

  • July 08, 2024

    MoD Accepts 'Duty Of Care' In Hearing Loss Suit

    The Ministry of Defence agreed Monday to uphold its "duty of care" to thousands of active and former service members who are now set to receive compensation for hearing loss from their time in the military.

  • July 08, 2024

    FX Fund Says Investments Wiped Out By Legit Trading Losses

    An investment fund that lost a client's money trading on the foreign exchange market has denied running a scam, claiming it owes the investor nothing because the losses were part of normal day-to-day trading.

  • July 08, 2024

    Trader Denies Knowingly Making False Cum-Ex Trades

    A British trader who has been convicted of defrauding Denmark in a sham tax reclaim scheme on Monday testified before a London court that he did not knowingly make false trades in order to make fraudulent tax refund applications, in a landmark £1.4 billion ($1.8 billion) trial.

  • July 08, 2024

    Council's Whistleblowing Investment Head Unfairly Sacked

    An English city council official has won his whistleblowing detriment and unfair dismissal claim against his former employer after he was fired for conduct unrelated to his concerns that a fellow director encouraged a contractor to bring legal action against the council.

  • July 08, 2024

    Aga Proves Converted Cooker Marketing Infringed TM

    Stove manufacturer Aga has won its claim for trademark infringement against a company selling electronic conversion kits for its ovens, persuading a London court that its marketing wrongly suggested that the two businesses were linked.

  • July 08, 2024

    NIG Sued By Asset Manager Over £4M Fire Destruction

    Parker Asset Management Ltd. has sued a subsidiary of U K Insurance Ltd. for allegedly failing to honor an insurance policy after a fire destroyed one of the firm's commercial properties and resulted in a loss of about £4.2 million ($4.5 million).

  • July 05, 2024

    Truckmakers Can Use Pass-On Defense In Price-Fixing Case

    European truck manufacturers can argue that local U.K. authorities suing them over a price-fixing cartel passed the inflated costs allegedly paid for vehicles on to residents through tax and service charges, a tribunal ruled Thursday.

  • July 05, 2024

    Legal Teams' Costs Slashed By £253M In UK Dieselgate Case

    Legal teams involved in unprecedented U.K "Dieselgate" vehicle emissions tests litigation had more than £250 million ($320 million) of their budgets slashed on Friday after a High Court judge ruled that the estimated costs were "out of all proportion".

  • July 05, 2024

    Xiaomi Won't Get Interim 4G Patent License From Panasonic

    A London court on Friday declined to award Xiaomi an interim license to use Panasonic's 4G tech ahead of the companies' upcoming patent trial, ruling that Panasonic is not acting in bad faith by holding out for better terms.

  • July 05, 2024

    Bitcoin Fraudster Gets £1.5M Of Assets Frozen

    A London court on Friday froze assets worth over £1.5 million ($1.9 million) belonging to Craig Wright, the man who falsely claimed to be the inventor of bitcoin, to cover the costs of a cryptocurrency podcaster who had to defend against Wright's defamation allegation.

  • July 05, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen collapsed sports television company Arena Television hit Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Bank with a claim, James Vorley, the Deutsche Bank metals trader convicted of fraud, sue his former employer, and journalist John Ware file a defamation claim against Pink Floyd band member Roger Waters and Al Jazeera Media Network. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • July 05, 2024

    Matrix KC Richard Hermer Tapped For Attorney General

    Matrix Chambers' human rights barrister Richard Hermer KC will serve as the U.K.'s attorney general in a surprise appointment from newly-elected Prime Minister Keir Starmer late Friday.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • Trends, Tips From 5 Years Of EPO Antibody Patent Appeals

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    Recent years of European Patent Office decisions reveal some surprising differences between appeals involving therapeutic antibody patents and those for other technologies, offering useful insight into this developing area of European case law for future antibody patent applicants, say Alex Epstein and Jane Evenson at CMS.

  • 4 Takeaways From Biotech Patent Invalidity Ruling

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    The recent Patents Court decision in litigation between Advanced Cell Diagnostics and Molecular Instruments offers noteworthy commentary on issues related to experiments done in the ordinary course of business, joint importation, common general knowledge and mindset, and mosaicking for anticipation, say Nessa Khandaker and Darren Jiron at Finnegan.

