0 results for 'Major League Baseball'
NY Litigator Says 'Unsullied Credibility' Help Persuade Michigan Jury to Reach $96M Verdict
Attorney Thomas Moore of Kramer, Dillof, Livingston & Moore secured the award in a case where a Canadian trucking company's vehicle caused the death of a New Jersey father and son.Washington Nationals Prevail in TV Rights Dispute Against Baltimore Orioles
New York's highest court, as arbiter of an MLB revenue-sharing agreement, said a payment to the D.C.-based team would stand.Baseballer's Homeowner Lawsuit Over Mold is a Lesson in Insurance Burden-Shifting
Despite all the errors in the lower court's report and recommendation, rather than remand the case—which was a possibility raised during oral argument—the Fifth Circuit agreed with the trial court's judgment.Club Takes Swing at MLB's Decision to Reduce Minor League Teams
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the document here.Orioles, Nationals' Legal Battle for Regional TV Rights Enters Final Innings in NY's Highest Court
The legal battle centers on a determination by Judge Lawrence K. Marks in a Manhattan trial court in 2015 that held the arbitration process by Major League Baseball's Revenue Sharing Definitions Committee, which had decided in favor of the Nationals, was "evidently partial."View more book results for the query "Major League Baseball"
Facial Recognition Surveillance Is Creating New Problems for Litigators
With any new technology, function creep is inevitable— particularly for surveillance devices. While many of the touted uses of facial recognition point toward efficiency and precision, the technology can also be leveraged for harms.Bedsworth: Stranger Than Fiction ... Science Fiction
"Hundreds, maybe thousands of Kiwis will have to be hired and deputized as cow burp umpires," says Justice William Bedsworth.NY's Highest Court Set to Take on Full Plate, Appellate Law Experts Say
The panel weighed in on Harvey Weinstein's appeal, and the Court of Appeals' prior decisions on fantasy sports and the void-for-vagueness doctrine.Judge Approves $2.25M Unpaid Wages Class Action, Reserving 1/3 of Common Fund for Attorney Fees
A federal judge has approved a $2.25 million class action settlement in favor of workers who were allegedly instructed by their employer not to include two 15-minute breaks when recording their compensable hours on their daily timesheets and further awarded the plaintiffs' attorneys one-third of the common fund.Inside Track: More Companies Jettison Employment Contracts
The agreements have fallen out of favor in part because they don't really lock down executives. Plus, they sometimes throw the spotlight on rich compensation packages, creating PR headaches.Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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