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Tyler

Tyler

May 28, 2014 | Delaware Business Court Insider

Addressing Section 503(b)(9) Claims Issues at the Outset

It is a common fact pattern among cases filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware over the past decade: an over-leveraged debtor is in default under its prepetition credit facility, and the prepetition secured lender is looking to liquidate its collateral and get out as quickly and inexpensively as possible.

By Michael J. Merchant and Tyler D. Semmelman

6 minute read

April 01, 2014 | Inside Counsel

From the inside out: Finding the perfect legal services outsourcing provider

With in-house teams becoming more familiar with legal outsourcing and more discerning about the services they require, quality is increasingly the key differentiator when selecting an outsourcing partner.

By Tyler Marion

10 minute read

March 14, 2014 | Corporate Counsel

Mitigating Cyber Risk: Strategies to Reduce Exposure

Cybersecurity is now a top-ranked risk at the board level, and your company needs to be prepared to effectively and efficiently respond to a cyber event.

By Tyler Gerking and Mark Massey

7 minute read

February 14, 2014 | The Recorder

Your Skills: Surveys Can Boost Trademark Suits

In deciding whether to use a survey in a trademark case, you should consider—in coordination with your survey expert—some fundamental issues, write Newport Trial Group's James Hardin, pictured, and Tyler Woods.

By James Hardin and Tyler Woods

12 minute read

August 11, 2003 | National Law Journal

Decision is not so dire

Despite the negative reaction around the nation, Intel Corp. v. Hamidi is not the invitation to chaos that many imagine.

By Tyler M. Paetkau and Ronald J. CookeSpecial to The National Law Journal

4 minute read

March 02, 2010 | Daily Report Online

Haley had impact on firm, legal community, city

When I joined the law firm of Kilpatrick Cody in 1982 following a judicial clerkship on the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the Atlanta legal community was remarkably different from what it is today. Any firm with more than 100 lawyers was considered a "large" firm, and all of Atlanta's large firms were clustered in the Five Points area in Downtown.

By Michael Tyler

8 minute read

November 21, 2012 | Connecticut Law Tribune

The Faulty Workmanship Exclusion

Builder's risk and other first-party coverages have traditionally excluded loss or damage caused by "faulty workmanship." A principal point of contention in litigation over this exclusion has been whether the exclusion applies to loss or damage caused by a finished product (damage to a desk when a poorly made ceiling falls on it) or the process of workmanship (damage to a windowsill during the process of repairing the window), or to both. In light of recent decisional law, courts appear less inclined to draw a distinction between process and product as a way of limiting the reach of the "faulty workmanship" exclusion.

By KIP DWYER and J. TYLER BUTTS

7 minute read

November 20, 2003 | The Recorder

It's Getting Hot in Here

Want to know some of the current hot spots when it comes to practicing employment law in California? This guide will help you keep track.

By Tyler M. Paetkau

9 minute read

January 24, 2013 | New Jersey Law Journal

The Faulty Workmanship Exclusion

Builder's risk and other first-party coverages have traditionally excluded loss or damage caused by "faulty workmanship." A principal point of contention in this area has been whether the exclusion applies to loss or damage caused by a finished product, or the process of workmanship, or to both. In light of recent decisional law, courts appear less inclined to draw this distinction between process and product.

By Kip Dwyer and J. Tyler Butts

7 minute read

May 17, 2001 | Law.com

XML -- Moving Legal Documents Onto the Web

Nearly all conversations about the Internet these days mention the nearly endless possibilities the Web provides its users. It is rare that you ever see or hear discussions of the Web's limitations. Ironically, the technology that fueled the Web's global explosion -- HTML -- is one of its most significant limitations. XML, the "new" markup language, is the answer to the limitations of HTML.

By Tyler Prochnow

6 minute read