By Ross Todd | April 23, 2018
Jack Daniel's has sued the maker of Lonehand Whiskey claiming that it designed its label and bottle to look deceptively close to its "Old No. 7" design.
By Cheryl Miller | March 30, 2018
Prop 65 is a regular target of business groups who say its private-right-of-action provisions and far-ranging scope leads retailers and manufacturers to post so many warning signs that consumers have come to ignore them.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz, Esq., Director, FC&S Legal | March 8, 2018
The Fourth District Court of Appeal has ruled that a vintage wine collector's insurer didn't have to cover the loss suffered when he purchased close to $18 million in counterfeit wine.
By Ross Todd | February 1, 2018
North Coast Brewing Co. couldn't convince a federal judge in Oakland to toss a lawsuit brought by jazz pianist Thelonious Monk's son over the craft brewery's use of his father's name and likeness.
By Alden Parker and Katherine Sandberg | January 29, 2018
The Trump administration's Labor Department announced its intention in December to make tip pooling a legal practice. In essence, the administration stated that it will revoke the Obama administration's rule and allow restaurants to pool tips as they see fit. The change will directly impact employers in California who pay tipped employees the full federal minimum wage.
By Ben Hancock | December 11, 2017
The commission underscored that how coin offerings are marketed matters, and that “utility tokens” aren't necessarily outside its purview.
By Cheryl Miller | November 16, 2017
California on Thursday unveiled its latest set of marijuana regulations—this time, emergency rules that will guide the legalized recreational market when it opens in January. Here are a few takeaways from the emergency regulations presented to the committee on Thursday.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2017
Pacific Gas & Electric's lackluster maintenance of power lines, poles, and brush played a major role in sparking the wildfires that ravaged Northern California's wine country last month, according to a suit filed by a coalition of plaintiffs firms.
By Rebekah Mintzer | November 13, 2017
Lawyers in-house at Instacart cleared the way through thorny regulations to get approval for alcohol delivery to customers in more than ten states.
By Ben Hancock | October 30, 2017
A federal judge hinted she could rule that a Grubhub delivery driver should be treated as an employee rather than as an independent contractor.
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