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Delaware
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January 30, 2025
Hotel Guests Get Backing For Algorithmic Pricing Suit
Hotel guests accusing a group of Atlantic City properties of using shared software to fix room rates are getting a helping hand in their Third Circuit fight to revive their suit from antimonopoly interest groups, who filed in separate amicus briefs in support of their effort this week.
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January 30, 2025
Chancery Tosses Last Of Deutsche Bank, Vik Debt Suit
A more than seven-year Delaware Court of Chancery battle tied to Norwegian billionaire Alexander Vik's alleged efforts to avoid a $236 million U.K. judgment in 2009 ended on Wednesday with a quiet fizzle.
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January 30, 2025
Ligado Creditor Pans 'Exorbitant' Fees For $115M DIP Loan
Satellite communications company Ligado Networks LLC's largest unsecured creditor asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge to reject the company's proposed $115 million Chapter 11 financing package, saying Ligado's secured lenders were seeking to help themselves to $100 million in fees as part of the deal.
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January 30, 2025
Chancery Reverses Magistrate Toss Of Paramount Doc Suit
A Paramount Global pension fund stockholder has won a Delaware Court of Chancery reversal of a magistrate's dismissal of a suit for company books and records on events surrounding a proposed multibillion-dollar merger between Paramount and Skydance Media, in a decision heavily focused on unnamed sources.
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January 30, 2025
Del. Supreme Court Names New Chief Disciplinary Counsel
Delaware's Supreme Court announced Thursday that it had appointed a former Marshall Dennehey attorney as chief disciplinary counsel for the office of disciplinary counsel, which helps adjudicate attorney misconduct allegations.
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January 30, 2025
BakerHostetler Adds Fish & Richardson Litigator In Del.
BakerHostetler has hired a commercial litigator who formerly worked for intellectual property firm Fish & Richardson PC for more than a decade to bolster its Delaware office and complex litigation prowess in the Chancery Court and elsewhere.
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January 30, 2025
Yellow Corp. Gets OK For $67M Real Estate Asset Sale
A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved defunct trucking company Yellow Corp.'s $67 million asset sales for its owned and leased properties, saying the asset purchase agreements serve "the best interests" of the debtor, creditors and other stakeholders.
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January 29, 2025
Del. Justices Mull 'Nuanced' T-Mobile Data Breach Claims
Delaware's chief justice pressed an attorney for T-Mobile Corp. stockholders Wednesday on what the attorney called a "nuanced" derivative claim that the company's board wrongly failed to pursue damages for massive data breaches after its controlling stockholder pressed for adoption of a vulnerable data sharing program.
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January 29, 2025
SPAC Investors Sue In Del. Over Conflicted Concert Co. Deal
Investors of a special purpose acquisition company have sued the venture's principals in Delaware Chancery Court, accusing them of steering the already cash-poor company into a conflicted deal to take public a concert promoter affiliated with a SPAC creditor that had scant luck beyond events involving a 1970s "one-hit wonder."
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January 29, 2025
Jenzabar Tells Del. Justices Investor Delay Sinks $26M Award
An attorney for the founder of a higher education software company told Delaware's Supreme Court on Wednesday that shareholders moved too late to recover on claims they were kept in the dark when millions in stock purchase warrants were allowed to expire without notice that they could invest in a follow-on opportunity.
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January 29, 2025
3rd Circ. Says DOE Pool Pump Rule Detractor Failed To Object
A Third Circuit panel unanimously denied on Wednesday a swimming pool pump manufacturer's challenge of the U.S. Department of Energy's conservation standards for pump motors, ruling that the company had waived its argument.
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January 29, 2025
Attys Apologize To Del. Judge For Unclear Discovery Bid
Attorneys from Heyman Enerio Gattuso & Hirzel, Wachtel Lipton Rosen & Katz, and White & Case have apologized to Delaware's chief U.S. district judge for not "clearly" communicating necessary information in a discovery bid related to their defense of corporate clients amid a Shell Chemical LP antitrust proceeding in the Netherlands.
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January 29, 2025
3rd Circ. Skeptical Of Philly Firm's Ch. 7 Case Fee Quest
The Third Circuit on Wednesday seemed skeptical that Spector Gaden Rosen Vinci PC properly informed a bankruptcy court of the billing and services provided to a couple in a Chapter 7 case in which a judge sanctioned the firm for violating disclosure rules, a matter that left one appeals judge "shocked" at the Philadelphia firm's alleged shortfall.
