By Jenna Greene | January 9, 2020
'The client came to us in a difficult situation. A successful result was not only far from guaranteed, but doubtful,' said Bartlit Beck partner Adam Hoeflich. 'We delivered exactly what they asked for.'
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | January 8, 2020
Former Kasowitz Benson & Torres bankruptcy partner Kyung S. Lee alleges that the firm fired him after he complained about unpaid compensation, after agreeing to pay him $550,000 a year.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Commentary
By Francis G.X. Pileggi and Chauna A. Abner | January 8, 2020
A recent Delaware Court of Chancery decision provides a cautionary tale about why the existence of signatures on an agreement will not always be sufficient evidence to establish that the parties intended to enter into a binding contract.
Litigation Daily | Expert Opinion
By Jenna Greene | January 6, 2020
The next waves of FCA activity—both at the federal and state levels—are building and signaling even more potential exposure and active litigation. Here are four emerging trends.
By Raychel Lean | January 2, 2020
A $43 million verdict and an $8 million award for attorney fees and costs secured the Third District Court of Appeal's stamp of approval Thursday, when a panel agreed that Miami-Dade County Expressway Authority had breached its contract with an electronic tolling company.
By Alaina Lancaster | December 19, 2019
The firm denies it created the mass arbitration guidelines, but said it was right to work with the arbitration organization on its DoorDash cases.
By Raychel Lean | December 19, 2019
The Fourth District Court of Appeal reversed a summary judgment for gym chain LA Fitness, citing unresolved issues over how its contract was presented on a computer tablet. But the ruling drew a dissent from one judge and came as a surprise to defense counsel.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | December 18, 2019
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled that a settlement agreement between the University of Connecticut and a builder over alleged construction defects on the school's campus was ambiguous as to whether the parties released their own insurers from potential coverage claims, meaning the Commonwealth Court must now look beyond the language of the agreement at the parties' intent.
By Zack Needles | December 13, 2019
David Stern, a founding partner of the Philadelphia workers' compensation and Social Security disability law firm previously known as Pond Lehocky Stern Giordano who sued the firm last week to dissolve the partnership, is now seeking an emergency injunction, alleging that he's been unlawfully expelled from the partnership and that the firm is now taking steps to "steal" his clients and cases.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Laura A. Kaster and David C. Singer | December 11, 2019
Any serious examination reveals significant limits to arbitration confidentiality even when the arbitration is a business-to-business arrangement. When consumers, employees, or investor-state disputes are involved, there are even fewer confidentiality protections.
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Description:NFSA has a great opportunity for a Labor Relations Associate and Junior Counsel. This position will support NFSA's collective ba...
McCarter & English, LLP is seeking litigation attorneys for our Newark, NJ offices. Candidates must have 3-6 years of law firm experien...
McCarter & English, LLP is actively seeking a corporate associate for its office located in Boston, MA. Candidate must have 2 - 5 years ...