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September 09, 2002 | Law.com

Directed Verdict Is Unlikely to End Labor Law Dispute

The confusing and controversial galaxy of labor law litigation became perhaps a little more confusing and controversial with a directed verdict in a seminal case out of New York. A decision on Wednesday by Supreme Court Justice Bernard J. Malone Jr. of Albany, N.Y., in effect restores a $3.3 million verdict in favor of an unharnessed window washer who fell from the third floor of a private school.
6 minute read
February 18, 2011 | Daily Business Review

Warehouse sells at big discount from 2006

1 minute read
March 17, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Panel Revives 'Stigma-Plus' Dismissal Suit

6 minute read
March 12, 2007 | Law.com

Kerr v. Brown

The trial court did not err by submitting an unavoidable-accident instruction in the jury charge.
3 minute read
December 18, 2009 | Daily Business Review

Anti-Defamation League's Florida office recognized by FBI

The FBI Director's Community Leadership Award recognizes community leadership in making safer communities.
1 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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May 10, 2005 | Law.com

Anti-Apartheid Hero Works to Protect His Name From Commercialization

Anti-apartheid hero. Icon of peace and racial reconciliation. Brand name? Nelson Mandela has deployed a team of lawyers to make sure the commercial label doesn't stick, going after opportunists, criminals -- and now even an old friend. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate's legal battle against his former attorney illustrates the complexities of protecting Mandela's name from commercial predators while allowing his fans to re-christen roads, squares, bridges, universities and shantytowns in his honor.
5 minute read
February 11, 2002 | New Jersey Law Journal

Time-and-Billing Software Is a Tough Buy for Midsized Firms

Midsized firms face difficult decisions when selecting a time-and-billing system. Unlike other technology decisions, which are usually phased out in three years, most accounting systems are expected to last much longer. Consequently, the margin for error for selecting a system is almost nonexistent.
5 minute read
September 07, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Suit Over Hospital's Duty to Prevent Wandering Settles for $900k

A Pittsburgh hospital accused of breaching its duty of care by allowing a patient to wander onto a rooftop where she died of hypothermia has settled its suit with the woman's son for $900,000.
4 minute read
July 08, 2010 | Daily Report Online

Judge, PD's affair sparks debate

When a Fayette County judge suggested that hundreds of defendants sentenced by another judge who was having an affair with their attorney should be informed their cases may have been compromised, a public defender pushed back, warning that it could create a "monster" in which each individual case would have to be reviewed.
13 minute read
September 27, 2007 | National Law Journal

Former attorney general of U.K. joins Debevoise & Plimpton

The former attorney general of the United Kingdom has joined New York's Debevoise & Plimpton as the firm's London-based head of European litigation. Peter Goldsmith, who served as the chief lawyer for the British crown and government from 2001 until June, said in an interview that the fact that it was an American rather than a British law firm had not been important to him. "The key part for me is that this firm understands problems need to be dealt with on a global basis," said Goldsmith.
2 minute read