Most Recent
Bravo can’t trade mark ‘Just Desserts’ for Top Chef spinoff
Entertainment 2018-11-27 3:02 pm By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

US television giant Bravo can’t trade mark the phrase “Just Desserts” in Australia for its Top Chef reality cooking show spinoff, a sweet victory for the Seven Network, which challenged the mark. 

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Elle publisher wins opposition to Aussie builder’s ‘Ella’ trade mark
Consumer Goods 2018-11-27 1:28 pm By Christine Caulfield Melbourne

The Paris-based publisher of Elle Magazine has succeeded in a challenge to a trade mark application by an Australian building supplier for the name of its brand of bathroom fixtures, ‘Ella’.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Nestle unit wins patent for internet-connected coffee machine
Davies Collison Cave 2018-11-27 12:57 pm By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

A unit of Nestle unit has defeated an opposition to a patent for an internet-connected coffee machine that would allow users to read news and weather while making their morning coffee.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Quinn’s fees, funder’s cut slashed in Bank of Queensland class action settlement
Baker McKenzie 2018-11-26 10:47 pm By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

A judge has taken a hatchet to Quinn Emanuel’s fees and the funder’s cut in a $12 million settlement of a class action against Bank of Queensland, a settlement which he previously described as one of the “worst” he’d ever seen.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

GSK defeats challenge to breakthrough RSV vaccine patent
Chris Burgess 2018-11-26 9:39 pm By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

GlaxoSmithKline has won approval for a patent for a vaccine to prevent a common respiratory virus affecting infants, beating out a challenge from a rival that has developed a competing vaccine.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Mark Latham faces $100,000 bill after settling defamation case
Defamation 2018-11-26 9:35 pm By Christine Caulfield Melbourne

Former MP Mark Latham has agreed to settle a defamation case brought against him by the political editor of pop culture site Junkee, and he could be on the hook for a $100,000 payout.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Judge OKs cut to $30M Palm Island class action settlement for financial advice
Class Actions 2018-11-26 4:01 pm By Christine Caulfield Melbourne

A judge has signed off on an application to set aside a portion of a $30 million settlement in a class action over the 2004 Palm Island riots for financial counselling for registered group members, saying the court had the power to make the landmark order.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

ALRC’s ‘leave to proceed’ proposal slammed as de facto class certification
Allens 2018-11-26 1:29 pm By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

A late proposal by the Australian Law Reform Commission to introduce a ‘leave to proceed’ mechanism into class actions has been blasted by a major litigation funder and a plaintiffs-side law firm as a de facto class certification procedure that would ramp up costs and add years of delay to cases.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

ASIC seeks provisional liquidators for Chinese bottled water co.
Food and Beverage 2018-11-26 10:44 am By Cat Fredenburgh Melbourne

ASIC wants provisional liquidators appointed to Chinese bottled water supplier Tianmei Beverage to determine whether the company has breached the Corporations Act and should be wound up, just two years after the company went public.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?

Leyonhjelm keeps up parliamentary privilege fight in Sarah Hanson-Young case
Defamation 2018-11-26 10:19 am By Christine Caulfield Melbourne

Liberal Democrat senator David Leyonhjelm has made good on his threat to challenge a ruling that kept alive a defamation lawsuit brought by Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young after he accused her of labelling all men rapists on the sidelines of a Senate debate.

Subscribe to Lawyerly to access this article.

Already a subscriber?

Lost your password?