By Adolfo Pesquera | March 29, 2024
The jury awarded $3,865,000 in compensatory damages, finding EP Energy was found 80% responsible and Priority 20% responsible.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | March 27, 2024
Plaintiffs personal injury firm Sorrels Law, founded in Houston in 2021, has opened an office in Dallas a few months after it moved into the Austin market with a new office there.
By Emily Cousins | March 26, 2024
"The sooner you bring a piece of litigation, the sooner you find out what the facts are," attorney Richard Silver said about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 1, 2024
During trial, plaintiff's counsel was able to show the medical record was tampered with and therefore conflicted with the neurosurgeon's testimony about the patient's condition before and after surgery, attorney Seth McCloskey said.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 29, 2024
Frank Burford worked as an aluminum smelter at an Alcoa plant in Rockdale. However, it was his wife Carolyn who died in 2015, allegedly because for 25 years she had been washing her husband's contaminated work clothes.
By Kevin Vice | February 22, 2024
"The promise of autonomous transportation relies on the public's adoption, which in turn relies on the public's confidence," writes personal injury attorney Kevin Vice.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 8, 2024
SBSB Eastham attorneys were granted a motion for directed verdict at the conclusion of the plaintiff's case dismissing claims for punitive damages based on alleged gross negligence.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 7, 2024
A former prosecutor turned personal injury lawyer is making it his mission to bring accountability to the hotel industry when corporations turn a blind eye to sex trafficking on their properties.
By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | February 6, 2024
"Damages must be proven to be 'genuinely compensatory' based on a 'rational connection' developed by a plaintiff to show a rational basis and connection between the 'injuries suffered and the amount awarded,'" say attorneys Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 25, 2024
"There is no evidence to suggest Monticello should have anticipated that Red River's employees would attempt to perform this task themselves, or that it knew or should have known the pole could not be moved safely," Justice Amanda Reichek stated for the majority.
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