By Jason Grant | August 12, 2022
"Whether remote classes were an adequate substitute for in-person instruction" after the COVID-19 pandemic interrupted BU's spring 2020 semester "goes to the issue of damages, not breach," wrote the federal judge, who also found that damages issues must go forward based on other reasons.
By The Associated Press/Report for America | August 11, 2022
The South Carolina Supreme Court agreed with the insurance company's argument that there must be the "physical alteration, destruction, or permanent dispossession of property" to make an insurance claim. The inability to use the property is not enough to trigger coverage.
The American Lawyer | Analysis|News
By Andrew Maloney | August 10, 2022
"You don't have to end the relationship formally. You just don't call them anymore," said one legal industry analyst, describing how some clients have ended relationships with law firms.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Colleen Murphy | August 10, 2022
"The fact that Claimant chose to voluntarily sign up for summer work does not make her a year-round employee," the court's majority wrote. "Accordingly, Claimant is disqualified from receiving UC benefits under Section 402.1(2) of the Law."
Daily Report Online | Analysis
By Trudy Knockless | August 10, 2022
"It is so much easier to trust someone at work when you know the whole person and trust them with your whole person," said Theresa Shea, general counsel of Utz Brands.
By Andrew Maloney | August 9, 2022
"It's not just salary, it's some basket of things," said Drew Beres, co-founding partner of Croke Fairchild. "How much are they coming to the office? How much are you paying them? How much are you working them? You have to consider all three."
By Ross Todd | August 8, 2022
Kercher explains the firm's "work from anywhere" policy this way: "We don't call it work from home. It's work from where you—as a trained professional with good judgment—should be."
By Andrew Maloney | August 8, 2022
As demand fell and expenses rose, profits-per-lawyer dropped 3.6% last quarter, according to a new report.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | August 5, 2022
Covington & Burling partner Rani Gupta Gupta discusses how insurance recovery litigators are pushing back against courts' assertions that COVID-19 does not result in property damage losses.
By Allison Dunn | August 4, 2022
"The defendants' attorneys undoubtedly performed a significant service for their clients by securing a dismissal of the plaintiff's claims with prejudice—arguably the best possible outcome in the case. Such a result is also exceedingly rare, as dismissal is the most severe sanction imposed by the court and is typically reserved for only the most egregious conduct," U.S. District Judge James P. Jones of the Western District of Virginia wrote.
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