Levi Strauss & Co. received court permission to file a late opposition to Lambretta Licensing Ltd.'s motion to set aside a default in their trademark dispute, after missing the deadline due to what the company called an inadvertent calendaring error.

Judge Noel Wise granted the stipulated request on April 14, allowing Levi Strauss to file its opposition by April 16, 2026—13 days after the original April 3 deadline. Lambretta Licensing did not oppose the extension.

The parties also agreed to continue their case management conference from April 28 to no earlier than May 25. According to court documents, Lambretta Licensing had filed its motion to set aside default on March 20, 2023, though the clerk subsequently vacated the hearing on that motion on March 23, 2026.

According to the stipulation, this represents the first continuance request in the case. Both sides agreed the extension would not prejudice either party or impact the court's consideration of the motion to set aside default, particularly since no hearing date is currently scheduled.