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On the biggest Internet shopping day of the year, appellate heavyweights Ted Olson of Gibson Dunn and David Frederick of Kellogg Huber lost Supreme Court cert bids in cases challenging New York's online sales tax law.
Goodwin's Eleanor Yost on Inter Partes Review
A Q&A with with Goodwin Procter IP partner Eleanor Yost, a post-grant proceedings specialist.Can Landlords Discriminate Against Criminal Tenants?
Most people recoil at the idea of discriminating against people and probably just as many presume that existing laws prohibit discrimination. What many do not realize is that the laws against discrimination, for the most part, only cover those in so-called "protected classes." The typical protected classes are, as one may expect, based on race, gender, national origin, religion, age (over 40), and disability. Needless to say, it is unlawful for a landlord to discriminate against prospective tenants on the basis of any of these. Aside from these protected classes, can a landlord discriminate in choosing his or her tenants on the basis of other reasons?Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 22, No. 232 - December 2, 2013
Daily decision alert.Lessons from Apple's E-Books Antitrust Trial
Apple Inc.'s e-books price fixing case offers several lessons regarding current antitrust enforcement and best practices for in-house counsel.View more book results for the query "*"
Appeals Court Ponders Arbitration of Legal Malpractice Claim
A federal appeals court weighed whether a law firm can keep a client's malpractice claim out of court if the two sides have a contract calling for arbitration of all disputes.Appellate Panel Hears Arguments in RMBS Case
Attorneys litigating a threshold issue on appeal in breach of contract repurchase actions over residential mortgage-backed securities faced a tough line of questioning Wednesday during oral arguments before the Appellate Division, First Department.To woo Sullivan to the firm many years ago, Bill Urquhart sent her a goody box containing a bottle of Cristal champagne, a laptop, a BlackBerry, and a box of Quinn Emanuel business cards. It was a good investment.
Non-IT Cyber-Exposures May Kill Your Business
Every day we're bombarded with information about the continuing attacks on our data and personal information, attacks that result in thefts costing businesses millions of dollars. While most of us agree wholeheartedly with the necessity for a business to get locked down on the IT side, one can't help but notice that almost none of the proposed solutions address the non-IT cyber-exposures that are just as real, and just as dangerous, to the health of a business.Insurer for Lawyer-Suicide Seeks To Disclaim Malpractice Coverage
The insurance carrier for the firm of well-reputed New Jersey lawyer John Fahy, who committed suicide in July, is seeking a declaration that it need not cover a malpractice suit alleging he blew the statute of limitations in a sex discrimination case and lied to the client about it until his death.Trending Stories
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