By Colby Hamilton | January 22, 2019
Stop & Shop employees claimed the company's delivery service fees were believed to be gratuity by customers ordering online.
By Erin Mulvaney | January 22, 2019
Labor and employment lawyers are flooded with calls as Trump's shutdown stretches out. "This situation is untenable in the long term. People can't go on for months and years without getting paid,” one attorney says.
By ALM Staff | January 18, 2019
"I empathize with the plaintiffs' positions. They are not the ones at fault here," U.S. District Judge Richard Leon says in his written ruling in a shutdown suit from federal employees. Leon earlier this week ruled from the bench, denying a temporary restraining order.
By ALM Staff | January 18, 2019
"I empathize with the plaintiffs' positions. They are not the ones at fault here," U.S. District Judge Richard Leon says in his written ruling in a shutdown suit from federal employees. Leon earlier this week ruled from the bench, denying a temporary restraining order.
By Christine Sexton | January 18, 2019
Bill Herrle, executive director of the National Federation of Independent Business in Florida, has since 2016 called for the Legislature to limit what plaintiffs' attorneys can charge injured workers.
By Anna Zhang | January 17, 2019
Partner Mark Sant leads an eight-lawyer team joining at a time when Australia expects substantial changes to its employment laws.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Cliff Rieders | January 17, 2019
Like the inevitable phoenix, the Pennsylvania Peer Review Act gives rise to significant appellate court cases from time to time. Most recently, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Reginelli v. Boggs, 181 A. 3d 293 (Pa. 2018), emphasized the narrow scope of the protection afforded by the PRPA.
By Tom McParland | January 17, 2019
CBS said in a filing with the SEC that Moonves had informed the company Wednesday that he intended to use a binding arbitration provision in his contract to try to recover his "golden parachute" after the company determined there were grounds to fire him for cause.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | January 17, 2019
CBS said in a filing with the SEC that Moonves had informed the company Wednesday that he intended to use a binding arbitration provision in his contract to try to recover his "golden parachute" after the company determined there were grounds to fire him for cause.
By Tom McParland | January 17, 2019
CBS said in a filing with the SEC that Moonves had informed the company Wednesday that he intended to use a binding arbitration provision in his contract to try to recover his "golden parachute" after the company determined there were grounds to fire him for cause.
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