The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By P.J. D'Annunzio | December 29, 2017
The Third Circuit in 2017 decided a landmark civil rights case over a citizen's ability to record police officers in public, a decision that was immediately propelled to the forefront of the most significant legal rulings in the region.
By Lidia Dinkova | December 28, 2017
ADF International says it's owed about $25.8 million for work it did on the Brightline station in downtown Miami.
By Brendan Farrington | December 28, 2017
A Palm Beach circuit judge ordered R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. to continue paying the state millions of dollars in settlement money despite selling off…
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | December 27, 2017
Attorney J. Michael Lewis, a Greenwich solo practitioner, has been sued for legal malpractice over his role in an insurance case.
By Lidia Dinkova | December 27, 2017
Fired contractor Tutor Perini Building Corp. says it's owed millions of dollars for work accumulated because Florida East Coast Realty was late turning in project plans but gave no deadline extension.
By Michael D. Mopsick | December 27, 2017
Mediation is not monolithic. It spans literally every type of case that can be brought before a court and many that cannot. Even within each practice area (family, probate, commercial, personal injury, etc.), one size does not fit all. And the types of parties that appear in mediation are even more diverse than the genres of their cases.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | December 21, 2017
A couple who had to sell off their expansive collection of antique toys as part of a bankruptcy can proceed with their lawsuit against the auction house alleging a conspiracy to sell the items for less than their full value.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | December 19, 2017
The Delaware Supreme Court on Monday ruled that Exelon General Acquisitions' decision to change the location of a Michigan wind farm allowed the company to avoid a $14 million earn-out payment to Deere & Co. stemming from its 2010 purchase of Deere's wind-energy business.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | December 19, 2017
In a closely watched case that waded into the murky ethics of business arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers, a majority of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court could agree on only one thing: fee-splitting arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers are not per se unenforceable just because they violate attorney ethics rules.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Charles F. Forer | December 18, 2017
Everyone thinks arbitration proceedings are automatically confidential and that the participants cannot blab about them to others.
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