By Scott Graham | June 12, 2019
California's Viasat says it's owed more than $300 million for "theft" of its error correction technology, but Massachusetts' Acacia Communications says Viasat is simply misreading their license agreement.
By Jenna Greene | April 16, 2019
Jurors are supposed to be like old-fashioned children: Seen but not heard. That is, sit quietly, pay attention—and for heaven's sake, don't email a lawyer during trial.
By Katherine A. Roberts and Katharine M. Miner | March 26, 2019
Less than one year after the California Supreme Court's decision in 'Dynamex Operations West v. Superior Court' upended long-settled questions on independent contractor and employee classifications, stakeholders on both sides of the debate are gearing up for a legislative fight to define the decision's reach.
By Jen Rubin | March 6, 2019
The perpetual search for a work-around to California's prohibition on employee non-competes was stymied again when a California Superior Court refused to dismiss outright an intentional interference with contract claim based upon an allegedly illegal long-term employment contract.
By Jenna Greene | February 12, 2019
It's a reminder for appellate lawyers everywhere: No matter how aggressive or creative you are, you're still stuck with the lower court record.
By Erin Mulvaney | February 4, 2019
The Labor Department's appeal had been pending for more than a year. Agency lawyers are pointing to a new Trump-era compliance directive that focuses on transparency and cooperation.
By Ross Todd | February 4, 2019
U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg found that The Gorilla Foundation had agreed to let a third party decide where Ndume, a gorilla loaned to the organization by the zoo, would live after the death of Koko, the western lowland gorilla who famously learned sign language.
By Ross Todd | January 24, 2019
Plaintiffs lawyer Thomas Girardi says that Law Finance Group has sued him for funds that were borrowed on behalf of clients. But the litigation funder's lawyer says the loan agreement clearly states the loan was to Girardi and his firm.
By Gina M. Roccanova | January 22, 2019
Fast-food chain Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. has found itself at the center of the ongoing debate over mandatory arbitration provisions in employment agreements. That debate has always assumed that arbitration clauses favor employers. However, the most recent developments in a wage-and-hour case against Chipotle have called that assumption into question.
By Ross Todd | January 22, 2019
Girardi, better known to reality TV fans as the husband of "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star Erika Jayne, was hit with a lawsuit by Mill Valley-based Law Finance Group on Jan. 17.
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