Miriam Rozen covers the business of law and focuses on how lawyers preserve and expand their client roster. Contact her at [email protected]. Twitter: @MiriamRozen.
December 22, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Under Trump, What Will Happen to Texas' Lawsuits Challenging Feds?Now that the Oval Office expects a new Republican occupant, the question arises: What will happen to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's brand as a White House challenger and --more significantly--to all those lawsuits?
By Miriam Rozen
6 minute read
December 22, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Winning Tips for Litigators for 2017 from Those Who Won in 2016Why not learn from winners? Texas Lawyer asked Texas litigators who won at trial in 2016 what they would each recommend as three litigation tips for 2017.
By Miriam Rozen
18 minute read
December 20, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Jury Consultants Need Not Apply — Winning Litigator Relies On Web InsteadJohn Zavitsanos never intends to return to the old-fashioned style of jury selection. The partner in Houston's Ahmad, Zavitsanos, Anaipakos, Alavi & Mensing won last September a $5.3 million verdict against a union for his employer, based on allegations of wrongful disparagement and tortious interference.
By Miriam Rozen
9 minute read
December 20, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
ABA Anti-Bias Rule Violates Free-Speech Rights, Texas Attorney General SaysTexas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Tuesday issued an opinion concluding that an American Bar Association Rule of Professional Conduct barring discriminatory conduct by its members would violate First Amendment rights if applied in his state.
By Miriam Rozen
7 minute read
December 19, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Tillerson May Steer Clear of Distraction of Climate-Change Litigation Against ExxonA Dallas federal judge offered no explanations for multiple orders he issued on his own this month in Exxon Mobil Corp.'s battle with Massachusetts and New York Attorneys General. But the effect of those orders could be that when Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson seeks Senate confirmation as secretary of state, the process will not be competing for attention with his company's battle with the attorneys general.
By Miriam Rozen
9 minute read
December 16, 2016 | Daily Business Review
Tort Reform Groups Slams Florida Supreme Court for Creating 'Judicial Hellhole'Deploying at times over-the-top rhetoric and a healthy dose of sarcasm, the American Tort Reform Association Thursday issued its annual report on what it calls the country's “judicial hellholes,” denouncing overly plaintiff-friendly conditions in a variety of jurisdictions of every size from coast to coast.
By Miriam Rozen
15 minute read
December 15, 2016 | National Law Journal
'Hellholes' Report Takes Aim at California in Full and Fla. High Court, Among OthersDeploying at times over-the-top rhetoric and a healthy dose of sarcasm, the American Tort Reform Association Thursday issued its annual report on what it calls the country's "judicial hellholes," denouncing overly plaintiff-friendly conditions from coast to coast.
By Miriam Rozen
15 minute read
December 15, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Labor Dept. Asks Fifth Circuit to Toss Injunction Barring New Overtime RulesA Texas federal judge got it wrong and overlooked controlling precedents when he determined employers should evaluate job duties alone to decide if an employee is exempt from the nation's overtime laws, according to an appeal brief filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit by the Obama administration's Department of Labor.
By Miriam Rozen
5 minute read
December 15, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
'Judicial Hellholes' Report Trains Fire on South Texas CountyTexas tort reformers couldn't have hoped for more favorable confluence of events. One month before Texas lawmakers are scheduled to start a new session, during which tort reformers are expected to lobby to curb hail-damage lawsuits filed against insurers, a Texas federal judge issued a stern warning to Steve Mostyn, a well-known Houston plaintiffs lawyer who files such suits and financially supports Democratic candidates. And then on Thursday the American Tort Reform Association issued its annual report on "judicial hellholes."
By Miriam Rozen
13 minute read
December 14, 2016 | Texas Lawyer
Texas Lawmakers Set to Weigh Treatment of 17-Year-Olds as Adults in Criminal ProceedingsIn Texas, if you are 17 and older and commit a criminal offense you will, if sentenced to serve time, go to an adult rather than juvenile facility. That could change.
By Miriam Rozen
11 minute read
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