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January 14, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Baer v. Chase et al

The New Jersey Supreme Court would hold that ideas lose their novelty if they are in the domain of public knowledge before use and, therefore, plaintiff's ideas, based on stories and facts in the public domain, could not have been misappropriated; although the District Court correctly concluded that the contract claims were unenforceable, it erred in applying the "sham affidavit" doctrine, and summary judgment on the quantum meruit claim is reversed.
17 minute read
October 28, 2002 | National Law Journal

Chart: The Legal Times 100

6 minute read
July 31, 2003 | New York Law Journal

New York Public Interest Research Group Straphangers Campaign Inc. v. Metropolitan Transportation Authority

MTA's Notice Of Public Hearing Regarding Fare Increase Complied With Statutory Requirements
26 minute read
January 01, 2010 | The American Lawyer

Class Acts

These 24 firms stood out for the sterling results they obtained for clients in 2008 and 2009.
8 minute read
May 08, 2001 | Law.com

Bush's First Judges

Formally starting a Senate confirmation process already mired in partisan bickering, President Bush today is expected to announce 11 nominations to federal appeals courts. The nominees were carefully chosen from the unofficial lists of names that have surfaced in recent weeks, and they do not include two potential nominees who have already stirred controversy.
5 minute read
December 26, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal

Unpublished Opinions

Unpublished state and federal court opinions.
23 minute read
December 03, 2002 | Law.com

R.H. Donnelley / Sprint

2 minute read
April 27, 2010 | The Recorder

Justices Add Exception to 'Moncharsh'

Courts can vacate arbitration awards based on legal error when not doing so would deprive the plaintiff of statutory rights, wrote California Supreme Court Justice Carlos Moreno. Three dissenters are not happy.
3 minute read
July 25, 2005 | Law.com

Among the Giants

The trend toward ever-larger law firms was supposed to squeeze out the little guys -- and though it's true that many GCs are still more comfortable sending big-ticket work to national firms, more companies are realizing smaller shops have their own allure: lower billing rates, more attention, leaner staffing and, often, deeper expertise. So while top-tier boutiques still compete for plum assignments, full-service midsize firms and smaller specialty shops are also finding a spot among the giants.
8 minute read
April 26, 2001 | Law.com

Georgia Music From Prison Camps, Front Porches and Capitol Hill

U.S. Sen. Zell Miller's passion for music has been with him longer, and maybe stronger, than his passion for politics. The Democrat from Georgia has even written a book that profiles over 100 artists, bands, and industry types linked to his home state. Many country music stars have pitched in at Miller fund-raisers, going back to his first run for statewide office in 1960 and continuing through his 2000 Senate campaign.
8 minute read

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