By Michael Booth | April 10, 2018
Legislation aimed at eradicating discriminatory pay practices in the workplace, already approved by lawmakers in Trenton, will be signed into law later this month, Gov. Philip Murphy announced Tuesday.
By Michael Booth | April 10, 2018
A New Jersey appeals court has ruled that a medical malpractice plaintiff prevented from testifying at his civil trial based on the potential prejudice his cognitive impairments might have had on the defendant doctor is entitled to a new trial.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | April 10, 2018
The two nominees are Paul B. Matey, the senior vice president, general counsel and secretary at University Hospital in Newark, New Jersey; and David J. Porter, a shareholder in the Pittsburgh office of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney.
By Ryan Lovelace | April 9, 2018
Squire Patton Boggs said Monday that it no longer had a strategic alliance with embattled Michael Cohen, who had been working out of the firm's offices in New York.
By Michael Booth | April 9, 2018
The New Jersey Supreme Court is considering whether a medical malpractice plaintiff who took the rare step of seeking counsel fees under the offer-of-judgment rule, even after entering a high-low agreement that was silent on the issue, may recover such fees.
By Charles Toutant | April 9, 2018
A state judge in Morris County, New Jersey, has dismissed the last defendants in a shareholder suit accusing financial institutions of devaluing a stock through "naked short sales."
By Charles Toutant | Michael Booth | April 9, 2018
The family of a woman who died while living in a state institution for the disabled accepted $1.4 million on April 2 to settle a Middlesex County suit,…
By Brian Baxter | April 6, 2018
While snow and other inclement weather in certain parts of the country scuttled the home openers of several Major League Baseball teams, the league's player's union marked the start of a new league year with a filing listing a long lineup of legal bills.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | April 6, 2018
The arguments came during opening statements in Russell v. Janssen Pharmaceuticals, which is the second Xarelto case to be tried in Philadelphia state court.
By Erin Mulvaney | April 6, 2018
Nearly 65 percent of workplaces where the average wage is less than $13 an hour also require mandatory arbitration agreements for their employees, according to the Economic Policy Institute report. The U.S. Supreme Court this term is looking at these agreements in action that involves the NLRB and private companies.
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