The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Madeline Manion | October 28, 2022
The case stems from the plaintiff, James Waters, being injured on Oct. 15, 2018 when he fell from a catwalk on the top of the tanker-trailer he was inspecting at a trucking terminal.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Allison Dunn | October 28, 2022
"I agree with the Hymans. Although Merrill may terminate her late husband's licensing deals, she has no right to cancel his royalty deals," Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer wrote.
By ALM Staff | October 28, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By ALM Staff | October 27, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Adolfo Pesquera | October 25, 2022
Defendants McLane Champions and Comcast Corp. sought to get the lawsuit dismissed based on the argument that any communications relating to the sale was protected under the Texas Citizens Participation Act.
Litigation Daily | Conversation
By Ross Todd | October 25, 2022
"You've got to jealously guard when you get the court involved in matters," says Bouchard, the former Chancellor of Delaware's Court of Chancery, now a partner at Paul Weiss.
By Jason Grant | October 24, 2022
A federal judge in Connecticut allowed a group of medical providers to avoid ERISA preemption and move forward with certain previously dismissed claims based on a state unfair insurance practices act, even though the providers failed in their complaint and briefing to distinguish the act as not being subject to ERISA law.
By Adolfo Pesquera | October 21, 2022
"The question at issue in Honeycutt was whether the attorney ... could recover against his former client. It does not establish that the attorney may recover his fees from the defendant in the lawsuit." the 13th Court of Appeals ruled.
By Allison Dunn | October 21, 2022
"The fact that Brandeis offered both in-person and online graduate programs, but only in-person undergraduate programs, could allow a jury to infer that Brandeis reasonably expected plaintiffs (both undergraduates) had paid tuition in exchange for in-person instruction," the judge wrote. "Finally, although classes might be moved with some frequency from one meeting place to another, a jury could find that this did not disturb a reasonable expectation that plaintiffs paid tuition in anticipation of classes meeting in-person somewhere on campus."
By Cheryl Miller | October 20, 2022
Cannabis dispensary operator MedMen said in a lawsuit that it shouldn't be forced to comply with the terms of a property lease because the marijuana that would have been sold there remains federally illegal.
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