The Legal Intelligencer | Expert Opinion
By Samuel C. Stretton | May 10, 2018
I am in-house counsel working with an insurance company and want to save money. To do so, I would utilize paralegals and in-house office attorneys with a company that is located in other states to prepare documents, pleadings and strategy. Then outside counsel would be hired to review the documents and then appear in the local court. Is this ethical?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | May 10, 2018
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court is set to weigh in on numerous high-profile cases during an unusually lengthy oral argument session expected to begin Tuesday in Harrisburg.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 8, 2018
H. Jeffrey Brahin of Brahin Law Offices presented a program at the Greater BucksMont Chamber of Commerce on “Does Your Corporation Really Protect You? Piercing the Corporate Veil.”
By Victoria Hudgins | May 4, 2018
A state lawmaker seeks to increase the timeframe from 15 to 30 days for an employer to request relief from charges of a former employee's unemployment benefits.
By Victoria Hudgins | May 4, 2018
A state senator introduced a bill that would criminalize sexual extortion in the state.
By Michael Riccardi | May 3, 2018
Following is a listing of executive and legislative action for April 27 and the week of April 30. The General Assembly was in recess at press time. The Pennsylvania Senate was scheduled to return to session on May 21. The state House of Representatives was set to reconvene on May 22.
By VerdictSearch | May 3, 2018
On Feb. 6, 2013, plaintiff Kathryn Carroll, in her 50s, was terminated as a medical records clerk at a Pottsville health facility after a dispute with her office manager over missing patient charts.
The Legal Intelligencer | Expert Opinion
By Samuel C. Stretton | May 3, 2018
I inadvertently did not pay my annual fee since I moved my address and didn't receive notices. I am now on interim suspension. What do I do?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 3, 2018
The Pennsylvania Superior Court tossed a jury award of $32 million to the family of a 6-year-old boy killed in a 2012 car accident in Pittsburgh, including $10 million for a wrongful death claim and $10 million for a survival claim.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | May 3, 2018
The primer sets forth the rules well, but it does not, nor could it, explain how our judicial system will compel the litigants to follow them. Moreover, until e-discovery is understood as well by as many courts and litigators who understand other principles of that have been part of all phases of litigation, e.g., small cases as well as larger ones, for much longer, it is unlikely that the principles set forth in the primer will be widely followed.
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