By Steven A. Meyerowitz | April 15, 2019
A federal district has ruled that an exclusion in a commercial general liability insurance policy precluded coverage of a lawsuit alleging that the insured company had violated its fiduciary duties under ERISA.
By Karen Sloan | April 14, 2019
In this first installment of The Big Fail, a series focused on the high percentage of law graduates failing the bar and the impact on law schools and the legal profession, The Recorder affiliate Law.com examines how far rates have dropped in recent years and the reasons for the decline.
By Michael Warren | April 12, 2019
The legalization of recreational cannabis presents unique challenges to employers' efforts to maintain a drug-free workplace.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | April 11, 2019
A California court has ruled that a claimant had the burden of demonstrating that the pilot of a Cessna aircraft that crashed had completed an annual training requirement as required by the pilot's insurance policy.
By Xiumei Dong | Lizzy McLellan | April 5, 2019
"I think the fear for me is in not holding powerful institutions and larger employers accountable, and in allowing law institutions like Jones Day to escape scrutiny," lawyer and plaintiff Nilab Tolton said.
By Caroline Spiezio | April 3, 2019
The rush of public offerings—with Lyft's already launching its IPO, and Uber, Slack, Pinterest and Airbnb poised to follow suit—could heat up the Bay Area's market for in-house counsel.
By Scott Graham | March 29, 2019
Oracle has accused Google of rehashing the same copyrightability arguments that the Supreme Court has already rejected.
The American Lawyer | Analysis|News
By Roy Strom | March 29, 2019
Partner profit growth was more evenly distributed among the Am Law 100 last year. But it's still tough to compete with firms boasting average partner profits above $3, $4 and even $5 million.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | March 26, 2019
This story is reprinted with permission from FC&S Legal, the industry's only comprehensive digital resource designed for insurance coverage…
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | March 25, 2019
A federal district court in California has ruled that an insurer did not act in bad faith in its investigation of whether its insured had died by committing suicide in a case where the insured's body had not been found.
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