By Thomas A. Dickerson | June 30, 2017
Thomas A. Dickerson writes: Although subject to criticism, there are occasions when a non-cash settlement of coupons, in whole or in part, for the purchase of good and services from the defendant may be appropriate. The courts must be particularly careful and make certain that a proposed coupon settlement is nearly as good as a cash settlement as possible.
By dailyreportonline | Daily Report | June 29, 2017
Phyllis Sumner of King & Spalding drew attention through negotiating settlements of 25 putative consumer class actions against Home Depot from one…
By dailyreportonline | Daily Report | June 29, 2017
One of the biggest wins for Greenberg Traurig's mass torts/products liability team was a complete defense verdict for client C. R. Bard in the closely-watched pelvic mesh trial in the 16th Judicial Circuit of Missouri.
By Jenna Greene | June 29, 2017
Taking a price fixing class action to trial is not for the faint of heart.
By Jim Saunders | June 28, 2017
The governor's office insists he exercised valid veto powers, but attorneys for homeowners who lost trees say the state can't legitimately withhold payment on final judgments.
By Charles Toutant | June 28, 2017
A federal judge in Camden granted preliminary approval on Tuesday to a $9 million settlement by TD Bank of litigation over coin-counting machines that allegedly shortchanged customers.
By Adina Solomon | June 28, 2017
Practice Profile: Mann specializes in class action litigation involving consumer finance, unfair competition and false advertising claims. She touches…
By B. Colby Hamilton | June 27, 2017
Attorney fees are too high in the $1.34 billion final distribution agreement with Tremont Group Holdings Inc., Bernie Madoff's second-largest feeder fund that lost billions in the Ponzi scheme collapse, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit said.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 27, 2017
On Friday, Uber Technologies Inc. plans to convince a Los Angeles judge to approve a proposed $7.75 million settlement that would resolve all claims brought over the alleged misclassification of its drivers under California's Private Attorneys General Act of 2004.
By Scott Flaherty | June 27, 2017
The firm refuted claims that it breached a lawyer's employment contract, and instead accused the lawyer of misleading the firm about his ability to find plaintiffs for a potential class action over the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant meltdown in Japan.
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