Business litigation can involve such areas as partnership disputes, collections, mediation, contract enforcement, franchise disputes, enforcement of promissory note, employment agreements, fraud and breach of contract, to name a few.

For example, as a business owner you may have several accounts that require professional assistance to collect funds owed to you. Lawyers can prepare demand letters, file law suits, negotiate settlements, and enforce final judgment.
Lawyers can also help enforce employment and non-compete agreements, and independent contractor agreements.
A business lawsuit might also include such areas as commercial defamation, patent or trademark infringement, interference with contractual or economic relations, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud or misrepresentation, unfair or deceptive trade practices.
As well as litigating on your behalf, business law attorneys can help you with many other ares of business law including banking and finance law, business formation and organization, negotiations, planning, acquisitions, mergers, sale of businesses, environmental, intellectual property, labor and civil law.
Business Law
Business to Consumer
Unfair business practices can include fraud, misrepresentation, scams, hoaxes and oppressive or unconscionable acts or other practices by business, against consumers.
Unfair business practices encompass tenancy problems, the purchase of products and services by consumers, insurance claims, and debt collection in cases of default.
Businesses to Business
Unfair business practices may also involve unfair business competition such antitrust, tortious interference, trademark infringement and passing off. In the United States, this form of unfair competition is governed by the Lanham Act.
Other unfair business practices include price discrimination, boycotting, conspiring to allocate markets or customers, and monopolization.