By Cedra Mayfield | June 4, 2021
"It is uncertain whether, under existing Georgia law, [the defendant] was using the repair vehicle at the time of the accident within the scope of [the employer's] consent, and consequently whether [the defendant] qualifies as an insured for purposes of the policy's liability coverage," said John C. Patton, an attorney for the insurance company.
By Dan Roe | June 1, 2021
The Am Law 200 firm's announcement is the latest in a series of office openings in the Carolinas.
By Greg Land | March 16, 2021
The appellate opinion said "undisputed evidence" showed that deceased stuntman John Bernecker was an employee of the production company and that any tort claims fell under the Workers' Compensation Act.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 12, 2020
"On the eve of trial, the defense team estimated their worst verdict at $1.5 million," Chief Judge William Pryor and Judges Robin Rosenbaum and Robert Luck said in an unsigned unpublished opinion.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 4, 2020
"This could embolden plaintiffs' attorneys to file more lawsuits," said Womble Bond Dickinson insurance defense litigator Rachel E. Keen.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | October 5, 2020
A New York Yankees minor league team's lawsuit against its insurer over coverage for business losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic is being moved from federal to state court.
By Katheryn Tucker | September 30, 2020
"This case presents at least three novel issues of Georgia law," Judge Britt Grant said.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Irene Thaler | September 21, 2020
The restaurant Berries of the Grove in Miami boasts Belgian waffles, steak and Nutella pizza on its online menu. However, its name may now become center stage for arguments in COVID-19 litigation.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Ann E. Murray | September 2, 2020
Whether an employer's workforce continues to work fully remote, there is no question but that individuals' desire to access medical services remotely will continue well into the future.
By Angela Morris | May 18, 2020
In what may be a first across the United States since the coronavirus pandemic canceled jury trials, Texas judges on Monday invited a jury pool to a court proceeding over video teleconference. Monday's hearing in an insurance dispute was actually a "summary jury trial," which is an alternative dispute resolution process.
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