By Matthew Oxman and Allen Yancy | April 24, 2020
Finding itself in a position that was unthinkable just a few months ago, and with the disruption showing no signs of abating soon, the legal industry must now contend with a "new normal."
By Alaina Lancaster | April 20, 2020
The lawsuit claims Ticketmaster Entertainment Inc. and its parent company, Live Nation Entertainment Co., retroactively changed refund policies in the wake of COVID-19.
By Cheryl Cauley and Jonathan Patchen | April 13, 2020
Just as courts have recognized that the "trade secret exception" does not square with 'Edwards', the same should be true for the "while employed" exception of 'Techno Lite'.
By Patrick Hammon and Matthew Schechter | April 6, 2020
The high court's unanimous opinion has far-reaching consequences, as it held where parties to a contract containing a provision to arbitrate in California also agree to a specified manner of service, "that agreement supplants statutory service requirements ...."
By Alaina Lancaster | March 30, 2020
In partially granting Apple's motion to dismiss a class action of iCloud users who argue that the tech company fraudulently outsourced the storage of their data to Microsoft and Google, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh ruled that class members who did not pay Apple for storage do not currently have standing for injunctive relief.
By Lothar Determann | March 26, 2020
The pandemic notwithstanding, companies have to continue to comply with existing laws and protect their interests with enforceable contracts, valid consent declarations, formal records, effective applications for government approvals, and other documents.
By Alaina Lancaster | February 10, 2020
Judge William Alsup wrote "in irony upon irony, DoorDash now wishes to resort to a class-wide lawsuit, the very device it denied to the workers, to avoid its duty to arbitrate. This hypocrisy will not be blessed, at least by this order."
By Lidia Dinkova | January 31, 2020
Harvey Hernandez and his NGD Homesharing teamed up with Airbnb on a residential development deal that appears to have collapsed in dueling lawsuits.
By Alaina Lancaster | January 24, 2020
Covington & Burling's Douglas Sprague, the former head of the white-collar crime unit in San Francisco's U.S. Attorney's Office, is representing Airbnb in its dispute with Harvey Hernandez and the Miami-based real estate developer's company NGD Homesharing over $11 million in capital supplied to help bolster short-term rental offerings in urban markets.
By Alaina Lancaster | January 22, 2020
Apium alleges that Aquabotix Technology Corp. refuses to pay royalties on a swarming ocean vehicle the companies developed together.
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