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District Split: Arbitrators, Non-Parties, Pre-Hearing Discovery
David L. Elsberg, a member of Miller & Wrubel, writes that the legal limitations on prehearing discovery sometimes make little difference in practice and on occasion may be circumvented by creative litigants and arbitrators.Five Firms Fall in for Australian Military Housing Project
Four of Australia's Big Six firms are among the legal advisors on a $965 million housing project for the Australian Department of Defence.Lawsuit against pollster for Hillary Clinton dropped, legal tussle resolved
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Judge rules subsidized rent payments should go to homeowner association
A Palm Beach Circuit Court judge has ruled that a housing authority should pay a low-income tenant's rent directly to a homeowners association, and not a landlord who is late paying maintenance fees.Court Weighs Duty To Indemnify Corporation's Outside Counsel
When a corporation hires outside counsel, that doesn't mean the lawyer should be entitled to indemnification if things goes awry and legal troubles ensue. Or does it? An appeals court says yes: that the outside counsel becomes a corporate agent if he performs what are in essence outsourced company functions. It's a unsettled point of law in New Jersey, and it will be decided by the state Supreme Court.Campbell v. Planet Asef Realty
Panel Affirms Dismissal of Legal Malpractice Suit; Attorney Did Not Breach Duty to BuyerAt big firms, equity gender gap continues
Firms talk a good line, but how many can demonstrate that they are promoting a strong percentage of women into the equity-partner ranks? Our survey shows slow progress for women partners at large firms.Governor's Budget Could Mean Big Changes for Calif. Employment Laws
Tucked inside Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's voluminous $143 billion budget proposal is a single-line spending provision that could mean big changes for California's employment laws. The governor's plan allocates slightly less than $500,000 to revive the Industrial Welfare Commission, the five-member body that regulates workers' wages, conditions and hours. The Legislature de-funded -- and effectively deactivated -- the commission in 2004 amid complaints that it failed to consider a minimum wage hike.Trending Stories
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