Business Disputes in Cardiff.

Commercial dispute solicitors in Cardiff for businesses across South Wales. Wales-aware advice at the Cardiff Business and Property Courts, settling most disputes out of court, and fighting your corner properly when it counts.

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Independent since 1903
Plain English, not legalese
Locations across South Wales and the South West
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Business Disputes team
About business disputes

Cardiff commercial dispute advice

If you’re facing a business dispute in Cardiff, a fall-out between shareholders, a supplier refusing to pay, a contract that’s gone wrong, or an unpaid invoice, most of it can usually be sorted without ever setting foot in court. Our commercial dispute solicitors act for Cardiff businesses across the Cardiff Capital Region on the full range of commercial matters: shareholder, partner and director fall-outs; contract and supplier disagreements; debt recovery; and professional negligence claims against advisers who’ve let you down.

Cardiff venue and Welsh procedure

Commercial litigation in Cardiff is generally heard at the Cardiff Civil and Family Justice Centre on Park Street, which houses the Business and Property Courts in Wales. For higher-value or complex claims that’s where your case, or your defence, will be heard. Welsh-speaking parties have a statutory right under the Welsh Language (Wales) Measure 2011 to use Welsh in those proceedings, and we’ll factor that into how the case is prepared and presented. Most Cardiff disputes are settled earlier than that, though, through pre-action correspondence, mediation in Cardiff or one of the ADR routes available locally.

Who we act for across Cardiff

We act for businesses across the city, financial services and insurance in the Cardiff Capital Region; media and tech in Cardiff Bay; manufacturing and logistics around Wentloog, Cardiff Gate and the Newport Road corridor; and the retail and hospitality SMEs that line the city centre and the Bay. Matters involving Cardiff Council, the Welsh Government or the Development Bank of Wales are part of that mix.

Your local office

Robertsons Solicitors in Cardiff

Find us: 6 Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3RS

Call Cardiff: 029 2023 7777

Tell us your access needs and we’ll do what we can to accommodate you.

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““Great firm and helped with all my legal needs.””

Zubin Jones
How we work

How we work in commercial disputes in Cardiff

A business dispute is rarely just a legal question, it's a commercial one. We start by understanding what a good outcome looks like for you, then advise on the most effective way to get there: a robust letter, a negotiated settlement, mediation or court proceedings. We'll also tell you honestly when a fight isn't worth having.

  • An honest assessment of the strengths, risks and likely cost from the outset
  • Wales-aware on Cardiff Business and Property Courts procedure
  • Most disputes resolved without court, but we go the distance when needed
  • Backed by the firm's commercial property, employment and secured lending teams when the issue crosses over
Our team

Who would be looking after you?

Some of your business disputes specialists, supported by the wider Robertsons team.

Liz O'Connor

Associate Director

Liz is an Associate Director in the Litigation & Dispute Resolution team at Robertsons Solicitors and heads the firm's Employment department. Qualified in 2008, she has over 15 years' experience advising individuals and businesses on employment matters, partnership and shareholder disputes, and a wide range of contentious work, with a practical, commercially minded approach.

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Luke Hallinan

Director, Head of Litigation

Luke is a Director at Robertsons Solicitors and head of the Civil Litigation department. Qualified in 1989, he has over 30 years' experience in contentious litigation for both individuals and businesses, with particular strengths in neighbour and boundary disputes and contentious probate, alongside commercial litigation, property disputes and professional negligence. He founded the firm's debt recovery department.

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Olivia James

Litigation & Employment Legal Executive

Olivia is a Litigation & Employment Legal Executive. She supports the team's solicitors across a range of contentious matters, preparing legal documents, managing case files and ensuring client matters progress smoothly and efficiently.

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Robyn Bramham-Exley

Litigation & Employment Legal Executive

Robyn is a Litigation and Employment Legal Executive. She supports the firm's Litigation and Employment team across commercial, property, employment and contentious probate matters, assisting with proceedings, witness statements, disclosure and court preparation. She holds the CILEx Level 3 Diploma and CPQ Advanced Paralegal Qualification.

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What clients say

Real stories from real clients

★★★★★
“Very professional and quick to reply to any queries, thank you.”
Christopher Chambers
★★★★★
“Responsive and speedy. Will use again and would recommend.”
Andrew
★★★★★
“Efficient professional staff, prompt reply to queries.”
Mr Brown
Why Robertsons

What makes us different?

Independent in Cardiff since 1903

Over a century advising Welsh businesses, with an established Cardiff office.

Commercial, not just legal

Advice aimed at the outcome that's actually good for your business.

Wales-aware

Cardiff Business and Property Courts experience and Welsh language rights built into our advice.

