New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. | November 6, 2018
Appellate Practice columnists Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. examine several major provisions of the new uniform rules, including electronic filing requirements, filing deadlines for appellate submissions, and motion practice.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | November 6, 2018
The one-page order, entered Monday, did not disclose anything about the settlement, but said the case should be dismissed because of the agreement.
By Max Mitchell | November 6, 2018
The one-page order, entered Monday in an Eastern District of Pennsylvania federal court docket, did not disclose anything about the settlement, but said the case should be dismissed because of the agreement.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 5, 2018
Plaintiff's lawyers are already at work on the next appeal of a case Chief Judge Stephen Dillard called "the poster child" for the difficulty court's face in applying the "distraction doctrine."
By Zach Schlein | November 5, 2018
Miami attorney Peter R. Restani represented refrigeration company Turbo Air against a $2.25 million insurance claim by three insurance carriers. The plaintiffs alleged a design defect in a Turbo Air-manufactured freezer caused the fire that destroyed Fort Lauderdale's Dapur Asian Tapas Restaurant in November 2015. However a fire origin expert hired by Restani offered a much different theory, involving a dryer, linens and combustible cooking oils.
By Michael Weber | November 2, 2018
As recent Supreme Court decisions have surveyed and expanded the landscape of arbitration and arbitration agreements, employers have placed greater focus on whether arbitration is actually the right fit for their company.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | November 2, 2018
Two men who started taking the antipsychotic drug Risperdal in the 1990s had no way of suspecting its link to excessive breast tissue growth they experienced—until their mothers saw TV commercials discussing the link more than a decade later—attorneys have argued to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in an effort to expand the statute of limitations for bringing lawsuits over the drug.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | November 1, 2018
Arguments before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court last month that delved into whether doctors should be held to a strict liability standard in medical negligence cases veered out of bounds, one of the attorneys who appeared before the justices is contending.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Robert R. Hanneman Jr. | November 1, 2018
On Aug. 24, the governor signed into legislation the removal of the voluntary tender credit for counsel fees.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Peter B. "Bo" Rutledge and Amanda W. Newton | November 1, 2018
Even if the U.S. were amenable to accepting service at its foreign embassies, adherence to the Second Circuit's statutory interpretation could upend customary international law and the executive branch's reading of sovereign immunity.
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