0 results for 'Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir'
Pa. Appeals Court Cuts $8.3M Attorney Fees Award in Property Damage Case
The ruling was far from a complete loss for the plaintiff, with the court upholding the remainder of the $14.3 million judgment it had won in the case.FTC Publishes Noncompete Ban, Legal Challenges Promptly Follow
The same day it voted to publish the final rule, tax services and software company Ryan LLC filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas seeking an injunction to stop the implementation of the ban. The following day, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and three other business groups filed a similar lawsuit in the Eastern District of Texas challenging the ban.Blurred Lines: The Ongoing Battle Between iLottery and iGaming
The fight is over legislation that prohibits the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue (the department), the administrator of the lottery, from offering products that "simulate casino-style lottery games" as part of the iLottery program. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently construed the meaning of that phrase in Greenwood Gaming & Entertainment v. Department of Revenue.Public Posting 2.0: High Court Creates Test for When Social Media Posts Are State Action
On March 15, the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in on an issue that more directly impacts the legal interests of public officials: When does a public official's social media activity on a personal account constitute state action under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983, subjecting the public official to liability?View more book results for the query "Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir"
People in the News—March 19, 2024—Lamb McErlane, Cohen Seglias
Lamb McErlane health law chair Vasilios J. Kalogredis was a panelist and attorney Sonal Parekh was a moderator for the American Bar Association (ABA) health law section's webinar, "Medical Terminology New Health Law Attorneys Need to Know".The Legal Intelligencer Announces 2024 Pennsylvania Legal Awards Finalists, Honorees
All honorees will be recognized, and winners in finalist categories announced, at the Pennsylvania Legal Awards event in May.Forum Non Conveniens—Pennsylvania's Jurisdiction Jigsaw Puzzle
Historically, to establish forum non conveniens, a defendant had to show the plaintiff's chosen forum is either oppressive or vexatious without any particular form of proof. Through a series of recent decisions, however, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has sown uncertainty in the once-settled area of the law.Trending Stories
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