By Alaina Lancaster | December 28, 2021
The Ninth Circuit found evidence did not support a judge's allegations that a team of Sullivan & Cromwell attorneys in Palo Alto and New York misrepresented the record in a case seeking to disclose millions of documents connected to Volkswagen's emissions scandal.
By Avalon Zoppo | November 18, 2021
Consovoy McCarthy attorneys and the conservative organization Buckeye Institute argued that OSHA's mandate should be reviewed by the full court first because it raises questions of "exceptional importance" and violates precedent.
By Cedra Mayfield | November 10, 2021
"Google's advertising product contains, as a component, goodwill that we created associated with our trade name," argued Jason J. Carter on behalf of Edible Arrangements on Wednesday before the Supreme Court of Georgia.
By Ben Feuer and Rex Heinke | April 8, 2021
In our decades of experience working with many in-house counsel on significant appeals for their companies, there are a few realities that they told us they wished they'd known earlier in the litigation process, say Ben Feuer and Rex Heinke of California Appellate Law Group.
By Cheryl Miller | March 10, 2021
California's new secretary of state reported on March 1 that 311 publicly held corporations had at least one woman serving on their boards of directors, compared to 282 one year ago.
By Dan Clark | February 16, 2021
While working in the San Francisco City Attorney's Office, Aileen McGrath represented the city in lawsuits against the federal government that sought to stop federal funding to sanctuary cities.
By Marcia Coyle | January 28, 2021
Although both lawyers said changes in positions by a new solicitor general should be careful and rare, they agreed that the Affordable Care Act case, now awaiting decision by the justices, met certain preconditions for a switched position by the government.
By Tom McParland | December 10, 2020
The panel overturned a National Labor Relations Board decision, which found the cable company's interrogation of employees about discussions they had leading up to the demonstration qualified as an "unfair labor practice" under the National Labor Relations Act.
By Marcia Coyle | November 10, 2020
"It's hard for you to argue that Congress intended the entire act to fall when the same Congress that lowered the penalty to zero did not even try to repeal the rest of the act," Roberts told Texas Solicitor General Kyle Hawkins. "I think they wanted the court to do that but it's not our job."
By Cheryl Miller | October 22, 2020
"The People counter, correctly, that a party suffers no grave or irreparable harm by being prohibited from violating the law and that defendants' financial burdens do not rise to the level of irreparable harm," wrote Associate Justice Jon Streeter of California's First District Court of Appeal.
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