Defamation

Barrister moves to disqualify cavoodle case judge over lunch with silk

A Sydney barrister who won defamation proceedings against Nine over an Instagram-famous cavoodle has sought to disqualify a judge from hearing a dispute with her solicitors over costs, citing a lunch he had with Nine’s silk. 

Crime

Former FWC senior president charged with possessing child abuse material

A legal academic and former senior president of the Fair Work Commission is facing charges after child abuse material allegedly flashed on his screen during a lecture at Monash University.

Sports

‘Outlandish training’: Former NRL player sues club over career-ending injury

Former NRL player Lloyd Perrett has launched a lawsuit against his former club, alleging his career was cut short after sustaining permanent injuries from the club’s training regime.

Retail

Kmart faces action over Uyghur forced labour claims

Kmart is facing legal action to determine whether the retail giant has engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct over alleged forced labour of members of a Chinese ethnic minority group.

Intellectual Property

IP Australia cans Better Beer’s brand battle with rival TRADIE

Craft brewer Better Beer has lost a challenge to rival TRADIE’s bid to register a trade mark for the promotional phrase 'TRADIE Beer Built Better', with IP Australia finding no real danger of confusion between the brands.

M&A

Mayne Pharma may face disclosure breach claim over $672M merger collapse

A court has heard US drug maker Cosette may amend its case to accuse Adelaide's Mayne Pharma of continuous disclosure breaches in their battle over the termination of their $672 million merger.

Discrimination

Giggle for Girls’ exclusion of trans woman protected as special measure, Full Court told

Women-only social media app Giggle for Girls has told the Full Court its exclusion of a trans woman qualifies as a special measure under the Sex Discrimination Act, as the app was intended to benefit some, if not all, women. 

Competition & Consumer Protection

Applicant may press restart in Sony Playstation class action

A class action against Sony alleging it used restrictive trade practices to block competition with its Playstation store will likely need to make “substantial” changes to its case, a court has heard. 

Business of Law

Barrister who failed to disclose contempt conviction loses battle for practicing certificate

A barrister who claimed a conviction for contempt had "slipped his mind" has lost an appeal of a decision finding he was not a fit and proper person to hold a practicing certificate.

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