By Michael A. Mora | April 30, 2024
"We cannot, therefore, conclude that there is no reasonable possibility that the conspiracy to fraudulently conceal claim contributed to the verdict on punitive damages," the state appellate court judges ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | April 30, 2024
"To provide much needed constitutional clarity after Mallory and conclusively resolve the jurisdictional status of nearly 90% of the total plaintiffs in the Paraquat mass tort program, this court should grant Syngenta Crop's petition for permission to appeal," the defendant argued.
By Adolfo Pesquera | April 30, 2024
One of the complainants against the sanctioned judge was Chief Justice Tracy Christopher of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Carin A. O'Donnell | April 30, 2024
For newer construction litigation practitioners representing injured workers, this complexity might obscure some basic tenets of their case.
By Marianna Wharry | April 30, 2024
"The changes SafeRent has agreed to make are key to ensuring the original intention of the nation's voucher programs, helping to erase historic discrimination in the housing markets," said Brian Corman, a partner at Cohen Milstein who leads the firm's fair housing litigation efforts and helped negotiate the settlement.
By Emily Saul | April 30, 2024
Prosecutors had asked that the former president be held in contempt following more than 10 online statements about witnesses and jurors.
By Adolfo Pesquera | April 30, 2024
"The truth and responsible reporting practices will prevail over meritless defamation claims seeking to silence watchdog journalism," defense attorney Laura Prather said.
By Ross Todd | April 30, 2024
Over the past couple of years we've written about what the relative dearth of cases proceeding to a jury verdict has meant for the trial courts and law firms. Our colleague Avalon Zoppo recently looked at what it means for appellate courts and the development of the law.
By Cheryl Miller | April 29, 2024
A new bill would extend filing deadlines for summary judgment motions while limiting what evidence can be introduced in reply briefs.
By Brian Lee | April 29, 2024
The change deleted a provision that had been interpreted for more than 100 years as requiring in-person voting.
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