By Greg Land | October 18, 2018
Judge Thomas Thrash wrote that the injured man's complaint did not show that Amazon had sufficient notice that the hazardous hoverboard could burst into flame before selling it.
By Andrew Denney | October 18, 2018
Members of the panel at oral argument questioned the breadth of a state court's authority if it did have jurisdiction over a sitting president, going so far as to consider if it could hold the president in contempt.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 18, 2018
A man claiming to have been cheated out of credit for writing a song that was eventually recorded by R&B star Usher has won a more than $40 million judgment in a combined verdict and settlement against two men he co-wrote the song with.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith | October 18, 2018
In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith write: The Justices of the Appellate Division are back for the Fall 2018 session. Although the color of the leaves change in the fall, nothing has changed for the four Appellate Division departments as they continue to churn out words of wisdom and legal scholarship.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | October 18, 2018
Andrea Constand's defamation case can proceed against former prosecutor Bruce Castor Jr., a federal judge ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Edward T. Kang and Kandis L. Kovalsky | October 18, 2018
Today, there are close to 3,000 emojis in the Unicode Standard. As such, people can communicate a lot more through emojis, if they choose. And, the data shows this is what people are choosing.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Andrew J. Rossetti and Dean E. Avgerinos | October 18, 2018
The goal of a trial attorney is to effectively highlight the family's pecuniary losses to the jury, in an effort to substantiate and increase the value of the claim.
By Andrew Denney | October 17, 2018
The ruling is both a win for property owners across the city who own the nearly 1,800 units used to shelter the homeless, and a blow for legal service providers who are fighting to establish tenant rights for thousands of cluster-site residents.
By Andrew Denney | October 16, 2018
Whether a former contestant on "The Apprentice" will have to wait until President Donald Trump is out of office to hale him in to court in her defamation lawsuit is expected to be the central issue before a Manhattan appeals court on Thursday afternoon when it is set to hear arguments in the case.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Colin E. Wrabley and Joshua T. Newborn | October 16, 2018
By filing a notice of removal in federal court after the state-court suit is filed but before the state-court suit has been effectively served, a tactic enabled by modern technology and the ability to electronically monitor more and more state-court dockets on a real-time basis.
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