Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Nick Panayotopoulos and Nan Rigby | April 6, 2018
'Prevailing party' clauses may better allocate the financial risks of litigation, as well as potentially discourage employees and former employees from pursuing meritless litigation.
By Greg Land | March 30, 2018
U.S. District Judge William Duffey Jr. ruled that the county's failure to notify its liability insurer about several lawsuits lets National Casualty Co. off the hook for more than $6.5 million the county sought to help pay for an $18 million settlement in 2015.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Robin Hensley, Raising the Bar | March 16, 2018
Construction litigator Keith Lichtman built a healthy practice helping clients address disputes, then he followed his passion and launched a mediation practice, too.
By Jonathan Ringel | March 6, 2018
This contest is not about who represented the largest or most prestigious client. Nor is it necessarily about who got the biggest—or smallest—verdict.
By Greg Land | February 22, 2018
A co-manager of the plaintiff, a family-owned company, erupted when lead defense lawyer Richard Robbins asked about his litigious relations with other members of his family.
By Jonathan Ringel | February 21, 2018
Bako's lawyers spent one sentence denying that the Delaware law voided the noncompete agreements and then offered pages of details of “gross misconduct” on which their counterclaims for breach of duty of loyalty, unjust enrichment and defamation are based.
By Greg Land | January 25, 2018
Everest Indemnity said it was never told about the underlying accident, law suit or default judgment until the company it insured was hit with a $3.3 million default judgment.
By Samantha Joseph | January 25, 2018
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's former bank and its attorney face a separate hearing to set punishment.
By Katheryn Tucker | January 11, 2018
“If this is an issue you are interested in—and you should be— I encourage you to talk to your members of the General Assembly, because it will require a two-thirds majority vote to put this much-needed reform on the ballot.” —Gov. Nathan Deal.
By Greg Land | January 10, 2018
The per curium order entered last week makes clear that bad-faith claims filed against an insurer qualify as contract claims that have a five-year statute of limitations.
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