0 results for 'Cole Scott & Kissane'
South Florida Lawyers Clinch $13 Million Verdict in Wrongful-Death Case
Richard K. Slinkman and Ryan J. Wynne with the Slinkman, Slinkman & Wynne law firm represented the estate of Michelle Anderson in Alachua Circuit Court.Jury Agrees Truck Driver Didn't Have Time to Avoid Bicyclist
The jury finds no negligence by the truck driver in the case of a bicyclist who was hospitalized for more than a month.Jury Sides With Doctor Who Treated Man's Broken Arm Weeks Before He Died
The man died of sepsis weeks after he was treated by a Venice orthopedist.Motorcyclist Injured When Cement Truck Pinned His Leg
The motorcyclist claims his leg was pinned when a cement truck rolled onto him at a stop light.Challenger to Hillsboro Beach Resort Sale Gets $3.5M, But the Deal Stands
A Los Angeles man said the sale of the Seabonay Beach Resort wasn't legitimate because he should have been the one to authorize it. He lost in part and won in part.View more book results for the query "Cole Scott & Kissane"
Florida Appellate Court Rules for State Farm Insurance in Attorney Fee Dispute
The Third District Court of Appeal found the lower court erred in denying State Farm's motion for appellate attorney fees. The underlying case concerned the insurance provider's allocation of PIP coverage of Hialeah resident Reynier Cordoves, who assigned his benefits to Caribbean Rehabilitation Center Inc.Ambiguous Settlement Proposals Doomed Insurer’s Bid for Its Attorneys’ Fees
A Florida appellate court has ruled that an insurer could not recover its attorneys’ fees and costs where the indemnity provision in the insurer’s settlement proposals was ambiguous.Ambiguous Settlement Proposals Doom Insurer’s Bid for Attorney Fees
District Judge Ivan Fernandez found insurance company settlement proposals “patently ambiguous” in rejecting a request for attorney fees.Litigation Leads Growth in Attorney Counts at Florida Law Firms
Plaintiffs and defense firms are pushing up the numbers in the annual Review 100 survey. Full-service? Not so much.'Dear Florida Supreme Court: We Need Your Help,' 11th Circuit Writes in SOS About Damages
The Eleventh Circuit wrestled with whether an "unusually broad" exculpatory clause in a business contract was legally enforceable, because the provision appears to protect one of the signatories from all damages.Trending Stories
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