0 results for 'Bergeson, LLP'
Bergeson Firm Gets a Bigger Office but Wants to Stay Small
The boom in litigation work in Silicon Valley is trickling down to the smallest of players. The 13-lawyer San Jose defense boutique, Bergeson LLP, is readying itself to ride a wave of new work generated by increased scrutiny on corporate practices. Name partner and founder, Daniel Bergeson, is moving his firm to bigger offices as demand for securities defense expertise prompts him to look for new hires. But, he said he likes small-firm life, and he doesn't have a grand plan to fill up all the new space.Getting a Bigger Office -- but Wanting to Stay Small
The boom in litigation work in Silicon Valley is trickling down to the smallest of players. The 13-lawyer San Jose defense boutique, Bergeson LLP, is readying itself to ride a wave of new work generated by increased scrutiny on corporate practices.Rutan & Tucker Opens First Northern California Outpost
Orange County's largest law firm, the 130-lawyer Rutan & Tucker, has chosen San Jose as the spot to open its first satellite office. Rutan announced the new office will open Friday.Cite as: In Re Currency Conversion Fee Antitrust Litigation, MDL No. 1409, NYLJ 1202488718066, at *1 (SDNY, Decided March 29, 2011)District Judge William H. Pau
Cite as: In Re Currency Conversion Fee Antitrust Litigation, MDL No. 1409, NYLJ 1202488718066, at *1 (SDNY, Decided March 29, 2011)District Judge William H. Pau
Wilson Sonsini's Otteson Enters Solo Practice
Partner James Otteson is striking out on his own after nearly 20 years as a patent litigator at the firm.9th Circuit: $10K 'Bet' Can't Settle E-Retailer Fight
L.L. Bean and Gator.com settled a case over pop-up ads last summer, but both sides asked to keep the issue of whether federal courts have jurisdiction over out-of-state Internet retailers alive -- and included a provision in their settlement agreement that said Gator.com would pay L.L. Bean $10,000 more if a panel decided in favor of the apparel retailer. Despite the "side bet," a 9th Circuit panel decided Tuesday the issue was moot because the parties had settled.Court Says $10K "Bet" Can't Settle E-Retailer Fight
A $10,000 "side bet" wasn't enough to persuade a Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals en banc panel to answer whether federal courts have jurisdiction over out-of-state Internet retailers. Maine-based L.L. Bean Inc. and Gator.com Corp. of Redwood City, settled last summer. But both sides asked the court to keep the issue alive and included a provision in their confidential settlement agreement that Gator.com would pay L.L. Bean $10,000 more if the panel decided in favor of the well-known retailer.Cite as 10 C.D.O.S. 11941 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. COMPREHENSIVE DRUG TESTING, INC., D
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