Gran Designs has been fined for issues at a home built in Perth's hills, months after the death of a worker on another project led to a $175,000 penalty.
The federal court has ordered Griffin Coal to hand over more than $5 million in damages to its former contractor Carna Group, following a bitter six-year contractual dispute.
A Welshpool-based towing company is suing fuel supplier Maisey Fuels for allegedly failing to pay a $1.3 million bill as part of a diesel spill clean-up expected to cost $15 million.
The widow of former CFC Group chief Marc Cardaci has been appointed executor of his estate, ending a four-year long court battle with her former brother-in-law.
The Joondalup Resort is suing Singaporean billionaire Tuck Kwong Low for allegedly breaching a 20-year-old purchase agreement, amid a legal dispute over the resort’s future.
The Shire of Serpentine Jarrahdale’s council election has been rocked by allegations of electoral fraud, with two people in possession of about 50 ballot papers taken into custody.
Family-owned business Whittens is suing engineering company Mondium for allegedly failing to properly value and pay for work it completed at Rio Tinto’s Western Turner mine.
Quintis and several of its senior executives are facing defamation action at the hands of the company's former director, a claim it intends to vigorously defend.
The Regal Theatre's operators have stepped up their search for $1.2 million they may have lost in two alleged investment scams, gaining discovery orders in the Supreme Court.
An investigation by the state’s corruption watchdog has allegedly found the Shire of Ravensthorpe’s former chief executive spent close to $55,000 of shire money on sexual services.
The consumer watchdog has taken control of Real Asset Conveyancing after it allegedly failed to complete recent settlements and assist authorities with an investigation into its affairs.
A former Perth finance broker at the centre of an investigation by the corporate watchdog has been spared jail after pleading guilty to two counts of fraud and one of giving false information.
The Shire of Ravensthorpe has sacked its chief executive in a decision shrouded in secrecy, revealing only that it was based on confidential information from the CCC.
The state’s environmental regulator has given BHP the green light to increase iron ore exports from Port Hedland by 40 million tonnes annually, despite concerns about dust exposure.
Investors, consumers, and activists are pressuring big businesses to ensure the ethical security of their supply chains, but the first round of modern slavery statements shows varying degrees of compliance.