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Justices to Mull Statute of Limitations in Med Mal Cases
The state Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments on whether, in light of the certificate of merit requirement, the statute of limitations in a medical malpractice case where there are multiple potential causes of an injury should toll upon confirmation of the specific cause of the injury or simply upon discovery that the injury was the result of someone else's conduct.Heirs in $165M Suit Say Coke Ties Compromise SunTrust Banks
SunTrust Banks Inc.'s failure to diversify family trust assets that sometimes had up to 90 percent Coca-Cola stock has prompted claims against the bank. The $165 million federal suit raises questions about the bank's decades-old relationship with Coke and also will likely test the limits of attorney-client privilege between King & Spalding and its longtime clients Coke and SunTrust. The bank has identified two King & Spalding partners in the firm's trusts practice as witnesses in the case.College gossip Web site targeted by New Jersey attorney general denies breaking law
TRENTON, N.J. AP - The college gossip Web site JuicyCampus.com has criticized a consumer fraud investigation launched by the New Jersey attorney general."JuicyCampus has not violated any laws," reads an unsigned statement posted on the Web site earlier this week. The statement also accuses the attorney general of interfering with users' free speech.3rd Circuit Says Corporations May Take Info Requests 'Personally'
Lawyers for AT&T have won a court battle with the Federal Communications Commission over whether corporations are entitled to assert claims of "personal" privacy. The FCC argued that when Congress crafted the exemptions clauses of the Freedom of Information Act, it intended the phrase "personal privacy" to extend only to human beings. But AT&T claimed that FOIA specifically defines the term "person" to include corporations. The 3rd Circuit has ruled that AT&T had the better argument.View more book results for the query "*"
Proposed Changes to Patent Rules May Force Execs to Re-think Strategy
On Jan. 3, 2006, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office gave notice in the Federal Register of significant proposed changes to its rules governing the practice of filing continuation patent applications, and executives may need to re-think their companies' patent strategy as a result.Fractured Ankle Brings .1 Mil. Settlement
Safety and Wage Loss at Heart of CaseThe Federal Trade Commission is fighting a two-front battle against deals in which brand pharma makers pay generics to keep their products off the market. It seems to be making political headway, but on Tuesday the FTC took a big blow in court--partly because of some questionable litigation strategy.
Cal Law Welcomes a New Publisher
Brian Hunt succeeds Christopher Braun as publisher of The Recorder, Cal Law and GC California.Trending Stories
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