By Colby Hamilton | January 8, 2019
With a May 6 date set for Weinstein's criminal trial in Manhattan state court, the former movie mogul is seeking stays across all his federal civil suits.
By Colby Hamilton | January 8, 2019
With a May 6 date set for Weinstein's criminal trial in New York state court, the former movie mogul is seeking stays across all his federal civil suits.
By Colby Hamilton | January 8, 2019
With a May 6 date set for Weinstein's criminal trial in Manhattan state court, the former movie mogul is seeking stays across all his federal civil suits.
By Andrew Denney | January 8, 2019
Johnson & Johnson has had mixed success around the country in court fights with plaintiffs who say that using the company's baby powder caused cancer.
By Andrew Denney | January 7, 2019
Johnson & Johnson has had mixed success around the country in court fights with plaintiffs who say that using the company's baby powder caused cancer.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Robert Pratter and Silvio Trentalange | January 7, 2019
Although the U.S. Supreme Court is apt to apply the century-old Federal Arbitration Act to require forced arbitration, lawyers and the courts, legislatures, and social movement campaigns are avenues employees and consumers can take to get their disputes into court.
By New Jersey State Bar Association | January 7, 2019
Supreme Court to review doctrines of additur, remittitur
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Edward T. Kang | January 3, 2019
When a corporate director or officer is sued by a third party for alleged misconduct carried out in her capacity as director/officer, the company generally indemnifies the director/officer by defending her against the lawsuit.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Steven Balson-Cohen | December 28, 2018
On Dec. 5, 2018, a unanimous panel of the Appellate Division, Second Department issued its decision in 'Shah v. Mo. M. Rahman', upholding the trial court's ruling not to grant plaintiff's counsel's application to hold a 'Frye' hearing before admitting into evidence the testimony of a defense biomechanical engineering expert. In so doing, the court, citing, well established Court of Appeals authority, has arguably dealt the biomechanical 'Frye' hearing its final death blow.
By Charles Toutant | December 27, 2018
A federal judge rules that sanctions against Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi are not warranted in a case where its fee was paid by a nonparty hospital.
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