By Andrew Demillo and Rick Callahan | The Associated Press | November 21, 2023
"It makes me feel like there's going to be a child out there who's not going to feel safe at home to tell their parents and the school's going to rat them out for wanting to be called a different name or different pronouns," said Kim Michaelis-Peters, the mother of an 18-year-old nonbinary high school student.
By Alex Anteau | November 17, 2023
Derek Bauer of Baker Hostetler said a member of his client's litigation team camped outside the Superior Court of Fulton County presiding judges' courtroom in case a opposing counsel tried to get an ex parte injunction—which is exactly what happened.
By Maryclaire Dale | The Associated Press | October 31, 2023
"Every step of the way it seemed like his rights were more important … than mine and my children's," said Janet Paulsen, who was left partially paralyzed in 2015 after being shot by her husband shortly after telling him she wanted a divorce.
By Alex Anteau | October 25, 2023
According to the winning companies' motions to dismiss the protestor's claims, "Everyone else—patients with serious medical conditions, the Georgia Access to Medical Cannabis Commission, the courts, and the other litigants—are just collateral damage in the protesters' campaign of delay."
By Alex Anteau | October 24, 2023
"I suspected after oral argument that the court was not going to agree with our interpretation of the long-standing Georgia precedent on the void ab initio clause," said plaintiff-appellee attorney Julia Stone of Caplan Cobb. "And the opinion has borne that out."
By Alex Anteau | October 23, 2023
A crane operator had a side hustle for years before he was injured. However, the COVID-19 pandemic drove away both clients and profits from the gig in the months leading up to a debilitating injury.
By Alex Anteau | October 19, 2023
Each party contends the other made a big mistake in the filing process—the question is whose error sticks.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David J. Kaufmann | October 17, 2023
When franchising burst on the American economic scene in the 1950s and 1960s, no franchise-specific laws, rules or regulations were there to greet it. This article provides an overview of the laws, rules and regulations that have since developed that govern franchising in the United States.
By Alex Anteau | October 13, 2023
Appellants say the way things are now greatly diminishes a defendant's incentives to settle because they risk being found liable for a higher portion of attorney fees.
By Mason Lawlor | October 12, 2023
This complaint was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
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