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January 29, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal

Fraud Suit Says Car Makers Plotted To Keep Canadian Cars From U.S.

The New Jersey Supreme Court heard arguments Monday on whether a consumer fraud class action suit can proceed against American and Canadian carmakers for allegedly conspiring to inflate new car prices in the United States.
3 minute read
November 15, 2011 | Corporate Counsel

Calif. Judge Spreads Federal Circuit's Gospel: Less Is More

Speaking to the rocket docket crowd and visitors from less plaintiff-friendly jurisdictions, Federal Circuit Chief Judge Randall Rader announced a novel advisory order that calls for strict limits on electronic discovery in patent suits, which can cost accused infringers dearly even on bogus claims.
9 minute read
June 22, 2010 | New York Law Journal

What a BigLaw Buddy Can Mean for Solos and Small Firms

7 minute read
July 18, 2005 | The Legal Intelligencer

Despite Business Expertise, Insured Can Invoke Discovery Rule

The Superior Court has ruled that an Allegheny County man's experience in investing did not afford him any special understanding of the insurance industry that would prevent him from invoking the discovery rule in a lawsuit alleging deceptive marketing an
8 minute read
March 18, 2010 | New Jersey Law Journal

Judicial Doctrine Trumps Plain Language of the Product Liability Act

Third Circuit Court of Appeals effectively substituted the judicial policy pronouncements embodied in the "economic loss doctrine" for the plain language used by the New Jersey Legislature.
9 minute read
June 17, 2009 | Law.com

Anatomy of an Arbitration Disaster

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge last month affirmed an arbitration award in a wrongful termination suit of more than $4.1 billion, sending shock waves through the labor and employment bar. Alston & Bird partner Michael D. Young spoke to The National Law Journal about the lessons to be learned from the outcome in this case regarding arbitration agreements and the arbitration process. He also broke down the award to explain how the arbitrator came up with such an astronomically high number.
6 minute read
March 19, 2008 | Texas Lawyer

Discipline Report: Lawyer Suspended, Another Gets Probation

The State Bar has announced that a Jefferson County lawyer has been suspended and a lawyer in Harris County has been placed on probation. The suspended lawyer was ordered to pay $1,289.95 in attorneys' fees and direct expenses to the State Bar of Texas and $2,750 in restitution to a former client. The other lawyer was ordered to pay $11,043.75 in attorneys' fees, costs and expenses.
3 minute read
August 09, 2011 | Corporate Counsel

China's Intellectual Property Regime Comes of Age

China's intellectual property protection: Not too many years ago that would have been considered an oxymoron. Then the Chinese government announced its future economy would be based on innovation, not manufacturing.
11 minute read
August 07, 2007 | Law.com

Publishers Join Case Against YouTube

A group of music publishing companies said Monday it is joining a copyright infringement lawsuit against Google Inc.'s video-sharing site YouTube. The National Music Publishers' Association said it was joining the lawsuit out of concern that many songwriters weren't receiving proper compensation when their music appeared on YouTube videos.
2 minute read
October 07, 2009 | New York Law Journal

United States v. Jae Shim

Under 'Flores-Figueroa,' Court Had to Instruct Jury As to 18 USC �2421 Mann Act Knowledge Element
1 minute read

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