By Greg Land | December 11, 2019
The majority opinion said Atlanta IT staffing firm Principle Solutions was covered for $1.7 million swiped by scammers, but a dissenting judge argued causation was too remote for summary judgment.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | December 2, 2019
In their Federal E-Discovery column, Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss the recent case of 'Herzig v. Ark. Found. for Med. Care', which addresses the issue of ephemeral messaging and spoliation. The court there found that the use of the ephemeral messaging app Signal was evidence of bad faith sufficient to warrant sanctions.
By Charles Toutant | November 15, 2019
Online transactions now make up 11% of all retail transactions in the United States, New Jersey Appellate Division Judge Jack Sabatino wrote in the ruling.
By David R. Gelfand, Daniel M. Perry, Andrew B. Lichtenberg and Rachel R. Siegel | November 8, 2019
The Second Circuit changed course from dicta in an earlier decision and now joins the Eleventh Circuit in allowing U.S. courts to compel extraterritorial discovery in support of foreign proceedings.
By Zach Schlein | October 22, 2019
The appellate court ruled Juanita Kho's legal victory against the city was incorrectly premised on an unauthenticated picture from Google Maps. Kho alleged the city was negligent in maintaining a sidewalk she suffered an injury on.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By David E. Sellinger and Theodore J. McEvoy | October 10, 2019
The U.S. Supreme Court decision that was expected to resolve the appropriateness of cy pres-only class action settlements, 'Frank v. Gaos,' did not turn out the way most observers (including the Third Circuit) anticipated.
By Ross Todd | October 7, 2019
A California court was "troubled" that Abir Cohen Treyzon Salo and name partner Alexander Cohen failed to cite "directly applicable contrary authority" in the case over defamatory posts on review sites, including Yelp and Avvo.
By Zach Schlein | September 27, 2019
The appellate court upheld a woman's petition for a permanent injunction against the former caretaker of her children. The ousted nanny contended the admitted evidence did not sufficiently establish she had stalked her former employer or caused emotional distress.
By Ross Todd | August 28, 2019
A nonprofit video producer founded by political commentator Dennis Prager argued that a Ninth Circuit panel should revive its claims that YouTube violated its First Amendment rights by restricting access to some of its videos.
By Ross Todd | August 21, 2019
The Ninth Circuit held that The Ultimate Software Group Inc., a company behind a website which allowed Wesley Greer to connect with a drug dealer who sold him fentanyl-laced heroin, fell within the broad immunity afforded to interactive computer services under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
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