By Nick Hafen, Head of Legal Technology Education, BYU Law | April 30, 2024
Start getting familiar with it now so you can not only satisfy your professional responsibility obligations, but set yourself apart from others.
By VerdictSearch | April 30, 2024
On April 20, 2022, plaintiff Susan Wilson, 78, a landscape architect, was knocked to the ground by Neomal Perera's dogs in Phoenixville.
By Andrew Maloney | April 30, 2024
Law firm profit margins will decrease because "AI disproportionately impacts non-partner hours," the hours yielding the highest margins, noted a Law.com Pro Fellows report.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Amanda O'Brien | April 29, 2024
Republic First's recent struggles included a clash between its ousted founder and the board, which prompted a lawsuit—since resolved—accusing Holland & Knight of overbilling.
By Charles Toutant | April 29, 2024
"[I]f Mall Chevy materially breached the franchise agreement, then as a matter of law, GM would have good cause to terminate the franchise," Third Circuit Judge Peter Phipps wrote.
By Benjamin Knuth | April 29, 2024
With the Corporate Transparency Act now in effect, the rubber has hit the road for corporate counsel seeking to evaluate their clients' responsibilities and filing requirements.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Alan Nochumson and Alex Goldberg | April 29, 2024
In a recently published opinion, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court in Shyam Ventures v. Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of Castle Shannon, 2024 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 76 (Pa. Cmwlth. Mar. 7, 2024), set clear limits on the expansion of a legal nonconforming use and when such an expansion may be considered an entirely new use altogether.
By Alexander Lugo | April 29, 2024
A partner and an associate, both based in Miami, say they were subjected to retaliation and ultimately lost their jobs after raising concerns about how they were treated at the Philadelphia-based firm.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Casey Alan Coyle and Michael Libuser | April 29, 2024
The fight is over legislation that prohibits the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue (the department), the administrator of the lottery, from offering products that "simulate casino-style lottery games" as part of the iLottery program. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently construed the meaning of that phrase in Greenwood Gaming & Entertainment v. Department of Revenue.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mark Hinderks | April 29, 2024
Whether communications (oral or electronic) received by the lawyer constitute such a "consultation" to trigger "prospective client" status depends on the circumstances, including whether the lawyer or law firm has invited the submission of information about the representation through advertising, website reference, etc., without qualifying cautionary statements or warnings about the nature of the communications.
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