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January 29, 2025
White House Rescinds Trump's Spending Freeze
The White House on Wednesday rescinded a directive freezing federal funding, saying it wants to end litigation and confusion, but said the move will not end a review of spending to ensure compliance with a series of executive orders by the president.
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January 28, 2025
Capri Investors Sue Over Scrapped $8.5B Tapestry Merger
Fashion brand giants Capri Holdings Ltd. and Tapestry Inc. misled investors about potential antitrust regulatory issues associated with their planned $8.5 billion merger that ultimately led to the deal's failure and investor losses, according to a proposed securities class action filed Tuesday in Delaware federal court.
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January 28, 2025
GSK Urges Del. Judge To Enhance $235M Skinny Label Win
GlaxoSmithKline LLC is urging a Delaware federal judge to enhance the $235 million damages award a jury issued against Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. in 2017, now that the dispute over skinny label infringement has returned to district court.
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January 28, 2025
Chancery Nixes TRO in Jenzabar Stock Buyback Dispute
Investors in an educational software venture mired in Delaware Court of Chancery litigation dating to 2009 lost an 11th-hour effort to broaden the latest case on Tuesday, with a vice chancellor noting that the state Supreme Court is set to take up an appeal in the already decided action on Wednesday.
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January 28, 2025
Creditors Seek To End Yellow Corp.'s Exclusive Ch. 11 Control
The official committee of unsecured creditors in Yellow Corp.'s bankruptcy case filed a motion Tuesday to terminate the defunct trucking company's exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan, or alternatively, to convert the proceedings to a Chapter 7 liquidation.
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January 28, 2025
Judge Temporarily Halts Trump's Funding Freeze
A D.C. federal judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked a Trump administration freeze on federal spending that was set to go into effect at 5 p.m., as a group of nearly two dozen attorneys general filed a separate case challenging what they described as an illegal and potentially catastrophic move.
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January 28, 2025
Chancery Bars More Disclosures In Sage-Biogen Fight
A Delaware vice chancellor on Tuesday prohibited Biogen Inc. and its human therapeutics product subsidiary from making public statements regarding a potential buyout of Sage Therapeutics Inc. after Sage sued for enforcement of a standstill provision in an earlier Biogen deal for Sage stock.
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January 28, 2025
NY Battery Startup Hits Ch. 11 With $136M Debt, Sale Plans
Electric vehicle and renewable energy storage lithium-ion battery maker iM3NY filed for bankruptcy protection in Delaware, reporting around $136 million in debt after it wasn't able to drum up new funding for a battery production plant in New York.
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January 27, 2025
Virtu, Insiders Sued In Del. Over Stock Buybacks
Stockholders of Virtu Inc. have sued the global financial services venture's top brass in Delaware's Court of Chancery, alleging they diverted roughly $400 million from public stockholders through share repurchases that took advantage of the company's two-tiered corporate structure.
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January 27, 2025
PTAB Axes Processor Patent Asserted Against Carmakers
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has invalidated all the claims in a patent issued almost a decade ago to engineers at Intel and then assigned to a litigation business that asserted it against automakers and others.
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January 27, 2025
Chancery Orders Tech Co. Trust Dissolved, Sanctions Trustee
Citing a trustee's repeated, improper attempts to transfer interests now held in a statutory trust formed to hold an Idaho tech company's shares, a Delaware vice chancellor on Monday ordered the trust dissolved and the trustee barred from managing any other trust or entity holding the company's stock.
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January 27, 2025
Judge Refuses To Stop Amazon Data Suit In Ill. State Court
A Delaware federal judge refused on Monday to block a lawsuit in Illinois state court accusing Amazon Web Services of illegally collecting voice data, saying the Illinois privacy case involves different claims and parties than the federal case, which was dismissed because some plaintiffs lacked standing.
Expert Analysis
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Analyzing Advance Notice Bylaws On 'Clear' Or 'Cloudy' Days
In Kellner v. AIM ImmunoTech, the Delaware Supreme Court recently clarified the framework for judicial review of advance notice bylaws adopted, amended or enforced on "clear" or "cloudy" days, underscoring the responsibility of boards to ensure that their scope does not overreach or prevent the possibility of a contested election, say attorneys at Venable.
