The NSW Supreme Court’s new Chief Justice has used his maiden speech to lament how remote hearings and working from home has led to the “insidious depersonalisation” of the legal profession, with half-empty chambers and solicitor’s offices losing their soul and personality.
Firstmac slams Zip Pay provider’s defences in fight over ‘Zip’ trade mark
Redbubble can’t dodge Hells Angels trade mark infringement claims
‘That’s not what investors signed up for’: Linchpin used funds for unauthorised loans, court told
Clients of Linchpin Capital Group and subsidiary Endeavour Securities who were promised investments in a diversified loan portfolio were instead duped into funding Linchpin’s own business interests and lining its directors’ pockets, a judge has heard as trial got underway in ASIC’s case against three former Linchpin directors.
Energy Beverages tries to revive ‘Mother’ trade marks
Government showed ‘reckless indifference’ to wildlife by approving mine waste dump, suit says
HWL Ebsworth overlooked ‘obvious red flags’ in joint venture contract, trial told
‘The end of litigation as we know it’: Judge pans Nando’s costs in franchising spat
WA premier says death threats followed Clive Palmer’s ‘outrageous’ remarks
Sensible class action reform needed to ensure access to justice for next 30 years
Three decades on from its rocky beginnings, when representatives of the coalition opposition decried the Part IVA bill as a “monstrosity” and as “looney”, “half baked” and “wrong” during parliamentary debates, the class action procedure and its legitimacy and efficacy have come to gain acceptance across the spectrum of practitioners and among the judiciary, says Maurice Blackburn’s Julian Schimmel.