By Raychel Lean | October 3, 2018
Trial No. 2 for Joyce Higgs, a cruise ship passenger who fractured her arm and shoulder after tripping over a "negligently" abandoned cleaning bucket, resulted in an almost identical million-dollar jury verdict.
By Andrew Denney | October 2, 2018
The total judgment for plaintiff Larry Jackson includes more than $2.6 million in prejudgment interest, which adds to $5.4 million in compensatory and punitive damages.
By Amanda Bronstad | October 2, 2018
The lawsuits come on the heels of a $670.7 million settlement with DuPont and Chemours Co. last year involving an MDL over a related chemical that has been linked to cancer and hypertension in pregnant women and other illnesses.
By Raychel Lean | October 1, 2018
Miami lawyers Meranda Reifschneider and Raul E. Garcia of Rubenstein Law argued that if staff at a Winn-Dixie store in Miami Lakes had fixed or unplugged a leaking produce case, Juan Del Valle would never have slipped and needed three spinal surgeries.
By David Gialanella | Charles Toutant | October 1, 2018
A roofer who suffered a traumatic brain injury in a 40-foot fall agreed to a $5.6 million settlement in his Union County suit, Smith v. Blue Rock…
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | October 1, 2018
After the Supreme Court's Aug. 15 opinion in Wilner v. Vertical Realty, Inc., we believe the rule requires revision with respect to multi-defendant cases.
By Max Mitchell | September 27, 2018
Erie County has agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle claims that corrections officers at the county prison beat a 52-year-old man so severely he eventually sustained strokes, kidney failure and a collapsed or punctured lung.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 26, 2018
At times against the objections of the lawyers, particularly for the defense, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Margaret Oldendorf interviewed jurors, reiterated jury instructions, ordered more oral arguments and replaced a juror with an alternate.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | September 26, 2018
A company registering to do business in Pennsylvania, even as a foreign corporation, can be sued in the state's courts, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled in a case of first impression.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Michael L. Hyman | September 26, 2018
The recent $7.5 million verdict for a St. Petersburg, Florida, condominium resident to compensate him for the injuries that he sustained in his community's hot tub is a telling example of the potential ramifications that can result when any defects in the working condition of these amenities are not properly addressed.
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