0 results for 'J.P. Morgan Chase and Co.'
Breach of Duty to Defend Stands Out Among Noteworthy Issues
Evan H. Krinick, co-managing partner of Rivkin Radler, writes: The past term's significant insurance law decisions by the New York Court of Appeals resolved a variety of issues that will alter the practice of insurance law in important ways. But one decision in particular, in which the court evaluated the consequences to an insurance carrier of its breach of the duty to defend its insured, will surely be one of the most widely discussed and debated insurance law decisions rendered by the court in recent years.U.S. DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK Judge Wexler This is a case brought pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA") of 1974, 29 U.S.
Previous deal lands new client for K&S
King Spalding partner Jack D. Capers Jr. landed client Eclipsys Corp., the Atlanta-based health care data technology company that last week announced plans for a $1.3 billion merger with Allscripts-Misys Healthcare Solutions Inc., because of a deal he closed a few years ago.That deal, he said, was the sale of Alpharetta-based medical software provider Per-Se Technologies to health care company McKesson Corp.Justice Judith J. Gische NEW YORK COUNTY Supreme Court Attorney for the Plaintiff: James E. Hurley, Jr. Esq. Attorney for the Defendant: Percy A. Randall, Esq./p
Cite as: Chen v. TYT East Corp., 10-Civ.-5288 (PAC) (DF), NYLJ 1202614470487, at *1 (SDNY, Decided May 8, 2013) 10-Civ.-5288 (PAC) (DF) Judge Paul
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Post-Sept. 11 'Backlash' Proves Difficult to Quantify
With five lawsuits filed in three states last week by the ACLU, all alleging racial profiling of Arabs and Asians on airplanes, Americans could be forgiven for thinking that the Sept. 11 attacks turned the country into a nation of vigilantes and bigots. But the official numbers tell a less alarming story, making it hard to determine if the hike in bias claims since September was serious or even statistically significant.Northwest projects $7B post-bankruptcy value
MINNEAPOLIS AP - Northwest Airlines Corp. said Thursday it expects to be worth roughly $7 billion when it emerges from bankruptcy later this year, and will pay its unsecured creditors roughly three-quarters of what they are owed.Continental Airlines Inc., the next-largest airline, is worth just over $4 billion based on Thursday's stock valuation.Cite as: US v. Robert E. McDonald, 11 Cr. 19, NYLJ 1202493981608, at *1 (SDNY, Decided May 9, 2011)District Judge: John G. KoeltlDe
Cite as 10 C.D.O.S. 8857DAVID B. REEVES, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. MV TRANSPORTATION, INC., Defendant
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