Accredited & recognised by
Law Society Lexcel accredited
Chambers Ranked in UK 2026 — Robertsons Solicitors
Common questions

What do clients ask us most often?

Terminating a commercial contract carries significant risk and should never be done without careful consideration. A contract can be terminated: under an express termination clause in the contract (for example, for material breach, insolvency, or on notice); or at common law, where the other party has committed a repudiatory breach — a breach serious enough to entitle the innocent party to treat the contract as at an end. The critical risk is wrongful termination: if a party purports to terminate when it is not actually entitled to, that purported termination is itself a repudiatory breach, entitling the other party to terminate and claim damages against the party that got it wrong. This is one of the most common and costly mistakes in commercial contract disputes. Before terminating, a business should establish clearly whether it has a valid contractual or common law right to do so, and follow any procedural requirements in the contract precisely. Taking legal advice before terminating is strongly recommended.

Find out about Commercial Contract Disputes →

Not necessarily — the time limit for a professional negligence claim is not always measured from when the negligent work was done. The primary limitation period is six years from the date of the breach of duty (in contract) or from when the damage was suffered (in the tort of negligence). But where the business did not know, and could not reasonably have known, about the negligence at that time, the Latent Damage Act 1986 may provide an additional three years from the date the business had the knowledge needed to bring a claim — subject to a long-stop of fifteen years from the negligent act. This is particularly relevant in business cases where the consequences of negligent advice — a defective document, a tax problem, an inadequate structure — may not come to light until years later. Identifying the correct limitation period in a professional negligence claim can be complex and depends on the facts. Because missing the deadline is usually fatal, a business that suspects negligence should take advice promptly rather than assuming it is either in or out of time.

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Where partners have not entered into a written partnership agreement, their relationship is governed by the default rules in the Partnership Act 1890 — and these default rules often surprise partners and cause disputes. Under the Act, in the absence of agreement: profits and losses are shared equally, regardless of the partners' respective capital contributions or workload; no partner is entitled to a salary; all partners are entitled to take part in management; decisions on ordinary matters are taken by majority, but changes to the nature of the business require unanimity; and — most significantly — the partnership is dissolved automatically when any partner leaves, retires, dies, or gives notice to dissolve. This last rule means that without an agreement, a single partner can bring the whole partnership to an end, throwing the business into crisis. The absence of a written agreement is one of the most common causes of serious partnership disputes, which is why putting one in place is strongly recommended.

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A commercial contract dispute is a disagreement between businesses about the existence, meaning, performance, or termination of a contract. They arise in many ways, including: one party failing to deliver goods or services, or delivering them late or defectively; non-payment or disputed payment; disagreement about what the contract actually requires; a party purporting to terminate the contract; allegations that one party was induced to enter the contract by a misrepresentation; and disputes about the effect of particular clauses, such as limitation, exclusion, or force majeure provisions. Commercial contract disputes are among the most common business disputes and can affect supply chains, cash flow, and commercial relationships. The starting point in any dispute is always the contract itself — its terms determine the parties' rights and obligations. Taking early legal advice, with the contract to hand, allows a business to understand its position and options before matters escalate.

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A director or boardroom dispute is a disagreement involving the directors of a company about how it is managed or about a director's conduct or position. They commonly arise from: disagreements about strategy or major decisions; conflicts between directors, or between directors and shareholders; concerns that a director is acting in breach of their duties or in their own interests; disputes about a director's removal or the terms of their departure; allegations of misconduct or mismanagement; deadlock at board level; and the pressures that arise when a company is in financial difficulty. Because directors are responsible for managing the company and owe it significant legal duties, boardroom disputes can have serious consequences for the company and for the directors personally. In private companies, directors are often also shareholders, so a boardroom dispute frequently overlaps with a shareholder dispute. Early legal advice helps directors understand their position, duties, and options.

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A partnership dispute is a disagreement between the partners in a business about how the partnership is run, how profits are shared, or the conduct of one or more partners. They commonly arise from: disagreements about the direction or management of the business; disputes over the division of profits or partners' drawings; concerns that a partner is not pulling their weight or is acting against the partnership's interests; breakdown of trust between partners; disputes when a partner wants to leave or retire; disagreements about bringing in new partners; and the consequences of a partner's death, incapacity, or misconduct. Partnership disputes are often especially difficult because partnerships are built on a relationship of mutual trust and good faith, and when that breaks down the consequences can be severe — particularly where there is no written partnership agreement to provide a framework for resolution. Early legal advice is important to protect each partner's position and the business itself.

Find out about Partnership & LLP Disputes →

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