By Greg Land | November 5, 2021
Lawyers for the successful record label, whose artists roster includes platinum-selling R&B star Summer Walker, said they will probably ask for attorney fees after the defendants abandoned their claims for a 12.5% ownership share of the label as the trial neared its end.
By Cedra Mayfield | November 2, 2021
"The trial court abused its discretion in ordering severance of the claims because such severance neither furthered convenience nor avoided prejudice to MARTA," Presiding Judge Sarah Doyle wrote in a Georgia Court of Appeals decision.
By Greg Land | October 5, 2021
U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg said claims that PowerPlan Inc. used its near-monopoly providing software support for regulated utilities to "squash" a potential competitor were sufficiently supported to survive a motion to dismiss.
By ALM Staff | September 16, 2021
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Greg Land | May 17, 2021
Georgia State-wide Business Court Judge Walter Davis said it was no small task creating a new court 'out of whole cloth.'
By Katheryn Tucker | November 20, 2020
"The necessary consequence of today's decision is that Plaintiff—the largest operating subsidiary of Cox Enterprises, Inc., Georgia's largest privately-held company by most metrics—is unable to avail itself of the Georgia State-wide Business Court in a dispute that falls squarely within its jurisdiction and is well-suited to be adjudicated in this Court," Judge Walt Davis said.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 5, 2020
"Objection is fatal to the transfer under the language of the governing statute," ruled Georgia Court of Appeals Presiding Judge Sara Doyle, sitting by designation on a Business Court case.
By Raychel Lean | August 3, 2020
"We feel like we're detectives, and our job is to go to the crime scene and figure out what happened, follow the money and try and help the victims as best we can. It's often a whodunnit," one plaintiffs attorney said.
By Raychel Lean | September 16, 2019
U.S. District Judge William Dimitrouleas found that a plaintiff contractor hired to help with Hurricane Maria recovery efforts in Puerto Rico unjustly enriched itself from a defendant auto repair company.
By Greg Land | March 4, 2019
The verdict included $1.8 million in attorney fees and $750,000 in punitive damages for the credit card processing company that said the defendants funneled $4.3 million of its money into an offshore family trust and to buy cars, homes and gold.
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