By Raychel Lean | February 18, 2021
Armed with heartbreaking security footage, a toxicology report and testimony from witnesses around the country, jurors had to decide whether the former Tampa attorney died accidentally or by suicide.
By Raychel Lean | February 18, 2021
Armed with heartbreaking security footage, a toxicology report and testimony from witnesses around the country, jurors had to decide whether the former Tampa attorney died accidentally or by suicide.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Irene Thaler | February 18, 2021
The opinions offer a glimpse of how courts are analyzing COVID-19 policy language and may offer insight into the future (or perhaps, more fittingly, the nonfuture) of COVID-19 litigation in Florida.
By Meredith Hobbs | February 17, 2021
Tony Tatum, who co-led King & Spalding's insurance coverage and recovery practice, Shelby Guilbert and Joe Englert said McGuireWoods offers a "clear runway" for their practice, with no impediments to representing policyholders against insurers.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Gerald H. Baker | February 15, 2021
Gerald H. Baker's annual look at developments in the area of automobile injury law.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Gerald H. Baker | February 14, 2021
Since 1988, there have been over 120 published cases that deal with some aspect of the verbal threshold. These cases are listed here in chronological order by subject matter.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Gerald H. Baker | February 14, 2021
A look at four cases from the past year: one new case dealing with the verbal threshold (workers' compensation liens) and one dealing with UM/UIM coverage (Deemer Statute), and two important cases dealing with automobile and motor vehicle injuries (dram shop and common carriers).
By Melissa Siegel | February 12, 2021
The tractor-trailer's driver was proceeding with a green traffic signal, but the pedestrian, Manuel Anduray, was in a crosswalk.
By Zack Needles | February 11, 2021
With divergent COVID-19 business interruption insurance rulings coming down all over the U.S, the Ohio Supreme Court has been asked by a federal judge to decide whether having the coronavirus on a business's property would constitute a compensable "physical loss."
By Tom McParland | February 10, 2021
The ruling, from Justice Timothy S. Driscoll of the Supreme Court's Commercial Division, was the first written decision by a New York state court to address COVID-19 coverage in an insurance dispute, an attorney for one of the defendants said Wednesday.
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