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5 reasons in-house counsel are reluctant to make the predictive coding leap
The fundamentals of litigation practice have remained the same for decades.Executive and Legislative Action for Week of July 22, 2013
Following is a listing of executive and legislative action for the week of July 22. Members of the General Assembly are scheduled to return to session in September.Phila. Jury Finds Pathmark Negligent in Trip-and-Fall Case
A Philadelphia jury has awarded $834,703 to a Bucks County woman who fell at a Pathmark supermarket in Northeast Philadelphia while on the job. The plaintiff alleged the supermarket's improper substitute for a doorstop caused the fall, which resulted in injuries that have left her with permanent pain in her shoulder and knee.The U.S. Supreme Court Reshapes America
While I have been on the road plying my trade, the U.S. Supreme Court has been active in issuing decisions that many folks believe will change the nature of our democracy.Management Memo: Is Your Firm Creating a Star Culture?
In the wake of Dewey & LeBoeuf's collapse last year, Legal affiliate The American Lawyer published an article we had written about an issue that turned out to be a major contributing cause of that implosion: the wide compensation spreads within the equity partnership of large law firms. With the release earlier this year of regular Legal affiliate The Am Law Daily contributor Steven J. Harper's book, The Lawyer Bubble, and a recent American Lawyer survey that detailed the compensation spreads at many large firms, the issue has gained even greater attention.View more book results for the query "*"
Stevens Unlikely to Weigh In on Act 13 as New Justice
Supreme Court Justice-designate Correale F. Stevens is unlikely to participate in a ruling on controversial amendments to the state's Oil and Gas Act — signed into law as Act 13 — after he's sworn into office.No New Taxes in Transportation Funding Proposal
A proposal to raise nearly $2 billion annually for the state's roads, bridges and mass transit systems flopped recently in the legislature, partly because it would end up increasing prices at the pump through a wholesale fuel tax increase.Application of Antitrust Laws to Patent Cases Materially Altered
In FTC v. Actavis, 133 S.Ct. 2223 (2013), a decision that has captured the attention of both antitrust and intellectual property lawyers alike, the U.S. Supreme Court recently held in a 5-3 vote that reverse-payment settlements resolving Hatch-Waxman Act patent litigation are not immune from antitrust liability simply because they fall within the scope of the patent being challenged in the litigation.Jury Sides With Plaintiff in SEPTA Bus Injury
On October 11, 2011, plaintiff Valerie Calloway-Ethridge, 51, boarded a Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority bus at the Broad Street-Olney Avenue terminal in North Philadelphia.JQC Investigating Broward Circuit Judge Laura Watson
The state Judicial Qualifications Commission is investigating Broward Circuit Judge Laura Watson for her role in an insurance settlement before she was elected to the bench.Trending Stories
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