The High Court is set to weigh in on a challenge to a precedent-setting decision that found breaches of statutory duty under a provision of the Design and Building Practitioners Act are not apportionable, in a case with significant ramifications for the NSW construction industry.
Acciona hit with second suit over $511M waste-to-energy plant
GLAD trash bags maker taken to court by ACCC for ‘50% ocean plastic’ claims
Court’s openness in Lehrmann case shines light on what judges do, and that’s good for judges
Judges experience extreme levels of stress and secondary trauma, exacerbated by public comment that is often ignorant of what the job entails. The transparent approach taken by the judge presiding over the Bruce Lehrmann case may help pave the way to alleviating some of that stress, but more needs to be done, experts say.
Not ‘plainly wrong’: NSW appeals court sticks to guns on class closure
Victoria Solicitor-General Rowena Orr appointed to appeals court
Latecomer class action to take first swing at Mercedes-Benz
Court OKs BHP’s coal mine extension, accepts ruling will ‘dismay’ climate change activists
FWC rejects WFH request, says Bendigo Bank worker ‘only concerned about himself’
Sydney lawyer’s defamation claims don’t pass serious harm test, appeals court finds
The Full Court has clarified that a prior bad reputation is relevant to determining whether a defamation plaintiff has suffered serious harm, tossing an appeal by a Sydney lawyer who lost her case over an article related to her conviction for an alleged $16,000 scam at David Jones, which was later overturned.