By Allison Dunn | September 13, 2023
"[A]s appellees have now conceded, there is no qualitative difference between online instruction and in-person instruction. They are the same, we charge the same, it's the same instruction," argued OSU's counsel, John R. Gall, a senior partner at Squire Patton Boggs in Columbus.
By Riley Brennan | September 13, 2023
"In closing the casino and hotel pursuant to the emergency directive, the seller was merely following the law so as to maintain its gaming licenses and thus did not materially breach the agreement," Justice Linda Marie Bell wrote.
By Riley Brennan | September 12, 2023
The Massachusetts Appellate Court vacated a grant of summary judgment to an employer, finding the employees' class action lawsuit claiming the business had failed to pay them "Sunday pay" was wrongly dismissed.
By Adolfo Pesquera | September 12, 2023
If The Boeing Co.'s reading of the first federal district court's opinion asserting lack of jurisdiction to be dispositive, plaintiffs' attorney Joshua Davis said, "then there is no benefit to the statute that the Legislature enacted to save cases."
By Adolfo Pesquera | September 12, 2023
Sanders v. The Boeing Co. is a certified question issue about interpretation of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, which tolls limitations where a prior action is dismissed "because of lack of jurisdiction" and refiled in a court of "proper jurisdiction" within 60 days after the date of the dismissal "becomes final."
By Jane Wester | September 11, 2023
Cuomo has subpoenaed several of women and associated entities. But several of them have filed motions to quash the subpoenas.
By Riley Brennan | September 11, 2023
The Maryland Appellate Court weighed in on a divorced couple's fight over their remaining embryo, awarding ownership to the mother after determining the parties' oral agreement to give the embryo a chance at life "no matter what" included the contingency of divorce.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Howard J. Bashman | September 11, 2023
Recently, legal news outlets have been reporting on a far less happy situation regarding a 96-year-old judge serving on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit who is facing disciplinary proceedings for being too old and infirm to stay current with her workload.
By Riley Brennan | September 8, 2023
A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, aligning with other circuits, held that pro se litigants who are also attorneys should not be afforded special consideration or be treated as proceeding without counsel under the circuit rules.
By Jane Wester | September 8, 2023
Each side urged Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron to hand them summary judgment.
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