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Foreclosure filed against Lauderdale hotel owner
Firm Alleges Former Employee Stole More Than $100,000
A Dallas law firm has filed a civil suit against a former employee, seeking payment of more than $100,000 she allegedly stole from its coffers. Dallas' Owens, Clary & Aiken filed a petition in the 95th District Court, alleging that a former employee, Rena Gallagher, engaged in theft and fraud and breached her fiduciary duty when she systematically altered checks and entries in the firm's accounting records.Keating Is Picked As Dean of State`s Judicial Institute
LOOKING for a person with extraordinary credentials to run an extraordinary institution, Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye said Friday that she has selected Robert G.M. Keating as dean of the New York State Judicial Institute.View more book results for the query "*"
Federal Judge Limits Scope of Bilt-Rite Decision
When the Pennsylvania Supreme Court handed down its decision last year in Bilt-Rite Contractors v. The Architectural Studio, the justices adopted Section 552 of the Restatement of Torts (Second).Appeals Court Deals Blows to State in School Takeover Cases
The Commonwealth Court recently handed down opinions in two companion cases that indicated a certain amendment to the Education Empowerment Act may be unconstitutional because it creates a class of one.Taking New Area of Litigation One Plaintiff Suit at a Time
Spurred by a recent warning from the Food and Drug Administration, some plaintiffs firms, including Milberg Weiss, have identified gadolinium suits as a burgeoning area of litigation. Used to treat diseased kidneys, the chemical has plaintiffs lawyers salivating at the thought of a new arena of billion-dollar mass torts. But one firm wants to take it one suit at a time. Jeffrey Kaiser, a partner at Levin Simes Kaiser & Gornick, says the work on the first case will "set the tone" for the other cases.Benchmark Electronics Inc. v. J.M. Huber Corp.
While New York law governs appellant's contract claims, Texas law applies to its fraud, statutory fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims. The fraud and misrepresentation claims should not have been dismissed for inadequate pleading under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b). The Texas fraud claims are viable, however, not based upon precontractual representations, but only insofar as they are based on representations specified in the parties' contract.Trending Stories
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