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People in the News—May 24, 2024—Goldberg Segalla
Goldberg Segalla added Scott T. Earle to the firm's construction litigation and counsel group in Philadelphia.'Alleged Biological Parent's Rights': Pa. Justices Agree to Eye Long-Standing Paternity Legal Theory
The Supreme Court has previously noted that the theory "has been characterized as one of the strongest presumptions known to the law," and was originally developed "to shield a child from the stigma attached in the past to illegitimacy, which subjected the child to significant legal and social discrimination."View more book results for the query "*"
Filing a Late Notice of Claim: 'Jaime v. City of New York'
The Court of Appeals recently handed down a significant decision regarding the requirements a petitioner must meet when making a motion for leave to file a late notice of claim: 'Jaime v. City of New York'. This article discusses the background of the case and its potential significance for injured parties.New York Courts Reject Insurance Companies' Attempts to Recoup Defense Costs
Recently, several New York courts have held that an insurance company has no right to recoup defense costs where the insurance policy includes a duty to defend, but does not include an express contractual provision allowing for recoupment.AI Litigation Spotlight: 'NYT v. OpenAI'
Of the many early genAI cases working their way through trial courts, the one that stands out is New York Times Co. v. Microsoft because of its carefully crafted complaint and actual examples of verbatim reproductions of NYT content produced by ChatGPT. Now that the parties have completed briefing on two motions to dismiss (one by OpenAI and the other by Microsoft), it's worth pausing to assess what's at stake, and what lies ahead, in this important case.'Buy and Shelve': A Deadly Strategy for Life Insurance
Corporations typically have risk management departments that stay on top of their coverage portfolios, but individual policyholders all too often purchase policies and simply file them away in the apparent hope that the mere act of buying coverage serves as a hedge against ever needing it. This is the "buy and shelve" approach to insurance. And, while it's never a good strategy, it is particularly dangerous in the context of life insurance.Trending Stories
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