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Art collector Jeanne Marchig didn't find out until nine years after Christie's auctioned a drawing of hers for $22,000 that the drawing had since been attributed to da Vinci and could be worth as much as $150 million. By then, according to a Manhattan federal judge, she'd already lost the right to sue the auction house for messing up the attribution.
Firm Finance: What Was Notable for 2012
Stats for each of the top 25 firms.Texas High Court's Coke Antitrust Opinion Challenged as 'Bizarre'
When the Texas Supreme Court released its decision in a 14-year-old antitrust case brought by soft-drink bottlers against The Coca-Cola Co., it took away a $15 million jury verdict and changed the face of Texas antitrust law. The court ruled that the law provides no remedy for out-of-state actions and that Texas courts cannot decide how to apply another state's antitrust laws to injuries in that state. Many amicus briefs, including one calling the decision "bizarre," have joined the motion for rehearing.Trademark Attorneys: Don't Promote Using 'March Madness'
Lawyers are getting swept up in the March Madness frenzy, but not due to basketball scores. It's potential trademark violations that has their heads spinning. Many are cautioning clients to refrain from using the terms "March Madness" or "The Final Four" for promotions. That's because the terms are trademarks licensed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and lawyers warn that the group isn't shy about protecting them. One IP attorney says, "Call it the 'basketball frenzy,' or something else."When the Federal Circuit overturned an East Texas jury verdict against Hyundai last month, the big loser was Erich Spangenberg, one of the most litigious patent enforcers in the country. In his latest column at Corporate Counsel, Joe Mullin talks to Spangenberg about the ruling and its impact. Is the troll model endangered?
2002 Associates Survey: From Allen & Overy to Lowenstein Sandler
The firm-by-firm breakdown of responses to the survey.Commentary: Board Certification — The Last Big Hurdle
In 1994, Kendall Gray was a briefing attorney at the Texas Supreme Court. When he and his co-clerks looked at the briefs and sat in the courtroom listening to arguments, they often thought the lawyering wasn't especially good, he remembers. They thought they could do at least as well, if not better. But he says he now knows that appellate practice is not as easy as it looks.Trending Stories
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