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Sanitarium, Rebel can’t sue UK insurer over promotion campaign
A court has dismissed proceedings filed by cereal giant Sanitarium and sports equipment retailer Rebel Sports against a UK-marketing company over a risk transfer agreement that promised to indemnify the companies for a recent joint promotion campaign. 
Caesarstone wins trade mark fight for ‘honest concurrent use’
Building products maker Caesarstone can register two trade marks despite their deceptive similarity to a mark by ceramic tile maker Ceramiche Caesar, a judge has ruled, after finding Caesarstone had shown honest concurrent use of the marks.
Reckitt to seek relief from Nurofen judgment before Full Court
Reckitt Benckiser will try to convince the Full Federal Court on Monday that a judge got it wrong when he found it misled consumers with claims that Nurofen is a more effective pain killer than rival GlaxoSmithKline's Panadol.
Coles wins reduction in fine because slip-and-fall victim was on phone
An appeals court has ruled grocery giant Coles is entitled to a reduction in a $688,000 personal injury judgment against it because the individual that brought the suit was on his phone at the time of the slip-and-fall incident.
ASIC vows to pursue fees-for-no-service cases in court
The corporate watchdog is planning to launch legal action soon over the banking industry's fees for no service, and expects to secure $1 billion in compensation for customers, the Royal Commission heard Friday.
Foodora enters administration, leaves landmark cases in limbo
Two weeks after announcing it would pull out of Australia, delivery food company Foodora has gone into administration, putting the brakes on two unfair dismissal cases and a sham contracting action by the Fair Work Ombudsman.
Judge gives RE/MAX, Resimax a week to settle trade mark fight
After signalling last month they were close to resolving their trade mark dispute, real estate companies RE/MAX and Resimax have been been given one last chance -- and one more week -- to settle.
ACCC hopes laundry cartel case will wash with Full Court
The Full Federal Court will hear arguments next week in an appeal by the ACCC over an alleged laundry detergent cartel, the first so-called hub and spoke case brought by the competition regulator.
Casual worker with predictable roster entitled to annual leave, Full Court says
A casual worker hired as a truck driver at a Rio Tinto coal mine was entitled to annual leave, the Full Federal Court said Friday in a landmark judgement that says employees on predictable, regular shifts are not casual even when employers give them the designation.
ACCC puts Fairfax, Nine merger review on fast track
The ACCC will decide by November 8 whether the proposed merger of Nine Entertainment with Fairfax Media raises competition concerns.