By Michael A. Mora | October 21, 2022
"Ethics professors in law schools can replace their textbooks with this order because it contains misconduct in every significant rule of ethics," said Brian Tannebaum, special counsel at Bast Amron.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Esther E. Galicia | September 12, 2022
Never underestimate the need to present expert testimony to support the reasonableness of the requested attorney fees award.
By Jason Grant | September 9, 2022
"Before finding the former husband was entitled to attorney's fees, the [trial-] court stated it was reserving the issue for a subsequent hearing," said the Fourth District Court of Appeal. "But it did not do so."
By Michael A. Mora | September 7, 2022
"Federal courts have engaged in a more thorough and exacting scrutiny of merchant cash advance agreements, looking at the agreement in a holistic and comprehensive manner and the conclusions they have reached are compelling," New York Supreme Court Judge Leon Ruchelsman ruled.
By Michael A. Mora | August 29, 2022
"This is a case unlike any other the court has ever seen," Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman said. "There were so many nuances and intricacies and so many land mines that could have been stepped on."
By Michael A. Mora | August 26, 2022
The Florida Supreme Court reminded litigants that it has consistently held that the purpose of the writ of prohibition is to prevent a court's action beyond the scope of its jurisdiction.
By Michael A. Mora | August 10, 2022
"Here in the U.S., many lawyers think they can file a lawsuit and they don't have to consider the risk that their client might have to pay the other side's attorney fees," said Gregory Herbert, a shareholder at Greenberg Traurig.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Dan Roe | July 29, 2022
Weil, Kirkland, Skadden and Latham once outpaced the rest of Big Law on what they could charge, but that may begin to change.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 22, 2022
The 2020 opinion from the Eleventh Circuit found incentive awards unlawful, prompting judges across the country to grapple over whether to grant the commonplace awards to class representatives in class action settlements.
By Michael A. Mora | July 22, 2022
"Claims an arbitrator exceeded the powers circumscribed by the parties' agreement is one of the most exceptional and difficult grounds to seek vacatur of the award," said Glenn J. Waldman, of counsel at Gunster.
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