By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 21, 2017
Despite an invitation shared on social media for the investiture ceremony installing Judge Stephen Dillard as chief of the Georgia Court of Appeals Wednesday, the outgoing chief judge confessed she was afraid it wouldn't happen.
By John Council | June 21, 2017
Shamoun & Norman sued former client Albert G. Hill Jr. in state court alleging he owed them a multimillion-dollar "performance incentive bonus."
By Marcia Coyle | June 21, 2017
Big-business advocates are lining up with the Trump administration's new position in the U.S. Supreme Court that workplace arbitration agreements banning class actions do not violate federal labor law.
By Michael Booth | June 20, 2017
Lawyers squared off before the New Jersey Supreme Court on Tuesday over whether Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield, the state's largest health insurer, can proceed with its planned rollout of its two-tiered Omnia Health Alliance Insurance Plan.
By Howard J. Bashman | June 20, 2017
Under the so-called "final judgment rule"—which federal appellate courts and the state appellate courts of Pennsylvania follow to slightly differing degrees—appellate review of even a tremendously important ruling of a trial court ordinarily must await the completion of the entire case.
By Ross Todd | June 20, 2017
The appellate court upheld a ruling finding that a writer could continue to pursue his claim that he was never paid for a script that allegedly spawned the action-horror franchise.
By John Council | June 20, 2017
University Park police found David Lewis' body in his home after friends hadn't heard from him in days.
By John Council | June 19, 2017
The court determined the school couldn't be held liable under Title IX because the only school official who knew of the abuse was the perpetrator.
By Marcia Coyle | June 19, 2017
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday blocked a lawsuit from moving forward against former George W. Bush administration U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and former FBI director Robert Mueller III over claims they crafted and executed unlawful detention policies in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terror attacks.
By Marcia Coyle | June 19, 2017
The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it will dive into a dispute over partisan gerrymandering next term. The outcome could have sweeping national consequences. Here's what to know.
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