0 results for 'Duane Morris'
Judge Denies Fusion GPS Bid to Block House Subpoena for Bank Records
The firm behind the so-called Trump dossier argued the subpoena from the House Intelligence Committee was overly broad.New Players to Enter State's Medical Marijuana Market After Judge Rejects Challenge
The action, brought by an association of existing companies in the market, aimed to stop an additional five from entering the market.Duane Morris Snags More Partners as Sedgwick Shuts Down in California
Akerman, Duane Morris, Goldberg Segalla and Steptoe & Johnson start 2018 by making several lateral hires from the soon-to-be-shuttered Sedgwick.Akerman Picks Up Partners as Sedgwick Shuts Down in California
Akerman, Duane Morris, Goldberg Segalla and Steptoe & Johnson start 2018 by making several lateral hires from the soon-to-be-shuttered Sedgwick.Why more failing law firms are choosing a death of dissolution rather than insolvency
As Clydes takes an 80-strong team from now-defunct US law firm Sedgwick, more failing firms are breaking up to avoid a costly bankruptcySteptoe & Johnson Adds Seven-Lawyer Sedgwick Group
Continuing the diaspora of partners that has expanded with Sedgwick's official dissolution, Steptoe & Johnson adds a team of well-known commercial and class action litigatorsSedgwick Diaspora Sees Four Law Firms Expand in California
Akerman, Duane Morris, Goldberg Segalla and Steptoe & Johnson have started off 2018 by making several lateral hires from the soon-to-be-shuttered Sedgwick. Goldberg Segalla has opened a Los Angeles office with its new recruit.Sedgwick Chair Joins Shook Hardy in San Francisco
Sedgwick leader Michael Healy has found a new home at Shook, Hardy & Bacon following the dissolution of the 85-year-old firm this month.After a Year Running Boutique, Former GC Jumps to Duane Morris
Insurance industry veteran Damon Vocke is joining Duane Morris a little more than a year after launching his own shop.Scope of Proceedings in the Trial Court on Remand
In their Appellate Practice column, Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. write: A finding of prejudicial error will generally result in a reversal of the judgment and a new trial on all issues unless the appellate court specifically limits the scope of the retrial. Where the appellate court finds error affecting the determination of only some of the issues, however, it may order a retrial solely as to those issues, saving the parties and the trial court the time, expense and trouble of retrying issues that were properly decided.Trending Stories
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