By Chris O'Malley | December 12, 2023
Nuclear reactor company NuScale Power's failed Idaho project has spurred at least one lawsuit so far from plaintiff attorneys who say executives' comments about the likelihood of pulling it off were overly rosy.
By Brian Lee | July 3, 2023
The litigation was said to have resulted in one of the largest shareholder verdicts in Delaware history.
By Ellen Bardash | May 15, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday denied fossil fuel companies a write of certiorari, sending environmental cases against them back to state courts in Delaware and New Jersey.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 24, 2023
"If this is an 'interested' director transaction ... the inquiry ceases. In that event, futility of demand has been established by any objective or subjective standard," the dissent said.
By Charles Toutant | August 17, 2022
"Climate change is an important problem with national and global implications. But federal courts cannot hear cases just because they are important," Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote for the court.
By Ellen Bardash | June 7, 2022
A federal complaint cites the Superfund law for demanding companies that produced or transported waste that ended up in a Newark, Delaware landfill to foot the bill.
By Ellen Bardash | January 7, 2022
U.S. District Judge Leonard P. Stark's decision to remand the case to Delaware Superior Court marks a win for state Attorney General Kathy Jennings, who first chose the state court as the venue for the complaint filed against more than 30 fossil fuel giants.
By Ellen Bardash | November 12, 2021
Boardwalk's share prices initially experienced a bump, but when analysts announced an acquisition by Loews would likely lead to a decreased value based on a pricing formula, they fell again, angering plaintiffs.
By Ellen Bardash | April 9, 2021
Counsel for the more than 30 defendant companies maintain the claims in the lawsuit fall under federal jurisdiction because they target the companies' production and sale of oil and gas.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 12, 2021
"While the commission's arrogation of the trust was improper from its inception, its deleterious effects have come into renewed focus in light of Governor Wolf's prolonged shutdown of the economy in response to COVID-19," the plaintiffs said in their 23-page complaint.
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