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Commercial Contracts
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March 26, 2025
Judge Wants Mich. Supreme Court's Take On Daimler Contract
A Michigan federal judge has asked the state's Supreme Court to clear up whether a contract obligating a Daimler Truck subsidiary to purchase "1 part to 100%" of its needs for transmission parts from a seller is an enforceable contract under a 2023 Michigan Supreme Court opinion, noting state justices haven't addressed a conflict among Michigan appellate court rulings.
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March 26, 2025
Insurers Must Cover $29M Axle Defect Costs, Co. Says
A successor company to an auto parts manufacturer told a Michigan federal court Wednesday its commercial general liability insurers must help cover nearly $29 million a German company said it lost from faulty axle shafts it purchased and were ultimately installed in certain Dodge Ram pickup trucks.
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March 26, 2025
French Co. Fails To Win Arbitration Bid In Payment Dispute
French engineering company Saipem SA has lost its bid for a stay in a London court as it looks to arbitrate claims asserted by Panamanian logistics provider Destin Trading Inc. related to an alleged $7 million shortfall in payment for a Congo River project.
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March 26, 2025
Ex-GE Exec Gets 7 Years For Fraud In $1B Angola Energy Deal
A Manhattan federal judge hit a former GE Power executive with seven years in prison Wednesday, after a jury convicted him of forgery and taking a $5 million kickback while working on a $1.1 billion deal in his native Angola.
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March 25, 2025
Judge Eyes Late Discovery Dispute In Google Antitrust Case
A D.C. federal judge wondered Tuesday why an Android keyboard app developer waited until "the eleventh hour" to bring him several discovery disputes in its antitrust lawsuit against Google LLC, where it accuses the tech giant of making deals that prevent its product from being the pre-loaded default keyboard on a device.
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March 25, 2025
Intel Says Trial Should Answer License Issue In VLSI Case
Intel Corp. told U.S. District Judge Alan Albright that a trial in its high-stakes patent infringement fight with VLSI Technology should focus on teasing out a disputed ownership structure that could inform whether the technology company has a license to use the chip patents.
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March 25, 2025
Amazon Slams 'Alternative Reading' Of ERISA In Worker Suit
Amazon on Monday urged a Washington federal court to throw out a worker's proposed class action alleging that Amazon used abandoned retirement plan funds to offset its own contributions, arguing that the suit's "alternative reading" of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act "flies in the face of" the well-established practice.
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March 25, 2025
Realtek Loses Sanctions Bid Over Alleged Patent Suit Abuse
Taiwan's Realtek Semiconductor Corp. lost its bid in California federal court to punish a pair of patent-holding companies for "wasting party and judicial resources" in an antitrust lawsuit over a licensing deal and a series of purportedly sham patent suits in Texas.
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March 25, 2025
Insurers Claim 4th Circ. Must Revisit Ruling For Aluminum Co.
Insurers in a coverage cap dispute with an aluminum company have asked the Fourth Circuit to reconsider an opinion holding that an ambiguous policy provision must be construed in the company's favor, calling it contrary to South Carolina law.
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March 25, 2025
Ship Co. Targets Vessel Seizure In $12M Arbitration Dispute
A U.S. shipping charter firm that specializes in the offshore wind market has urged a Mississippi federal court to let it seize a deep-sea motor vessel as it looks to enforce more than $12 million of arbitral awards against a Mexican maritime company.
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March 25, 2025
Insurance Mogul Seeks To Overturn $122M Contempt Order
A convicted billionaire embroiled in lawsuits over the demise of his insurance empire wants out of a nine-figure contempt order, telling the North Carolina Court of Appeals that neither he nor his company has the ability to pay more than $122 million to purge the contempt.
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March 25, 2025
Phillies Sue To Keep Player Stats Program Exclusive
The Philadelphia Phillies took the owners of a baseball statistics and analytics program it paid extra to have exclusive access to into Pennsylvania state court for allegedly working to "circumvent" that exclusivity and sell parts of the system to other teams.
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March 25, 2025
McCarter & English's $3.77M Fee Win Headed For Appeal
A former McCarter & English LLP client will appeal a $3.77 million Connecticut federal court judgment for failing to pay its legal bills following a Kentucky trade secrets case loss, federal court papers indicate.
