New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky | September 17, 2018
Intellectual Property columnist Stephen M. Kramarsky discusses a case in which the court examined improper use of confidential information for business evaluation.
By Zach Schlein | September 6, 2018
The Florida Fourth District Court of Appeal reversed a circuit court decision that had ruled in favor of plaintiff Windley Joseph, who lost use of his left eye at the fair in 2008. The court found the South Florida Fair had limited liability under Florida's sovereign immunity and state law for personal injury claims.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 5, 2018
Attorneys representing hundreds of consumer plaintiffs whose financial and personal information was exposed in a massive data breach at Equifax last year challenged arguments by the credit bureau's lawyers that no one suffered harm, and if they did, Equifax is not at fault.
By Corinne Ball | August 22, 2018
In her Distress Mergers and Acquisitions column, Corinne Ball continues an ongoing analysis of negative control rights previously discussed in a prior installment of this column.
By Jeffrey S. Lichtman and Richard A. Menchini | August 17, 2018
A look at four decisions handed down by the Court of Appeals in the past term that addressed a wide range of unresolved issues in tort law.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Richard Raysman and Peter Brown | August 13, 2018
A discussion of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan decision BullsEye Telecom v. BroadSoft, concerning a dispute over whether a licensor of telecommunications software could compete with the licensee's customers for the same services.
By R. Robin McDonald | July 17, 2018
Last year, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia and parent company Anthem Insurance Cos. rolled out a new policy that included refusals claims based on emergency room visits if the insurers later deemed them non-emergencies. Medical associations have been fighting the policy as dangerous and a violation of federal law ever since. On Tuesday, two groups—the American College of Emergency Physicians and the Medical Association of Georgia—sued to block the policy.
By Katheryn Tucker | July 16, 2018
A business selling metals futures and derivatives will have to pay most but not all of the $2.1 million in restitution awarded by a Florida federal judge, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled Thursday.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Stephanie N. Moot and Carol C. Lumpkin | July 11, 2018
Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is designed to ensure that individuals with disabilities have equal access to the goods and services offered by a place of public accommodation.
By Mark A. Berman | July 2, 2018
In his State E-Discovery column, Mark Berman examines the question: “What happens when a 'faithless servant' employee absconds with confidential company emails, and then deletes them from the company's server. Does a claim for conversion lie?
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