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Nationwide settles Masterchef Jock Zonfrillo’s defamation suit
Defamation 2021-01-18 11:44 am By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

The publisher of The Australian has settled defamation proceedings brought by celebrity chef Jock Zonfrillo, just a few months after the lawsuit was filed.

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News of Chau Chak Wing’s defamation win can’t be used by publishers in defence of reputation damage
ABC 2021-01-15 2:57 pm By Spencer Fowler Steen Melbourne

A judge has shot down a bid by Nine, the ABC and a high-profile journalist to use articles reporting on Dr Chau Chak Wing’s $280,000 defamation victory as evidence mitigating the harm to his reputation from a report at the centre of a separate defamation case.

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Judge fast-tracks Chevron’s high stakes case against Ampol over Caltex trade mark
Addisons 2021-01-15 2:35 pm By Miklos Bolza Sydney

A trade mark dispute between US oil giant Chevron and Australian petrol station operator Ampol has been set down for an expedited hearing in April, ahead of which the companies have been ordered into mediation.

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Law firms circle insurers over COVID-19 business interruption claims
Bannister Law 2021-01-15 2:08 pm By Miklos Bolza Sydney

At least five law firms are investigating lawsuits, including class action proceedings, in the wake of a landmark test case on COVID-19 exclusions for business interruption cover.

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Wyeth seeks total victory in vaccine patent battle with Merck Sharp & Dohme
Allens 2021-01-15 8:53 am By Cat Fredenburgh Sydney

Pfizer unit Wyeth is seeking to overturn part of a judge’s decision in its high-stakes patent dispute with Merck Sharp & Dohme that found claims in two of its patents relating to the blockbuster Prevnar 13 pneumococcal vaccine were invalid.

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Macquarie’s ‘defective’ payment system should have rung alarm bells, judge says
Anthony Britt 2021-01-14 5:33 pm By Spencer Fowler Steen Melbourne

Macquarie Bank has been ordered to fork out $330,000 to dozens of former advisers for a “defective and deficient” system which saw the bank fail to pay a raft of employment entitlements.

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Judge advises Chevron to trim ‘window dressing’ from trade mark suit against Ampol
Addisons 2021-01-14 3:00 pm By Miklos Bolza Sydney

A judge has told a unit of US energy giant Chevron Corporation to consider narrowing its trade mark dispute against Australian petrol station operator Ampol, as the parties consider whether to take the matter to an expedited hearing.

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Law firm boss can’t halt compensation bid in disciplinary action pending negligence suit
Agriculture 2021-01-14 2:08 pm By Miklos Bolza Sydney

The managing partner of a Brisbane-based law firm has failed to shut down a bid for compensation brought in disciplinary proceedings filed by the Legal Services Commissioner, which is seeking damages identical to those sought in a separate negligence case by a client.

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‘Sydney’s most controversial burger restaurant’ loses appeal in trade mark beef with In-N-Out
Appeals 2021-01-14 1:46 pm By Spencer Fowler Steen Melbourne

The Full Federal Court has upheld an appeal by In-N-Out Burgers against Sydney-based Hashtag Burgers, finding that its two sole directors were also liable for trademark infringement and passing off in owning and operating their ‘DOWN-N-OUT’ burger restaurants.

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University of Sydney lecturer sacked over swastika launches appeal
Appeals 2021-01-14 10:18 am By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

A former University of Sydney lecturer has appealed a ruling dismissing the lawsuit he brought against the university after he was fired for a seminar slide that imposed the Nazi swastika on the Israeli flag and which was later posed on social media.

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