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March 25, 2025
Colo. Atty Gave $2M Mineral Rights To Other Client, Suit Says
The special district for a Colorado residential community has sued its former lawyer and firms White Bear Ankele Tanaka & Waldron PC and Spencer Fane LLP for malpractice, claiming the attorney failed to secure its mineral rights, instead executing a deal that favored one of Spencer Fane's other clients.
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March 25, 2025
3D Printing Tech Co. Wins Chancery Order For Merger Closing
Delaware's chancellor issued a short-fuse post-trial order late Monday giving high-tech electronics board maker Nano Dimensions 48 hours to secure a national security agency agreement needed to acquire Israeli 3D printing defense contractor Desktop Metal.
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March 25, 2025
Hartford HealthCare Fights Disclosure Of Antitrust Settlement
Hartford HealthCare Corp. says it cannot be forced to reveal a confidential January antitrust settlement with another Connecticut hospital at the behest of a Teamsters health plan and a public transit agency separately accusing the consortium of creating a monopoly.
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March 24, 2025
Limp Bizkit Expands UMG Royalties Fight To State Court
Limp Bizkit, lead singer Fred Durst and their record label launched a second front against Universal Music Group in California state court over claims that its "royalty software" has shorted artists more than $200 million, after a federal judge ruled he couldn't oversee the bulk of the claims.
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March 24, 2025
Live Nation Inks $20M Deal Over Swift Tour-Tied Investor Suit
Investors suing Live Nation Entertainment Inc. have asked a California federal judge to approve a $20 million deal ending claims that the company made misleading statements about its operations when news of alleged anticompetitive practices with Ticketmaster caused stock prices to drop following the tickets sales debacle for Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour.
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March 24, 2025
NC Urges Court To Rule Fla. Realty Co. Duped Homeowners
The North Carolina Attorney General's Office has urged a state business court to find that a Florida real estate company targeted homeowners and tricked them into signing long-term predatory agreements in exchange for small cash advances, saying it is undisputed that the law was broken.
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March 24, 2025
Bread Financial Gets Investor's Spinoff Suit Tossed For Good
Bread Financial Holdings Inc. and some of its executives have beaten a shareholder suit alleging that they tried to defraud investors by concealing issues with now-bankrupt spinoff company Loyalty Ventures, with a court ruling that the defendants had made necessary disclosures to investors.
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March 24, 2025
Period App Users Get $3.5M In Privacy Deal With Analytics Co.
A defunct mobile analytics company caught up in a proposed class action alleging a menstruation tracking app impermissibly shared health information with Google and others has agreed to a $3.5 million settlement with app users, given its "limited pool of funds," app users informed a California federal court on Friday.
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March 24, 2025
Byron Allen Can't Revive $100M McDonald's Fraud Suit
A California appeals court on Monday refused to revive Byron Allen's $100 million fraud lawsuit over McDonald's 2021 pledge to spend more advertising money on Black-owned media, saying the fast food giant did not make an actionable business commitment by "joining a national dialog on racial inequity."
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March 24, 2025
United Healthcare Escapes Some Of Diagnostic Co.'s Claims
A Texas federal judge has wiped away a good portion of a cancer diagnostics company's suit against United Healthcare Services Inc., but left intact the company's claim that United breached an implied contract when it started to take back money it had already paid out.
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March 24, 2025
Chancery Won't Restart Disputed Bitcoin ATMs For Now
Delaware's Court of Chancery refused on Monday to order reactivation of dozens of bitcoin cryptocurrency ATM kiosks shut down by an Iowa grocery chain after that state's attorney general sued Bitcoin Depot and a similar operation for alleged scamming of users.
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March 24, 2025
NC Justices Set Preservation Rule For Bids To Undo Verdicts
The former CEO of a high-speed knitting machine manufacturer failed to preserve key arguments at the trial court in his efforts to undo a jury's $3 million award against him for self-dealing, North Carolina's highest court said Friday, using his case to endorse preservation requirements for parties asking a judge to overturn a jury verdict.
Expert Analysis
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Trump Likely To Prioritize Trade, Customs Fraud Enforcement
With the evasion of tariffs and duties a probable focus for the U.S. Department of Justice and its partners under President Donald Trump, businesses should carefully monitor supply chains to avoid enforcement targeting, say attorneys at Shook Hardy.
