New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jon Lomurro, Gary Riveles and Abbott Brown | June 13, 2019
Model Jury Charge 5.51, Legal Malpractice, needs to be updated
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | June 13, 2019
A federal judge has split from a growing line of recent federal and state rulings that have held that registering to do business in Pennsylvania still means consenting to be sued in Pennsylvania, despite the U.S. Supreme Court's seemingly conflicting 2014 ruling in Daimler AG v. Bauman.
By Suzette Parmley | June 13, 2019
The unanimous court ruled that defense counsel's failure to disclose that the defendant doctor's trial testimony differed from his interrogatory answers and deposition testimony, without objection from plaintiff's counsel, didn't amount to plain error or violate principles of "McKenney v. Jersey City Medical Center."
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Max Mitchell | June 12, 2019
According to attorneys, the decision is set to open the "courthouse doors" to hundreds of decades-old claims previously thought to be barred due to the state's statute of limitations.
By Ross Todd | June 11, 2019
In particular, the court took issue with opposing counsel's use of email to warn of an impending default request, finding the medium "ill-suited for a communication on which a million dollar lawsuit may hinge."
By Ross Todd | June 11, 2019
In particular, the court took issue with opposing counsel's use of email to warn of an impending default request, finding the medium "ill-suited for a communication on which a million dollar lawsuit may hinge."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Kenneth E. Pitcoff and Kevin G. Faley | June 10, 2019
The high court continues to expand the coverage of N.Y. Gen. Mun. Law §50-e(4), and give protection to municipal entities throughout the state.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 10, 2019
The lead-up to the first multistate HIPAA-related data breach suit was a decade in the making. Lawyers say the case's success is likely to trigger similar filings.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | June 7, 2019
A lawsuit filed by Montgomery County over lead-based paint in residential communities has been removed from federal court and sent back to state court where it originated.
New Jersey Law Journal | Profile
By David Gialanella | June 7, 2019
"I said, 'look, there are no guarantees,'" Orlofsky, a well-known litigator and former federal judge, recalled telling the client. "When they [the Supreme Court] took it, I knew I had a shot."
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