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Calif. High Court Gives Guidance on Post-Employment Sales Commissions
The recent decision Schachter v. Citigroup is the first California Supreme Court case to address the question of post-employment sales commissions. The court's guidance is necessary because existing case law and interpretations from the California Department of Labor Standards Enforcement have not provided a clear, consistent or well-founded framework, says attorney Richard H. Frank. The ruling provides guidance for companies on crafting enforceable employment contracts and commission plans to address this issue.Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 13, No. 158 - August 15, 2005
The Policies and Politics of Antitrust
Almost 30 years ago Robert Bork, in his seminal book "The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War With Itself," wrote that: "modern antitrust law has so decayed that the policy is no longer intellectually respectable. Some of it is no longer respectable as law; more of it is not respectable as economics; ... a great deal of antitrust is not even respectable as politics." Fast forward from 1978 to 2007 and do we find all has become "respectable"? No and yes, says attorney and law professor C. Evan Stewart.Goffer Sentenced to Three Years; Judge Says He Was Influenced by Older Brother
Ordering a term for Emanuel Goffer that was a downward departure from the 41 months that was the low end of his sentencing range, Judge Richard Sullivan said the guiding role of Zvi Goffer could not be ignored.Best on the Test: Texas Bar Exam Top Scorers Reveal Secrets to Their Success
For nearly everyone who takes the twice-yearly, two-and-a-half day, four-part Texas Bar Exam, the results are simple: pass or fail. But a handful of people get a bit more information than that because they earned the top three scores. Texas Lawyer has contacted a number of the ace bar-takers who earned the top score on the Texas bar exam.View more book results for the query "*"
Ethics Commission Levies Record Fine Against Texas Judge
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Presiding Judge Sharon Keller faces a hit to the pocketbook. In an order signed Wednesday, the Texas Ethics Commission levied a $100,000 civil penalty against Keller for multiple omissions on her 2007 and 2008 personal financial statements. Tim Sorrells, TEC's deputy general counsel, says, "It is the largest penalty." The TEC order isn't Keller's only problem; she's still dealing with fallout from the execution of Michael Richard.Republicans revive measure to change law school guidelines
Deere 3Q Easily Tops Wall Street Expectations
Deere & Co.'s third-quarter net income rose 27 percent, driven by booming agricultural activity in North and South America. The company easily beat most expectations.Trending Stories
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