The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | March 15, 2018
A Montgomery County judge said a former Wells Fargo bank manager should be compelled to hand over her tax returns in a breach of contract action she filed arising out of a Family and Medical Leave Act settlement she entered into with the bank.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | March 15, 2018
A three-judge panel of the court upheld a ruling by the grand jury supervising judge denying a motion by Pittsburgh-based television station WPXI seeking to intervene and access a search warrant and related documents.
The Legal Intelligencer | Expert Opinion
By Daniel E. Cummins | March 15, 2018
With the law of products liability cases continuing to evolve in the post-Tincher era, growing pains are being felt by both the courts and practitioners. In particular, as reported in numerous recent articles in the Pennsylvania Law Weekly and The Legal Intelligencer, the trial courts are faced with conflicting positions from the plaintiff's bar and the defense bar on the proper language for jury instructions in post-Tincher products cases.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mark Schultz | March 15, 2018
Since the 1940s, focus groups have been used to provide feedback to product sellers, television producers, governments and political candidates. Focus groups bring together a group of “ordinary people” to share their views on a topic or product.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | March 15, 2018
The court said the state Department of Labor & Industry regulation establishing that calculation method was "identical"—save for a single Oxford comma—to a Bureau of Employment Security regulation that had been invalidated by the Pennsylvania Superior Court a few years earlier.
The Legal Intelligencer | Expert Opinion
By Samuel C. Stretton | March 15, 2018
I saw an article recently about competency and the need for lawyers to become proficient on electronic discovery or else face disciplinary rule violations. I am an older lawyer. What should I do?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 13, 2018
Agreeing to arbitration was supposed to be as easy as clicking a button, but Live Nation was unable to show that a man seeking to sue the company actually clicked any of the buttons indicating his consent to arbitrate.
By VerdictSearch | March 13, 2018
On July 27, 2015, plaintiff Pamela Johnson, in her 40s, started working as a paratransit van driver at Keystone Quality Transport Co., a company that provides nonemergency medical transportation in the Philadelphia region.
By Victoria Hudgins | March 13, 2018
Mary-Jo Rebelo joined Burns White as an equity member in the firm's Pittsburgh office.
By Victoria Hudgins | March 9, 2018
Two state senators say Pennsylvania's Municipality Authorities Act needs to be amended. Their memo proposes term limits, prohibitions of who can serve on boards and establishing penalties for not submitting annual reports and audits.
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