The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Daniel E. Cummins | December 13, 2018
Over the past year there have been dramatic reversals of long-standing law by a newly activist Pennsylvania Supreme Court. There have been clarifications of recurring civil litigation issues by both the Superior Court and Commonwealth Court.
By Michael Booth | December 12, 2018
A three-judge panel of Second District Court of Appeal on Tuesday overturned a prior ruling by a Superior Court judge who said the expelled student was not deprived of a fair investigation and hearing.
By Michael Booth | December 12, 2018
A three-judge panel of District Seven of the Second Appellate District on Tuesday overturned a prior ruling by a Superior Court judge who said the expelled student was not deprived of a fair investigation and hearing.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David M. Barshay | December 12, 2018
In his No-Fault Insurance Law Wrap-Up, David M. Barshay discusses cases weighing-in on an insurer's burden to request additional verification to support by-report codes, and a recent Fourth Department ruling requiring timely denial for EUO/IME no-show defense.
By Michael Booth | December 11, 2018
In the latest decision implicating New Jersey's revamped bail system, the state Supreme Court reiterated the mandate that prosecutors must release all exculpatory information to criminal defendants before pretrial hearings, and set guidelines for situations in which judges should reopen detention proceedings.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jacqueline Greenberg Vogt | December 7, 2018
Construction disputes require lawyers to deal with complex, highly technical architectural, engineering and construction issues, making expert testimony crucial to prove or defend claims arising from construction projects.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | December 5, 2018
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has reinstated a $2.1 million jury award that mistakenly included compensation for future wage loss, finding that the defendant waived its right to challenge the verdict by failing to object at several intervals during trial.
By Vivia Chen | December 5, 2018
"The people bringing the suit would like to return to a day that's long passed," says the Wilmer partner representing the school in a challenge to its admission policies regarding Asian-Americans.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | December 5, 2018
Evidence columnist Michael J. Hutter explores New York's rules governing the questioning, including impeachment, of adverse parties and hostile witnesses on a party's direct case.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Miguel J. Chamorro | December 4, 2018
Growing confidence in the use of real-time communications equipment to take the testimony of witnesses located elsewhere has generated proposed amendments to Florida's rules of court procedure that may incentivize the use of such equipment—by allowing witnesses to be sworn in remotely.
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