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Katie Bewick

Senior Associate

Katie specialises in commercial litigation and has experience advising in a broad range of disputes and negotiations on behalf of companies and individuals.

katie-bewick

About

Katie is a litigator who specialises in corporate and commercial disputes, for a range of high net worth individuals and corporate clients, often with an international element. Whilst Katie advises on a broad range of disputes, her particular areas of practice include corporate disputes (including shareholder and partnership disputes, warranty and indemnity claims, claims involving directors, breaches of fiduciary duty and misappropriation of company funds and unfair prejudice claims), professional negligence, product liability and supply chain disputes and advising on cross-jurisdictional issues, including Arbitration. Katie frequently advises clients in the healthcare, retail (including food and beverage), financial services and manufacturing and technology sectors. Katie has extensive High Court experience (including at trial and applications involving injunctive relief), as well as experience resolving disputes through alternative means such as mediation and negotiated settlement.

Katie is also a member of The Association of European Lawyers (AEL).

Katie is admitted to practise in England and Wales.

Experience

  • Acted for a minority shareholder in a complex unfair prejudice petition involving a manufacturing company in the cosmetics industry, which culminated in an 8 day trial in the High Court;
  • Acting for a client in the financial services sector in a dispute issued in the High Court involving breaches of trust and issues involving agency law
  • Acting for a chain of public houses involving allegations of breaches of restrictive covenants
  • Acted for two individuals relating to their rights as shareholders in a large telecommunications company, involving allegations of unfairly prejudicial conduct and breaches of confidentiality
  • Acting for a well-known international supplier of sporting equipment involving issues of retention of title

Our thinking

  • Has a new route to recovery opened up for victims of banking payment frauds?

    Katie Bewick

    Insights

  • Boohoo lands itself in hot water for product labelling mishap

    Jamie Cartwright

    Insights

  • The rise in ESG reporting requirements for UK directors and of related shareholder activism

    Stephen Burns

    Insights

  • 2023: Spotlight on ESG in the product and supply sectors

    Katie Bewick

    Insights

  • Katie Bewick writes for Independent Community Pharmacist on ways to remove a company director

    Katie Bewick

    In The Press

  • Brand owners now required to police influencers

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • Financial losses arising from Covid and the rise of professional liability

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • Charlotte Healy and Katie Bewick write for Pharmacy Business on expert determination

    Charlotte Healy

    In The Press

  • Limitation periods for fraud, concealment or mistake: know your limits

    Katie Bewick

    Insights

  • The Environment Agency – the power to act but without sufficient resources to do so effectively?

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • Managing risk in property management companies – corporate governance and considerations for directors

    Stephen Burns

    Insights

  • Stephen Burns and Katie Bewick write for eprivateclient on the trials and tribulations of advising during a pandemic

    Stephen Burns

    In The Press

  • The end of LIBOR – a risk free change?

    Stephen Burns

    Insights

  • Legal disputes during the pandemic and beyond: alternative funding considerations for organisations

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • Challenges in the supply chain – fight or flight?

    Jamie Cartwright

    Insights

  • Adapting Brands and the Supply Chain - "For the Love of Scrubs"

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • Consumer brands - business as usual?

    Katie Bewick

    Quick Reads

  • A roulette gamble that did not pay off

    Stephen Burns

    Quick Reads

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