Most Recent
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank appeals loss of 20-year-old trade mark
Arguing the court was wrong to rule that its trade mark was not inherently distinctive, Bendigo and Adelaide Bank is challenging a judgment that revoked its 20-year-old mark for 'Community Bank'.
Ernst & Young denies it was negligent in goodwill review of Slater & Gordon’s Quindell deal
Accounting giant Ernst & Young, which has been dragged into two class actions by Slater & Gordon shareholders, has shot back at claims it was negligent in its 2015 audit report of the law firm's UK division, which included a review of the firm's disastrous acquisition of Quindell's professional services arm that found no impairment on the goodwill value of the deal.
Class actions get boost with contingency fees bill in Victoria
Plaintiffs lawyers running class actions in Victoria will be free to charge contingency fees under new legislation introduced by the Labor government this week, a move that will see a boost in class actions brought in the state and has prompted calls for the Federal Government to follow suit.
Funder’s cut, legal fees face scrutiny in second Murray Goulburn class action
The litigation funder financing the second of two recently settled shareholder class actions against Murray Goulburn will face similar scrutiny over its commission as the funder behind the first action.
Struggling tech firm Irexchange accused of misleading shareholders in new suit
Troubled retail technology firm Irexchange is accused of misleading shareholders through three different capital raising offers, according to a new Federal Court case brought by investors who sunk over $4.5 million into the company.
Judge quashes watchdog’s decision to probe AWU over GetUp! donations
An investigation into donations made to activist group GetUp! by the Australian Workers' Union more than a decade ago has been closed down by a judge, who has also ordered the return of documents seized in high-profile raids of the union's offices.
‘Pride and obstinacy’: Judge says Leyonhjelm got ‘locked’ into false claim, awards Hanson-Young $120,000
Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has been awarded $120,000 in damages after suing former senator David Leyonhjelm, with a judge finding there was no justification for defamatory commments he made to the media and that he acted with malice.
Maurice Blackburn ignored Fearless Girl artist’s restrictions on replica, State Street says
Maurice Blackburn disregarded emails by the artist behind the iconic Fearless Girl statue questioning whether she would be breaching her contract with US asset management firm State Street in selling the law firm a replica, a court has heard.
Judge to look at legal costs in stolen wages class action
A hearing for approval of a $190 million settlement in a historic class action over unpaid wages to thousands of Indigenous workers has been adjourned to next month after a judge appointed a referee to scrutinise the fees charged by the law firm behind the case.
Wagner family wins $3.7M defamation payout over 60 Minutes report
A prominent Queensland family has won almost $3.7 million in damages after a court found the Nine Network was "recklessly indifferent" to the truth of a 60 Minutes' report alleging the collapse of a wall at the family's quarry was to blame for floods that killed 12 people.