By Josefa Velasquez | February 22, 2018
An indenture trustee for a Hellas Telecommunication noteholders seeking roughly $565 million over defaulted bonds can bring lawsuits against two private equity firms accused of fraudulently transferring the proceeds from the indenture, New York's highest court has ruled.
By Gerald H. Baker | February 21, 2018
One of the main pillars of a democratic society is the right to trial by jury. The Supreme Court opinion in 'Williams' affirms that right.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | February 21, 2018
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has sent a Risperdal case that initially came to a $1.75 million verdict back to the trial court to determine whether there should be a new trial on punitive damages.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 21, 2018
Chief Justice P. Harris Hines plans to talk about “great change and great promise” throughout state government in 2018, including in the judicial branch with the election of new judges and a new Supreme Court justice.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 21, 2018
Following a one-day bench trial, Judge Kelly Brooks set damages for $5.97 million for wrongful death and $510,000 for suffering before the mother died at a Waycross hospital a few hours after being shot in the community of Hickox, 4 miles from Nahunta (pop. 1,000).
By Zach Warren | February 21, 2018
Even if understanding everything needed for e-discovery requires a whole mindset shift, it's a necessary one, judges said in the most recent Exterro judges survey.
New York Law Journal | Exclusive
By Josefa Velasquez | February 20, 2018
Several title insurance companies are asking the state Supreme Court to strike down newly enacted regulations from the New York Department of Financial Services, arguing that the new rules will result in companies shuttering and layoffs.
By Andrew Denney | February 20, 2018
A trial was begun Tuesday in Judge Jack Weinstein's Brooklyn federal court over a civil rights case brought by a man who alleged the New York City Police Department has failed to stop a practice known as “collars for dollars,” in which officers make false arrests near the end of their shifts to pocket extra overtime pay.
By Greg Land | February 20, 2018
The plaintiff's lawyers said "powerful" eyewitness testimony from a woman dying of cancer helped spur the defense to settle the case on the opening day of trial.
By Michael Booth | February 20, 2018
"We hold that a motion seeking reconsideration for an order denying or granting a motion to enforce an arbitration agreement is not an interlocutory order," a New Jersey appeals court has ruled.
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