  • Why Reperforming Loan Securitization In UK And EU May Rise

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    The recently published new U.K. securitization rules will largely bring the U.K.’s nonperforming loan regime in line with the European Union, and together with the success of EU and U.K. banks in reducing loan ratios, reperforming securitizations may feature more prominently in relevant markets going forward, say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.

  • What French Watchdog Ruling Means For M&A Landscape

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    Although ultimately dismissed due to lack of evidence, the French competition authority’s recent post-closing review of several nonreportable mergers is a landmark case that highlights the increased complexity of such transactions, and is further testament to the European competition authorities’ willingness to expand their toolkit to address below-threshold M&As, say lawyers at Cleary.

  • How Life Science Companies Are Approaching UPC Opt-Outs

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    A look at recent data shows that one year after its launch, the European Union's Unified Patent Court is still seeing a high rate of opt-outs, including from large U.S.-based life science companies wary of this unpredictable court — and there are reasons this strategy should largely remain the same, say Sanjay Murthy and Christopher Tuinenga at McAndrews Held.

  • New Directors' Code Of Conduct May Serve As Useful Guide

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    Although the Institute of Directors’ current proposal for a voluntary code of conduct is strongly supported by its members, it must be balanced against the statutory requirement for directors to promote their company’s success, and the risk of claims by shareholders if their decisions are influenced by wider social considerations, says Matthew Watson at RPC.

  • Lego Ruling Builds Understanding Of Design Exam Process

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    In Lego v. Guangdong Loongon, the European Union Intellectual Property Office recently invalidated a registered design for a toy figure, offering an illustrative guide to assessing the individual character of a design in relation to a preexisting design, says Christoph Moeller at Mewburn Ellis.

  • Contractual Drafting Takeaways From Force Majeure Ruling

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    Lawyers at Cleary discuss the U.K. Supreme Court's recent judgment RTI v. MUR Shipping and its important implications, including how the court approached the apparent tension between certainty and commercial pragmatism, and considerations for the drafting of force majeure clauses going forward.

  • Behind The Stagecoach Boundary Fare Dispute Settlement

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    The Competition Appeal Tribunal's recent rail network boundary fare settlement offers group action practitioners some much-needed guidance as it reduces the number of remaining parties' five-year dispute from two to one, says Mohsin Patel at Factor Risk Management.

  • The Unified Patent Court: What We Learned In Year 1

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    ​​​​​​​The Unified Patent Court celebrated its first anniversary this month, and while questions remain as we wait for the first decisions on the merits, a multitude of decisions and orders regarding provisional measures and procedural aspects have provided valuable insights already, says Antje Brambrink at Finnegan.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Spanish Judicial Oversight

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    The recent conviction of arbitrator Gonzalo Stampa underscores the critical importance of judicial authority in the realm of international arbitration in Spain, and emphasizes that arbitrators must respect the procedural frameworks established by Spanish national courts, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn.

  • F1 Driver AI Case Sheds Light On Winning Tactics In IP Suits

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    A German court recently awarded damages to former F1 driver Michael Schumacher's family in an artificial intelligence dispute over the unlicensed use of his image, illustrating how athletes are using the law to protect their brands, and setting a precedent in other AI-generated image rights cases, William Bowyer at Lawrence Stephens.

  • High Court Ruling Sheds Light On Targets For Judicial Review

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    The High Court's recent dismissal of iDealing.com's judicial review application for service complaint decisions by the Financial Ombudsman Service highlights the difficulty of distinguishing what decisions are amenable to judicial review, demonstrating that those made by statutory bodies may not always be genuine targets, say Alexander Fawke, Tara Janus and Bam Thomas at Linklaters.

  • Appeal Ruling Clarifies 3rd-Party Contract Breach Liability

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in Northamber v. Genee World serves as a warning to parties that they may be held liable for inducing another party to breach a contract, even if that party was a willing participant, say Neil Blake, Maura McIntosh and Jennifer O'Brien at HSL.

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