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Kristie Rearick

Kristie Rearick

Kristie Rearick is the magazines and publications editor at The Legal Intelligencer. She handles contributed content for the newspaper. Contact her [email protected].

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January 31, 2018 | Delaware Business Court Insider

Where Do You Want to Be Sued?

Where does your company want to be sued? Of course, the obvious answer is “nowhere.” But in this litigious country that is not realistic.

By Edward M. McNally

6 minute read

January 31, 2018 | Delaware Business Court Insider

Plaintiff Who Obtains a Corporate Benefit May Not Target a Stockholder to Pay a Fee Award

In a recent decision, Judge Andre G. Bouchard of the Delaware Court of Chancery addressed the question of whether a plaintiff who obtains a corporate benefit through litigation may target a particular stockholder to pay a common fund fee award.

By Justin T. Kelton

4 minute read

January 31, 2018 | Daily Business Review

Travelers Should Know How Cruise Lines and Resort Operators Skirt Liability

The recent tour boat accident in Mexico involving 10 travelers sailing from Miami on Royal Caribbean is the second such accident within weeks of each other. On Dec. 19, 12 people died after a tour bus to Mayan ruins south of Tulum flipped on a two-way highway.

By Robert L. Parks and Gabriel Garay

6 minute read

January 30, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

How $1B in Design Patent Damages Became $400M (And May Soon Become Less)

Apple will soon return to court to continue its legal battle with Samsung over Samsung's infringement of Apple's iPhone design. The latest chapter of this saga concerns the proper methodology for calculating damages that Samsung must pay to Apple for infringing Apple's design patents.

By Brett J. Rosen

8 minute read

January 30, 2018 | Daily Business Review

Are Cruise Ships Liable if Something Goes Wrong During an Excursion?

Passengers of cruise ships injured or killed during shore excursions: Is the cruise ship company liable if something goes wrong during the excursion they promote and sell to the passenger?

By Brett Rivkind

4 minute read

January 30, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

Products Liability, Mass Torts & Class Action

In the Legal's Products Liability, Mass Torts & Class Action supplement, read about company-generated documents and emails, navigating choppy waters…

By The Legal Intelligencer

2 minute read

January 30, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

Strategic Considerations Before Challenging Personal Jurisdiction in Products Liability Litigation

Over the last seven years, the U.S. Supreme Court has rapidly and dramatically altered the landscape of personal jurisdiction law. Specifically, the court issued six opinions that overturned a lower court's exercise of personal jurisdiction, reinforced due process limitations on state assertions of jurisdiction, and narrowed the scope of constitutionally permissible general and specific personal jurisdiction.

By Eric Rosenberg

8 minute read

January 30, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

A Comparative Review of Products Liability Jury Instructions

After the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued its decision in Tincher v. Omega Flex, the committee appointed by the court to prepare jury instructions issued “suggested standard products liability instructions” (published by the PBI) in an effort to provide guidance to the bench and bar.

By Larry Coben

15 minute read

January 29, 2018 | The Recorder

Dishing on the Trump Administration's Rollback of Obama-Era Tip-Pooling Regulations

The Trump administration's Labor Department announced its intention in December to make tip pooling a legal practice. In essence, the administration stated that it will revoke the Obama administration's rule and allow restaurants to pool tips as they see fit. The change will directly impact employers in California who pay tipped employees the full federal minimum wage.

By Alden Parker and Katherine Sandberg

4 minute read

January 29, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer

How to Cope With Construction Industry Labor Shortages

The United States is on the precipice of a massive skilled labor shortage, according to the 2017 Commercial Construction Index. Compiled by USG Corporation and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the survey revealed “steady optimism from contractors about revenue forecasts and their backlog of work, yet concerns about the availability, training and cost” of hiring skilled workers in 2018.

By Joshua Lorenz

7 minute read