By Alaina Lancaster | September 3, 2020
Producer Neal Moritz's mentioning of prior arbitration agreements in a lawsuit against Universal City Studios does not mean the dispute is bound by them, California's Second District Court of Appeal ruled.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael Brooke Fisher | September 3, 2020
In today's isolated, virus-ridden topsy turvy world with civil trials virtually at a halt, mediation via Zoom videoconferencing enables lawyers to function and resolve cases through the mediation process.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Peter B. "Bo" Rutledge and Emina Sadic Herzberger. | September 1, 2020
Identically-situated parties seeking discovery in support of arbitration before the same private tribunal will receive different receptions in the Second and Fifth Circuits than in the Sixth and Fourth Circuits. Litigants before the Eleventh Circuit and elsewhere will be writing on a blank jurisprudential slate.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Gail S. Tusan | August 28, 2020
Anti-racism dialogue must happen and continue until our country lives up to its promise of being "one nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all."
By Nicole Gueron, Melissa Holsinger, Allison Pincus, and Muriel Leung, Clarick Gueron Reisbaum | August 26, 2020
Our remote hearing is now complete, having included more than a dozen witnesses testifying over 10 very full hearing days, spread over two and a half weeks. Below are some hard-learned lessons shared from our trial team to yours.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 24, 2020
A panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit found that downloading the Uber app in an area where the company does not offer its wheelchair-accessible vehicle service is a futile gesture.
By Patrick M. Connors | August 21, 2020
A summary of several significant civil procedure decisions handed down by the New York Court of Appeals during its 2019–2020 term.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 19, 2020
"Amazon drivers have been essential workers during the coronavirus pandemic, and it is shameful that the richest man in the world, Jeff Bezos, has been able to get away with not properly paying the drivers for all of their time and depriving them of all employment protections through their misclassification as independent contractors," said lead plaintiffs counsel Shannon Liss-Riordan of Lichten & Liss-Riordan.
By Suzette Parmley | August 18, 2020
The case tests the bounds of employer arbitration contracts and if "acknowledging" an agreement is the same as "assenting" to one.
By Suzette Parmley | August 18, 2020
The case tests the bounds of employer arbitration contracts and if "acknowledging" an agreement is the same as "assenting" to one.
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