More law firms may soon be targeted in a lawsuit brought by defunct financial advisor Dover Financial alleging three law firms provided negligent advice concerning an inaptly titled ‘client protection policy’, which a judge recently found was “highly misleading” and “an exercise in Orwellian doublespeak”.
Employers guilty of wage theft face 10 years in jail under new law
University sued for firing cancer researcher with chronic back pain
Judge tells AUSTRAC to ‘guillotine’ Westpac case as it readies more claims
Top NSW judge backs flexible approach to virtual hearings
Mayfair to retire ‘Platinum’ brand to put trade mark dispute to rest
Barrister’s arguments on constitutional issue in CFMEU case ‘the wrong way around’, judge says
GetSwift leaked $138M deal to the press ahead of ASX announcement, ASIC says
GetSwift “sat on” an announcement about a lucrative deal with US-based automotive sales and marketing firm N.A. Williams for more than three weeks, then leaked the news to the media before announcing it on the Australian Stock Exchange, ASIC has told the Federal Court on day two of a trial in the corporate regulator’s case against the logistics tech company.
ANZ says allegedly worthless insurance policies gave customers ‘peace of mind’
High standards: Challenging a DOCA that compromises a litigation claim
While some judges have suggested a deed of company arrangement can be terminated at the comparatively low threshold that a liquidator may be “potentially” successful in litigating a claim, this is clearly not the test after a recent Full Federal Court ruling that affirms the high standard to be met by any challenge to a DOCA, where the deed compromises a commercial dispute, writes Baker McKenzies’ David Walter, Maria O’Brien and Ian Innes.