By Alaina Lancaster | February 4, 2021
Grocery associations have enlisted Morrison & Foerster and Stoel Rives to seek injunctions that would prevent cities in California and Washington from enforcing their coronavirus hazard pay laws.
By Jason Grant | December 18, 2020
Federal constitutional arguments have been rejected by courts in Michigan, Maryland, Pennsylvania and elsewhere, though state constitutional arguments could end up faring better.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 21, 2020
"Now, Coca-Cola has seized on global tragedy, the COVID-19 pandemic, as a pretext to claim a 'breach' and 'terminate' the sponsorship agreement early to save money," wrote Cozen O'Connor's Brett Taylor in Los Angeles and Paul Leary in Philadelphia.
By Scott Graham | September 16, 2020
Companies may be eager to abandon brands such as Aunt Jemima or Uncle Ben's. But strategies are limited for keeping them out of the hands of competitors and troublemakers, Davis Wright partners explain during LAIPLA webinar.
By Carolyn Branthoover | September 14, 2020
"Insurance companies are likely prioritizing the advance of their "physical loss of damage" battle in venues where the rules of insurance policy construction and case law are favorable to insurers, and policyholders need to be encouraged that pro-policyholder venues still exist and the loss of a few of these battles does not signify the loss of the war," says K&L Gates' Carolyn Branthoover.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 13, 2020
The delivery service is the latest gig economy company facing an injunction brought by California officials to reclassify workers as employees.
By Tom McParland | August 12, 2020
The ruling, from a three-judge panel of the Second Circuit, upheld a trial court's decision denying investors' motion to file a third amended complaint against the California-based food chain over the outbreaks that sickened more than 600 people in 2014 and 2015.
By Ross Todd | June 16, 2020
San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin on Tuesday announced an employee protection and unfair business practices action against DoorDash. The suit comes a little over a month after the state's attorney general and city attorneys in LA, SF and San Diego sued Uber and Lyft bringing misclassification claims and less than a week after a California regulator found the ride-sharing companies' drivers were employees.
By Kibkabe Araya | June 8, 2020
General counsel Matt Thelen, the lone in-house lawyer at LA-based online wine delivery club Winc, says increased demand has not distracted him from putting safety first for essential employees while rethinking the future of office workers-turned-telecommuters.
By Denny Jacob | May 19, 2020
Workers' compensation, employment practices and liquor liability look much different in the age of COVID-19.
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