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North Dakota Court Clarifies Natural Accumulation Rule in Matter of First Impression
"Remote areas are precisely the locations the natural accumulation rule protects because the reasonableness of monitoring remote areas of property, and lack of notice resulting therefrom, demonstrates the rationale for the rule. Where it is unreasonable for an owner or operator to continually monitor an area, such as the remote well site in rural North Dakota, it is unreasonable to expect the owner or operator to promptly clear any naturally accumulating snow or ice, ..." Justice Jerod E. Tufte wrote for the court.Cruel but Not Unusual: The Sentence Recommended for Sam Bankman-Fried
John S. Martin, former district judge and U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, presents his take on the U.S. Probation Department's recommended 100-year sentence for Sam Bankman-Fried.How One PI Lawyer Built a Huge Practice Without Advertising
I wanted to share his story with you—because he has built a huge personal injury (PI) practice without advertising—on the internet, yellow pages, billboards or otherwise.Canadian Appellate Court Hears Arguments in Thumbs-Up Emoji Contract Case
A Canadian grain farmer argued his casual response to a text meant he'd received the message, not agreed to a full contract with a grain buyer.Appellate Court Hears Arguments in Thumbs-Up Emoji Contract Case
A Canadian grain farmer argued his casual response to a text meant he'd received the message, not agreed to a full contract with a grain buyer.View more book results for the query "King"
Rising Stars: The UK Legal Industry's Best Up-And-Coming Women, 2024
More than 120 entries have been whittled down to the top 25 women aged under 40 tipped to spearhead the next generation of leading partners.Copyright Fair Use and The Dark Knight
Let's say we want to tell stories using Batman. The copyright on the original Batman comic does not expire until 2035. To what extent can we use Batman and rely on the fair use doctrine?Florida Legal Awards: Q&As With Finalists for Litigation Department of the Year
Five firms are finalists for the Daily Business Review's Litigation Department of the Year.SEC 'Neither-Understands/Nor-Cares' About Realities of Settlement Gag Rule
This article examines the SEC's no-admit/no-deny rule through the lens of the SEC's recent denial of a request to modify the rule filed by an external advocacy organization and concludes that the SEC should have given more consideration to amending the rule.