By Tom McParland | December 16, 2021
The ruling dooms a lawsuit seeking damages for excessive fees charged for copies of medical records.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 24, 2021
"It's a constant battle to protect our dignity and try to rid this kind of racist, anti-Semitic attitude from the nation's core," said Cooley senior counsel Alan Levine.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 23, 2021
The federal jury found in part for the plaintiffs behind the civil lawsuit alleging a conspiracy to commit racially motivated violence at the 2017 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Charles C. Sipos and Lauren Watts Staniar | November 16, 2021
Some courts have shown a willingness to certify damages classes in labeling cases under §§349 and 350 where the damages claimed would entitle plaintiffs' attorneys and the class to recover $550 for every single New York purchase of a low-priced consumer good like cereal, breakfast bars, or even grass seed.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric Alan Stone and Catherine Nyarady | November 9, 2021
In two recent decisions, the Federal Circuit and a Delaware district court took account of the underlying economic conditions that permit and prevent awards of lost profits, and looked at the implications of those conditions on otherwise unrelated areas of law. In this edition of their Intellectual Property Litigation column, Eric Alan Stone and Catherine Nyarady report on these cases and provide guidance for practitioners regarding the influence of lost profits damages over other issues in patent cases.
By Jason Grant | October 15, 2021
A panel of the Appellate Division, First Department court justices wrote that the jury "could not have reasonably disregarded the evidence that plaintiff suffered a herniated disc and two disc bulges as a result of the accident" in the vehicle collision personal-injury case.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | October 1, 2021
Seeger Weiss is among the firms investing resources in pursuing climate-related cases, despite U.S. courts' relatively chilly reception.
By Tom McParland | September 10, 2021
In a stipulation, posted to a Manhattan federal court docket Friday morning, the unnamed plaintiff agreed to undo the order in exchange for $7,500 in attorney fees to cover the cost of preparing her motion for default judgment.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin A. Schwartz | September 3, 2021
In his Section 1983 Litigation column, Martin Schwartz focuses on damages from lost earning capacity resulting from an arresting officer's infliction of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
By Jane Wester | August 16, 2021
The singer Bob Dylan has been accused of threatening and sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl in 1965, when he was approximately 24, according to a…
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