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How To Grow Marketing, Biz Dev Teams In A Tight Market
Faced with fierce competition and rising operating costs, firms are feeling the pressure to build a well-oiled marketing and business development team that supports strategic priorities, but they’ll need to be flexible and creative given a tight talent market, says Ben Curle at Ambition.
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Patent Lessons From 5 Federal Circuit Reversals In June
A look at June cases where the Federal Circuit reversed or vacated decisions by the Patent Trial and Appeal Board or a federal district court highlights a potential path for branded drugmakers to sue generic-drug makers for off-label uses, potential downsides of violating a pretrial order offering testimony, and more, say Denise De Mory and Li Guo at Bunsow De Mory.
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Series
Rock Climbing Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Rock climbing requires problem-solving, focus, risk management and resilience, skills that are also invaluable assets in my role as a finance lawyer, says Mei Zhang at Haynes and Boone.
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Think Like A Lawyer: Dance The Legal Standard Two-Step
From rookie brief writers to Chief Justice John Roberts, lawyers should master the legal standard two-step — framing the governing standard at the outset, and clarifying why they meet that standard — which has benefits for both the drafter and reader, says Luke Andrews at Poole Huffman.
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Examining Chancery's Relaxed New Confidential Filing Rules
The Delaware Court of Chancery’s overhauled Rule 5.1, which governs confidential filings, risks permitting nonconfidential information to be shielded from public review unless and until a challenge notice is filed — but several potential solutions could help to override this issue, says Delaware attorney Daniel J. McBride.
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Del. 3M Ruling Risks Upending Corporate Insurance Programs
A Delaware court's findings last week in the 3M earplug insurance litigation that a parent company's defense fee payments don't count toward a subsidiary's self-insured retention and that an insurer's duty to pay defense costs doesn't attach to multidistrict litigation merit closer scrutiny in light of the modern corporate form and the fundamental objectives of MDLs, say Julie Hammerman and Gary Thompson at Thompson HD.
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Series
Being A Luthier Makes Me A Better Lawyer
When I’m not working as an appellate lawyer, I spend my spare time building guitars — a craft known as luthiery — which has helped to enhance the discipline, patience and resilience needed to write better briefs, says Rob Carty at Nichols Brar.
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Lead Like 'Ted Lasso' By Embracing Cognitive Diversity
The Apple TV+ series “Ted Lasso” aptly illustrates how embracing cognitive diversity can be a winning strategy for teams, providing a useful lesson for law firms, which can benefit significantly from fresh, diverse perspectives and collaborative problem-solving, says Paul Manuele at PR Manuele Consulting.
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Del. Dispatch: 27.6% Stockholder Not A Controller
The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in Sciannella v. AstraZeneca — which found that the pharma giant, a 26.7% stockholder of Viela Bio Inc., was not a controller of Viela, despite having management control — shows that overall context matters when challenging transactions on breach of fiduciary duty grounds, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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Opinion
Now More Than Ever, Lawyers Must Exhibit Professionalism
As society becomes increasingly fractured and workplace incivility is on the rise, attorneys must champion professionalism and lead by example, demonstrating how lawyers can respectfully disagree without being disagreeable, says Edward Casmere at Norton Rose.
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What FTX Case Taught Us About Digital Asset Recoverability
FTX's Chapter 11 plan has drawn lots of attention, but the focus should be on the anticipated outcome for investors, which counters several myths about digital currencies, innovation and recoverability, says Kyla Curley at StoneTurn.
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Series
Serving In The National Guard Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My ongoing military experience as a judge advocate general in the National Guard has shaped me as a person and a lawyer, teaching me the importance of embracing confidence, balance and teamwork in both my Army and civilian roles, says Danielle Aymond at Baker Donelson.
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A Midyear Forecast: Tailwinds Expected For Atty Hourly Rates
Hourly rates for partners, associates and support staff continued to rise in the first half of this year, and this growth shows no signs of slowing for the rest of 2024 and into next year, driven in part by the return of mergers and acquisitions and the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence, says Chuck Chandler at Valeo Partners.
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Opinion
States Should Loosen Law Firm Ownership Restrictions
Despite growing buzz, normalized nonlawyer ownership of law firms is a distant prospect, so the legal community should focus first on liberalizing state restrictions on attorney and firm purchases of practices, which would bolster succession planning and improve access to justice, says Michael Di Gennaro at The Law Practice Exchange.