By Randy Maniloff | June 13, 2018
Will a spectator injured at the U.S. Open suffer the same fate as an unlucky baseball fan? At least one case says "no."
By John Council | June 11, 2018
Corpus Christi's Thirteenth Court of Appeals has reversed the disbarment of a McAllen lawyer, ruling it was wrong to allow a federal judge to testify…
By Amanda Bronstad | June 8, 2018
A federal panel reviewing a $1.04 billion hip implant verdict appeared skeptical about Johnson & Johnson's arguments that a Dallas judge had…
National Law Journal | Live Coverage|News
By Amanda Bronstad | June 6, 2018
Johnson & Johnson “rigged the tests” to avoid conceding that its baby powder contained asbestos, causing 22 women to get ovarian cancer, plaintiffs lawyer Mark Lanier told a St. Louis jury in opening statements on Wednesday in the most high-volume talcum powder trial to date.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 4, 2018
Claims of 22 women are set to be tested in the case, the first scheduled to go to trial since the Supreme Court's 2017 decision in "Bristol-Myers Squibb v. Superior Court of California," which made it harder for nonresident litigants to pursue claims in multiplaintiff lawsuits.
By John Council | May 29, 2018
At first glance, the huge $89.6 million jury verdict Eric Penn and Zollie Steakley recently won against a trucking company seemed like an easy sell…
By John Council | May 24, 2018
A recent Texas Supreme Court decision that forces a Houston hospital to disclose reimbursement rates charged to insured patients versus uninsured patients will almost certainly be felt in so-called hospital lien cases, some Texas attorneys believe the decision could be applied to a range of other civil cases in which the reasonableness of a party's charges is at issue.
By John Council | May 14, 2018
After two courts slammed him for using what amounted to a “push poll” to sway a jury pool in a wrongful death case, prominent Dallas attorney William…
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | May 7, 2018
The law firm of Houston lawyer Daniel D. Horowitz filed a lawsuit against Colorado firm Bachus & Schanker, alleging it failed to pay a 40 percent share of a contingency fee.
By John Council | May 4, 2018
Snell was able to convince a Bastrop County jury this week that Justice of the Peace Donna Thomson intentionally violated the Deceptive Trades Practices Act when she sold Snell's client a house without disclosing that she still had a mortgage on the property, hitting the judge with nearly $1 million in damages.
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