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COVID Is Over, but Not When It Comes to Real Estate, Personal Injury Litigation
"COVID continues to impact trials as attorneys, judges, trial staff, litigants jurors, etc. test positive before, during, or after trial, and derail things that have taken years to get into a position to try," Attorney Kenneth J. McKenna said.Post-'Roe' Texas: Unanticipated Effects of the Human Life Protection Act of 2021
Nothing in Texas' trigger law precludes a medical malpractice suit against a physician—which is precisely where it creates uncertainty.Federal Judge OKs Age Discrimination Claim Alleging Employee Was Fired for Turning 40
But the district judge also agreed with a magistrate judge's recommendation to toss out the rest of the plaintiff's claims.View more book results for the query "*"
$1.6M in Backlog Relief: Macon Judicial Circuit Gets $400K More in Federal Funds
"That money is to basically set the other courtrooms up the same way mine is, which all runs through a laptop computer," said Macon Judicial Circuit Chief Judge Howard Z. Simms.Trusts, Escrows and Property of the Estate (or Not)
The assets available to secured creditors in a debtor's bankruptcy proceeding must constitute "property of the estate" within the meaning of section 541(a)(1) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. However, creditors can sometimes find assets of a debtor outside the realm of a bankruptcy debtor's estate based on certain pre-bankruptcy arrangements. Examples of those arrangements are trusts and escrows. This column discusses two recent cases, "Markel Insurance Company v. Origin Bancorp, Inc.," and "In re: Urban Commons 2 West LLC," where federal courts held that a trust and escrow arrangement, respectively, were each insufficiently structured to protect the related assets from claims of creditors of the bankrupt debtor.Reform Provides Much-Needed Transparency to Insurance Litigation
Despite its expansive overhaul of the Florida tort legal landscape, HB 837 did more than just impact tort lawyers in Florida. Section 6 of the bill also created a new Florida Statute s. 768.0427 which greatly leveled the playing field and provided transparency surrounding the amounts paid to medical providers who accept a letter of protection.Trending Stories
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