By Cogan Schneier | May 8, 2017
The judges and lawyers repeatedly turned to hypothetical situations throughout the roughly two-hour en banc hearing to formulate their points on President Donald Trump's second version of the order.
By Cogan Schneier | May 8, 2017
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit is hearing the case en banc, skipping the traditional three-judge panel in a move meant to speed up the case.
By Erin Mulvaney | May 5, 2017
The accounting firm BDO USA could be forced to disclose certain internal documents to U.S. regulators who are investigating claims the company discriminated and retaliated against female employees, including the chief human resources officer. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on Thursday overturned a lower court's decision that blocked enforcement of EEOC subpoena.
By Michael Booth | May 5, 2017
A New Jersey appeals court has ruled that an insurance carrier must provide coverage for a Newark firefighter who fell through a glass panel on a roof while responding to a fire.
By Michael Booth | May 4, 2017
The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a New York health care lawyer and a California chiropractor violated the state's Insurance Fraud Prevention Act when they helped a local chiropractor set up a multidisciplinary practice.
By Jason Grant | May 4, 2017
New York University's breach of contract lawsuit against Pfizer over hundreds of millions of dollars in cancer drug royalties must go forward, a divided Manhattan appeals court has ruled.
By Greg Land | May 4, 2017
A legal malpractice insurer has been found not responsible for at least $7 million in legal expenses accrued defending a bankrupt law firm sued by an investment company whose manager was also a partner at the defendant firm.
By Cogan Schneier | May 4, 2017
J. Harvie Wilkinson III may have to recuse himself, but he's not considered the most vocal of the court's conservative judges.
By Samantha Joseph | May 4, 2017
Miami developer Dadeland Station Associates Ltd. successfully argued it was still a renter, and therefore not liable for property taxes, on a site where it holds a 90-year lease.
By Jason Grant | May 3, 2017
The Court of Appeals may weigh in on a controversial amicus brief that was the target of a blistering dissent last year when it decides whether the state Department of Health properly sanctioned construction of a 20-story nursing home next to a Manhattan elementary school.
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