The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | August 12, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has reinstated discrimination claims that a former University of Pennsylvania police officer brought against the school for allegedly refusing to accommodate a skin condition he suffered that left him unable to shave.
By Dylan Jackson | August 12, 2019
Recent suicides have highlighted the degree to which law firm professional staff face many of the same pressures as their lawyer colleagues, yet many feel they are being neglected.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Lidia Dinkova | August 8, 2019
Of 9,000 investors, at least 2,600 were seniors who collectively contributed $400 million from their retirement savings.
By Lidia Dinkova | August 8, 2019
Of 9,000 investors, at least 2,600 were seniors who collectively contributed $400 million from their retirement savings.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Victoria Hudgins | August 7, 2019
A group calling themselves the Artificial Inventor Project listed an AI-machine as the inventor on two patents filed in U.S, U.K. and Europe patent office. While it is unlikely the patents will be approved, some welcomed the debate on modernizing patent regulations.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 6, 2019
The court upended a Delaware federal judge's approval of the class action settlement—which, in addition to paying data privacy groups with cy pres contributions to research best practices, paid class lawyers' fees and costs, along with payments to a few class representatives.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 2, 2019
The motion asks U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam Jr. to dismiss a complaint in the Superior Court of the State of California on the same grounds that he threw out claims in a district court case earlier this year.
By Lizzy McLellan | August 2, 2019
Delaware-based Morris James warned this week that a website borrowing real details about the firm was thoroughly phony.
By Max Mitchell | August 1, 2019
Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III ruled Thursday in Henlopen Landing Homeowners Association v. Vester that the homeowners association had instead punished the family for improperly altering its driveway against the association's internal rules, and there was no evidence indicating that the driveway dispute was a pretext for, or motivated by, discrimination.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | July 29, 2019
A Venezuelan government-owned oil company has failed to shake a lawsuit that resulted in a $1.4 billion judgment against it over its expropriation of a Canadian company's gold deposits.
Presented by BigVoodoo
Join the industry's top owners, investors, developers, brokers & financiers at THE MULTIFAMILY EVENT OF THE YEAR!
Law.com celebrates the California law firms and legal departments driving the state's dynamic legal landscape.
The Texas Lawyer honors attorneys and judges who have made a remarkable difference in the legal profession in Texas.
Description: Fox Rothschild has an opening in the Washington, D.C. office for an aviation associate in the litigation department. The ideal ...
Kent & McBride, P.C. a Civil Defense litigation firm with offices in both Cherry Hill, NJ and Middletown, NJ seeks to fill the following...
When you come to work for New Jersey Judiciary you will join an 8500-member strong TEAM that operates with the highest standards of independ...