By VerdictSearch | February 8, 2022
On Jan. 15, 2018, plaintiff Morris Hubbard, 52, a deliveryman, slipped and fell on a sidewalk at 45 Gamewood Road, in Levittown. Hubbard claimed neck, shoulder and lower back injuries.
By Jason Grant | David Gialanella | January 20, 2022
The case went to mediation last fall in the run-up to a January 2022 trial date, and it did not settle. But the parties continued the discussions after the mediation and it settled late last year, according to Sean Mahoney, a lawyer at Stathis & Leonardis who represented the plaintiff.
By Cedra Mayfield | January 20, 2022
"The notice ... did not provide a specific amount that would constitute a binding offer of settlement that could be accepted by the City," read the Georgia Court of Appeals decision. "Accordingly, the trial court erred in denying the City's motion to dismiss."
By Charles Toutant | January 14, 2022
A woman who needed multiple operations after slipping in an icy parking lot received a $1.05 million settlement in her Mercer County suit, Ghant…
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By VerdictSearch | January 13, 2022
On March 1, 2015, while it was snowing, plaintiff Dominick Parker, 64, a bus driver, was walking on the sidewalk at 1407 Creedmoor Ave. in Pittsburgh. He claimed that he slipped and fell on a sheet of ice that covered the sidewalk, resulting in a tear of his quadriceps tendon.
By VerdictSearch | January 6, 2022
On April 9, 2016, plaintiff Lynette Coleman, 37, an airline's baggage handler, fell while she was working on the tarmac of Philadelphia International Airport, in Philadelphia. She claimed that she suffered an injury of her neck.
By Cedra Mayfield | January 6, 2022
"The law was very strongly in our favor," said Peachtree Corners defense attorney Craig P. Terrett, partner of Cruser, Mitchell, Novitz, Sanchez, Gaston & Zimet. "There was very little legal support for overturning a jury verdict."
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By John J. Hare | December 30, 2021
In the state of New Jersey, under the New Jersey Design Services Act, architects and only architects, not engineers, are permitted to design buildings intended for human use, occupancy and habitation.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Deborah Koplovitz and Andrew B. Freedland | December 28, 2021
'Gundlach' illuminates the risks that may await a board when an employee's small side jobs goes awry, and serves as a cautionary tale.
By Cedra Mayfield | December 17, 2021
"We now are up to over 100 district courts across the country who have considered and rejected that very argument," said appellee attorney William James Atkins of Edmond Lindsay & Atkins in Atlanta. "The simple reason for that is the act requires a direct causal connection."
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