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November 04, 2011 | Daily Report Online

Suit accuses lawyer, cousin of unjust enrichment

Two cousins who run a Cartersville law firm are being sued for failing to repay their parts of a $1.5 million loan taken from a now-defunct bank.The plaintiff, Little Rock, Ark.-based Bank of the Ozarks, claims that attorney William A. Neel Jr. and his cousin, Robert Neel, defaulted on the loan. William Neel is the owner of the Neel Law Firm, and Robert Neel, who is not a lawyer, is its president.
3 minute read
January 14, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

Court says evidence valid despite police error

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that evidence found after an arrest based on incorrect information from police files may be used against a criminal suspect.
2 minute read
February 04, 2000 | Law.com

Y2K Costs And Counting

While the turn of the calendar to Jan. 1, 2000, has come and gone with minimal disruption to computer systems, the millennium bug continues to be a pest. Companies spent gobs of money to combat the year 2000 problem and many believe the expense was worth it. Florida's biggest businesses spent over $300 million on Y2K problems -- and haven't reported any. Nevertheless, some experts say it could be months, or years, before issues surrounding the year 2000 problem are resolved.
12 minute read
August 28, 2000 | The Legal Intelligencer

Bird Seed and Feed Business Can't Claim Manufacturing Exemption

A wildlife and birdseed business that thought it fell under a manufacturing exemption to a local business privilege tax will have to cough up thousands of dollars of tax money because the operation does not constitute manufacturing, a common pleas court j
4 minute read
March 18, 2002 | New York Law Journal

Panel Upholds Jailing Financier for Contempt

MORE THAN two years after he was jailed for civil contempt, financier Martin Armstrong still cannot find a sympathetic ear at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.After Two Years, Confinement Ruled Coercive, Not Punitive, in Nature
6 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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January 02, 2006 | National Law Journal

The Lion In Winter

Philip Hirschkop (right) has spent his career taking on unpopular causes, everything from opposing the Vietnam War to defending the rights of American Nazis to, more recently, serving as general counsel for an animal rights group. But after his current case, involving the Ringling Bros. circus, is resolved, the Alexandria, Va., lawyer is hanging it up.
13 minute read
March 23, 1999 | Law.com

Y2K Case Against Microsoft Dismissed

A Chicago federal judge has dismissed a class action against Microsoft Corp. that complained of Y2K problems in three versions of its popular FoxPro database software. U.S. District Judge Ruben Castillo ruled that Kaczmarek v. Microsoft Corp. was without merit. The suit claimed Microsoft had breached the warranties and committed negligencein the software's design. The suit also had included claims of deceptive trade practices and consumer fraud.
4 minute read
March 25, 2010 | New York Law Journal

International Litigation

Lawrence W. Newman and David Zaslowsky, members of Baker & McKenzie, write: Should one's ability to remove a case to federal court to enforce/challenge an international arbitration award under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of June 10, 1958 depend on whether one is seeking to confirm or vacate the award? In some courts it does, and in others, it does not.
10 minute read
June 20, 2003 | Law.com

PG&E, CPUC Craft Agreement on Bankruptcy

Nearly four months after being ordered into judicially supervised settlement talks, state regulators and Pacific Gas & Electric Co. have resolved their differences and have agreed to a plan that would allow the troubled utility to emerge from bankruptcy in 2004. In a press conference Thursday at San Francisco's federal bankruptcy court, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Randall Newsome announced a proposed settlement agreement that would repay creditors in full while keeping PG&E intact and under state regulation.
4 minute read
December 24, 2001 | The Legal Intelligencer

'Court' Can Mean Arbitrators

The term "court" in the arbitration provision of the Wage Payment and Collection Law does not mean that a common pleas judge must decide a claim for attorney fees, a common pleas court judge has ruled.
5 minute read

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