By Scott Graham | April 11, 2022
With a nod to Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn, a magistrate judge has recommended that the delivery giant be enjoined from using a new mark that resembles the mark used by Home Chef and The Kroger Co.
By Tom McParland | April 6, 2022
According to a complaint in the Southern District of New York, PepsiCo lacked a "functional back-up plan" to track employee time, and instead doled out an "estimated weekly pay" to its hourly employees that did not accurately reflect the actual hours they had worked.
By Scott Graham | February 18, 2022
Food prices, sustainability and consumer tastes are just some of the factors driving investment into plant-based proteins. So it's probably not surprising that suits over the intellectual property are following.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ellen Bardash | November 23, 2021
If the acquisition goes forward, the DOJ claims, refined sugar and the products it's used in could soar in price with nearly all the sales in the Southeast controlled by two producers.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 12, 2021
The public nuisance lawsuits, one in California and one in Illinois, alleged that McDonald's failed to protect its restaurant workers from COVID-19. The suits, one of which alleged workers had to wear doggie diapers and coffee filters as masks, both resulted in preliminary injunctions against the fast-food chain.
By Ellen Bardash | April 13, 2021
Defense lawyers said the case was one of products liability while counsel for tribal governments said they were stating a claim for negligence and public nuisance in holding JUUL responsible for health impacts on young people.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Anna M. Graves | April 17, 2020
The CARES Act is a step in the right direction, but for many restaurant companies, financial relief is still out of reach.
By Dan Packel | April 10, 2020
The firm has over 70 attorneys in five cities working with the James Beard Foundation to advise restaurant workers and owners on how to access coronavirus relief.
By Mike Scarcella | November 19, 2019
"When the CFTC violates orders of this court, as it has here, it should be held responsible," lawyers for Kraft and Mondelēz told a U.S. federal trial judge in Chicago. The CFTC, meanwhile, contends contempt is no longer an option.
By C. Ryan Barber | Mike Scarcella | November 1, 2019
"In effect, the CFTC negotiated a private resolution that left the industry without any intelligible guidance," the law firm Kobre & Kim said in a public-records lawsuit filed Thursday in Manhattan federal district court.
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