By Anna Zhang | June 25, 2018
The Japanese automaker's bet on Singapore-based Grab is the largest in the ride-hailing industry worldwide from a car manufacturer.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | June 21, 2018
The widow of a marine killed in a fiery crash when a tanker truck slid down a decline and impacted his vehicle has settled her case with the excavating company that owned and operated the truck.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Karen Meara and Christopher Rizzo | June 20, 2018
States and cities are striving to improve air quality and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in an era when the federal government is moving in the opposite direction.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 13, 2018
Volkswagen has scored a critical court victory in its battle against several state attorneys general who are still pursuing billions of dollars over its emissions scandal.
By R. Robin McDonald | June 11, 2018
Lawyers for three Atlanta residents who rely on wheelchairs to get around say the City of Atlanta has violated the terms of a 2009 settlement with the Justice Department that required the city to repair deteriorating sidewalks.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | June 11, 2018
A Tesla Inc. investor has sued over Elon Musk's $2.6 billion-valued pay package in the Delaware Court of Chancery, calling the stock option a "massive, unfair and unprecedented" gift that would make the car manufacturer's CEO one of the richest public-company executives in the world.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By James R. Ronca and Ryan D. Hurd | June 11, 2018
For every motor vehicle collision, someone is at fault. Whether the collision involves a single vehicle, two vehicles or 10 vehicles, with limited exception, someone's actions triggered the collision.
Daily Report Online | News|Profile|Q&A
By Kristen Rasmussen | June 11, 2018
Cline, the top lawyer at the agency charged with overseeing state routes, bridges and interstate highways throughout Georgia, talked with the Daily Report about his daily routines, which firms he uses for outside counsel and what he does when he's not in the office.
By Andrew Denney | June 7, 2018
In a ruling that advocates say could open Uber Technologies Inc. up to additional litigation over providing service to disabled people, a New York state court judge in Brooklyn found that the ride-sharing company's arbitration clause was too ambiguous to move a disabled woman's suit against the company into arbitration.
By Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida | June 7, 2018
The court heard an appeal from Adam Lloyd Shepard, who was convicted on a charge of manslaughter with a weapon after fatally striking Spencer Schott in January 2011.
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Shipman & Goodwin LLP is seeking a attorney to expand our national commercial real estate lending practice. Candidates should have a mi...