By Lisa Willis | November 15, 2023
"It was quite an easy win, but you had to find him and get that video to make it an easy win," said plaintiff counsel Michael Lotto of the Ward Law Group.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | November 15, 2023
After Schmidt supplied his employer with his CBD oil prescription and receipts, the law firm where he worked refused to reimburse him on the basis that the oil isn't a pharmaceutical drug.
By Riley Brennan | November 14, 2023
"As in Tennant and Smith, the allegedly dangerous condition here was on the floor of a store, but the customer's attention was directed upward. While the bag of soil that Plaintiff tripped on was large and unobstructed, a jury would be entitled to consider whether Plaintiff's attention was reasonably focused on the flowers on display rather than on the ground where she would have seen the bag," U.S. Magistrate Judge Ajmel A. Quereshi for the District of Maryland said.
By Lisa Willis | November 14, 2023
"It was quite an easy win, but you had to find him and get that video to make it an easy win," said plaintiff counsel Michael Lotto of the Ward Law Group.
By Emily Saul | November 13, 2023
The Neumann family controls over $1 Billion in art from artists such as Pablo Picasso and Jean-Michael Basquiat. One scion alleges another unduly influenced their mother to change her will. A jury disagreed.
By Riley Brennan | November 13, 2023
"Here, even if the smudge in the signature line could be considered a 'signature' by an individual, no evidence in the record exists to show where the certified mail was actually delivered, because the return receipt does not contain a specific address as required by Civ. R. 4.1(A)(1)," the court said. "In this case, the illegible smudges on the signature line and on the address line in the certified mail return receipt, along with the uncontested affidavits from REST's officer, employee, and agent averring that REST did not receive the summons and complaint are sufficient to establish that service on REST was not proper."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Peter Vaira | November 13, 2023
As with most major changes in industry or professional practices, there are many effects, some good, some troublesome. What is important to recognize is that with many mergers, the operation of the legal profession is different than 20 years ago.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen and Richard Emery | November 13, 2023
U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik's ethics complaint against the judge presiding over Donald Trump's civil fraud trial in Manhattan is an attempt to undermine the court process by making a further public spectacle of their largely silly allegations, former members of the board for New York's judicial watchdog write.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | November 10, 2023
A former Children's Hospital of Philadelphia nurse filed suit against the hospital, claiming she was fired over taking leave to undergo operation, and after contracting COVID-19, however, a Pennsylvania judge found she failed to make a sufficient showing.
By Lisa Willis | November 10, 2023
"We live in a world where not only catastrophic people are entitled to justice," said Jorge P. Gutierrez Jr. of The Gutierrez Firm.
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