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Recent Suits Show Antitrust Agencies' Focus On HSR Review
The U.S. Department of Justice's suit this month against KKR for inaccurate and incomplete premerger filings, along with other recent cases, highlights the agency's increasing scrutiny of Hart-Scott-Rodino Act compliance for private equity firms, say attorneys at Willkie.
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The 7th Circ.'s Top 10 Civil Opinions Of 2024
Attorneys at Jenner & Block examine the most significant decisions issued by the Seventh Circuit in 2024, and explain how they may affect issues related to mass arbitration, consumer fraud, class certification and more.
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Private-Bidding Compliance Lessons From Siemens Plea Deal
Siemens Energy’s recent wire fraud conspiracy guilty plea shows that U.S. prosecutors are willing and able to police the private, domestic bidding market to protect the integrity of the competitive marketplace, and companies will need a robust compliance program to mitigate these risks, say attorneys at Foley Hoag.
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FTC Report On AI Sector Illuminates Future Enforcement
The Federal Trade Commission's report on cloud service providers and their partnerships with developers of artificial intelligence's large language models suggests that the agency will move to rein in Big Tech with antitrust enforcement to protect startups, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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Mentorship Resolutions For The New Year
Attorneys tend to focus on personal achievements or career milestones when they set yearly goals, but one important area often gets overlooked in this process — mentoring relationships, which are some of the most effective tools for professional growth, say Kelly Galligan at Rutan & Tucker and Andra Greene at Phillips ADR.
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Coaching Little League Makes Me A Better Lawyer
While coaching poorly played Little League Baseball early in the morning doesn't sound like a good time, I love it — and the experience has taught me valuable lessons about imperfection, compassion and acceptance that have helped me grow as a person and as a lawyer, says Alex Barnett at DiCello Levitt.
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5 Litigation Funding Trends To Note In 2025
Lawyers and their clients must be prepared to navigate an evolving litigation funding market in 2025, made more complicated by a new administration and the increasing overall cost of litigation, says Jeffery Lula at GLS Capital.
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The Fed. Circ. In 2024: 5 Major Rulings To Know
In 2024, the Federal Circuit provided a number of important clarifications to distinct areas of patent law – including design patent obviousness, expert testimony admissions and patent term adjustments – all of which are poised to have an influence going forward, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.
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Rethinking Litigation Risk And What It Really Means To Win
Attorneys have a tendency to overestimate litigation risk before summary judgment and underestimate risk after it, but an eight-stage litigation framework can clarify risk at different points and help litigators reassess what true success looks like in any particular case, says Joshua Libling at Arcadia Finance.
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Mass Arbitration Procedures After Faulty Live Nation Ruling
Despite the Ninth Circuit's flawed reasoning in Heckman v. Live Nation, the exceptional allegations of collusive conduct shouldn't be read to restrict arbitration providers that have adopted good faith procedures to ensure that consumer mass arbitrations can be efficiently resolved on the merits, says Collin Vierra at Eimer Stahl.
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Proactively Managing Tariff Impacts On Megaprojects
President-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariffs may compound the complexity, duration and risks associated with financing and building large-scale infrastructure projects — so owners and contractors should plan to take possible tariff-related cost and schedule overruns into account when drafting contracts, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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US-China Deal Considerations Amid Cross-Border Uncertainty
With China seemingly set to respond to the incoming U.S. administration's call for strategic decoupling and tariffs, companies on both sides of the Pacific should explore deals and internal changes to mitigate risks and overcome hurdles to their strategic plans, say attorneys at Covington.
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Considering The Status Of The US Doctrine Of Patent Misuse
A recent Ninth Circuit decision and a U.K. Court of Appeal decision demonstrate the impact that the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 decision in Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment has had on the principle that post-patent-expiration royalty payments amount to patent misuse, not only in the U.S. but in English courts as well, say attorneys at Covington.
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Series
Playing Rugby Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My experience playing rugby, including a near-fatal accident, has influenced my legal practice on a professional, organizational and personal level by showing me the importance of maintaining empathy, fostering team empowerment and embracing the art of preparation, says James Gillenwater at Greenberg Traurig.