A judge has ruled that the discontinuance of a class action doesn’t lift the suspension of the limitations period on group member claims, and a court order that the clock run again is needed to ensure companies don’t face potential litigation in perpetuity.
‘What should I do with you?’ Judge lashes Chubb, Inchcape in $2.3M spat over cyber attack coverage
KPMG settles with principal allegedly subjected to ‘aggressive, belittling’ emails
ASIC fines Maritime Super for misleading super members over fees
Thomson Geer snags class action lawyer from Clifford Chance
‘Don’t rock the boat’: Lawyer says Greenwoods & Freehills forced him out over Lendlease ‘tax dodge’
Uber agrees to $26M penalty over misleading ride cancellation fee warnings
Nine’s ‘dog ate my homework’ excuse doesn’t wash with judge in cavoodle case
Nine has lost its bid to argue the substantial truth of an alleged defamatory imputation arising from its coverage of a custody battle for famed social media pooch Oscar the Cavoodle and has been taken to task by a judge for its delay in filing a defence in a defamation case, saying its excuse was no better than “the proverbial dog having eaten their homework”.