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Top 10 Things You Should Know About the New Patent Law
ALM's Sheri Qualters asked several patent practitioners to come up with a list of things lawyers should know about the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, set to launch March 16, 2013.30 Years Later, CERCLA Remains a Hot Topic in the Courts
On Dec. 11, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Cleanup and Liability Act, commonly known as the Superfund law, or CERCLA, turned 30.Sharply Divided Appeals Court Sends Kids Back to Busy Lawyer-Mom
The child custody case between Miami lawyer Alice Hector and her ex-husband, Robert Young, was resolved Wednesday, when an appeals court sided with Hector. The lawyer-mom's case gained national attention a year ago when custody of the children went to Young on grounds that Hector had failed to devote enough time to raising her daughters. Wednesday's decision is "going to set a lot of people's minds at ease that a working mother...doesn't have to worry about losing her kids," said Hector's lawyer.View more book results for the query "*"
Mass. high court allows employer to modify employee's job to avoid disability payments
Employees in Massachusetts who injure themselves at work may not be entitled to disability retirement benefits if their employer accommodates them with a lighter job. A recent Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruling held that employers can change an injured worker's duties to keep him on the job and prevent him from going into retirement and collecting disability.Plaintiffs Bar Ready for New Fight Over Malpractice Caps
Earlier this year, the Consumer Attorneys of California said its top priority with the Legislature was revamping the state's cap on medical malpractice damages. Now the session is well under way and bills have come and gone -- along with legislative deadlines -- but no one has introduced a measure to overturn the 1975 Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act, or MICRA -- at least not yet. Reworking MICRA remains a gleam in the eye of Consumer Attorneys President Bruce Brusavich.Suppressing Dangerous Clients Before They Strike
When he lost a custody fight for his three children, accountant Nicholas A. Lucarella hired two hit men to get revenge — against his own lawyer, Peter Paras of Red Bank, N.J. Shortly after meeting with Paras about a phony custody case, the men ran him down with a Jeep in his office parking lot.Donvito v. Northern Valley Regional High School Board of Education et al
Home instructors are not part of the regular teaching staff for purposes of tenure eligibility under N.J.S.A. 18A:28-5.Trending Stories
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