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First class action filed over combustible cladding
A product liability class action has been filed against the manufacturers of Alucobond PE cladding, the first of what's expected to be several lawsuits over the combustible cladding, believed to be in the majority of buildings in Australia.
Right of entry ID cards would crack down on ‘militant’ union officials, O’Dwyer says
The Federal Government is proposing changes to right of entry rules that would require permits to be issued in photo ID format, in a bid to curb abuse by "militant" union officials.
Michaelia Cash denies referring union donation to watchdog to hurt Bill Shorten
Liberal Senator Michaelia Cash has denied she referred concerns about a $100,000 donation by the Australian Workers' Union to the union watchdog to damage Labor leader Bill Shorten, telling a court Friday her referral was "in the public interest".
Parts used in Holden upgrades don’t infringe GM’s designs, court says
GM Holden has lost most of its case for design infringement against a company that imported and distributed spare car parts used to "up-spec" lower range Holden models, in the court's first test of the Designs Act's repair defence.
Judge orders recalculation of ‘excessive’ $5.8M bill by liquidators of SK Foods unit
A $5.8 million bill for four years' work by the liquidators of SK Foods unit Cedenco has been criticised by a judge as "outside the band of reasonable remuneration" and will have to be recalculated.
Halted questioning about ASIC emails warrants Octaviar class action re-trial, court hears
Critical emails from ASIC regarding a $250 million loan facility to Octaviar Group before its 2008 collapse were not only overlooked by the Public Trustee of Queensland in its role overseeing the firm's finances but were wrongly deemed irrelevant by the judge that heard the case, the Full Federal Court was told.
Who reads law firm websites? Judge skeptical of online class action notice
A judge overseeing a class action against the NSW government over a contractor who sold injured workers' information to Bannister Law has questioned the effectiveness of placing ads for group members on law firm websites, saying she didn't think it would "draw the matter to anyone's attention".
Judge allows expert reports in Cargill, Viterra case over $420M Joe White sale
The judge overseeing the marathon trial between agricultural giants Cargill and Viterra over the $420 million sale of malt producer Joe White has shot down objections to both parties' expert reports related to whether it was common industry practice to cheat customers by failing to comply with contract details and providing misleading malt test results.
Mylan appeals loss to Sun Pharma over cholesterol drug patent
Mylan has appealed a ruling invaliding claims of its cholesterol drug patent and dismissing its patent infringement case against Sun Pharma.
Employment partner loses appeal over ‘offensive’ letters to Lander & Rogers lawyer
An appeals court has reinstated charges of unsatisfactory professional conduct against the principal of a leading employment law firm, after the lawyer called opposing counsel at Lander & Rogers "fundamentally dishonest".