Texas

  • August 13, 2024

    Jury Awards $51M To Family In Carbon Monoxide Leak

    A Texas jury awarded a woman and her two children $51 million after they suffered from carbon monoxide poisoning in their apartment in 2015, finding in a Tuesday verdict that their apartment complex was responsible for the leak that allegedly left the children with serious brain injuries.

  • August 13, 2024

    Chamber Defends Texas Home For CFPB Late-Fee Rule Suit

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other trade associations battling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's $8 credit card late-fee rule told a Texas federal judge on Monday that the agency's latest bid to send the case to Washington, D.C., risks creating new rule challenge obstacles for local-level business groups and should be rejected.

  • August 13, 2024

    Stratasys Accuses Bambu Lab Of Infringing 3D Printing IP

    American-Israeli 3D printing company Stratasys filed a pair of infringement cases in Texas federal court against a group of Chinese-based entities, accusing them of designing, making and selling Bambu Lab-branded printers that copy several of its patents.

  • August 13, 2024

    Full 7th Circ. Asked To Review Tossing Of Protein Pouch Fight

    A Florida-based protein powder maker is asking the Seventh Circuit to reconsider its upholding of a Wisconsin federal court's decision to toss its claims over allegedly defective plastic zipper pouches on the grounds that they were filed too late.

  • August 13, 2024

    Halliburton Gets PTAB To Mostly Invalidate US Well Patent

    A Patent Trial and Appeal Board panel largely invalidated claims of a fracturing patent owned by U.S. Well Services LLC challenged by Halliburton Energy Services Inc.

  • August 13, 2024

    Texas AG Targets General Motors Over Unlawful Data Sales

    Texas' attorney general has escalated his probe into data privacy practices at connected car manufacturers, hitting General Motors with a lawsuit in state court Tuesday accusing the automaker of unlawfully gathering and selling drivers' private data — which would then be resold to insurance companies — without permission.

  • August 13, 2024

    Houston Election Failures Traced To Ex-Employee's Dual Jobs

    A former employee of Harris County's now-defunct elections administrator's office is facing six felony charges in connection with botching his responsibility to allocate ballot paper to polling sites during the 2022 election, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced Tuesday.

  • August 13, 2024

    Tesla, Stockholder Feud In Del. Over Texas Move's Validity

    Tesla inc. has fired a Delaware Court of Chancery broadside at a stockholder claim that the company failed to collect a required two-thirds majority vote to convert from a Delaware to a Texas-chartered company, saying the supermajority applies to charter changes rather than Tesla's corporate "redomestication."

  • August 13, 2024

    Parts Maker Can't Escape Goya Death Suit

    A machine manufacturer must face claims that a negligent inspection at a Texas-based Goya food distribution center led to a forklift operator burning to death after crashing into a pipe carrying hot beans, a federal judge has ruled, saying a jury could still find the company liable for failing to warn of the low hanging pipe.

  • August 13, 2024

    2nd Circ. Rewinds Tinder's 'Super Like' Theft Coverage Suit

    A Second Circuit appeals court panel asked a lower court Tuesday to reconsider whether Tinder owner Match Group notified its insurer in time to cover underlying claims by a product developer who said he wasn't paid for inventing the app's "Super Like" function.

  • August 13, 2024

    DOJ Says Law Bars All River Structures In Texas Buoy Row

    The Biden administration criticized Texas' "cribbed reading" of the Rivers and Harbors Act in its suit to make Texas remove a border barrier in the Rio Grande, saying the law bars all unauthorized structures in the river — even those that haven't been built yet.

  • August 13, 2024

    Jackson Walker Slams 'Draconian' Judge Romance Fees Bid

    Jackson Walker LLP is pushing back on a U.S. Trustee Office's attempt to roll back at least $13 million in fees and reimbursements awards, saying the firm is just the latest bystander to become "collateral damage" from a concealed romance between an ex-firm partner and a former federal bankruptcy judge.

  • August 13, 2024

    EPA Defends Approval Of La. Injection Well Authority

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Monday urged the Fifth Circuit to dismiss a lawsuit by green groups challenging the EPA's decision to give Louisiana authority over some underground injection wells, which can be used for carbon capture and sequestration.

  • August 13, 2024

    Baker Botts-Led Drilling Firm Joins September's IPO Pipeline

    Drilling equipment and services provider HMH Holding Inc. has filed for an initial public offering, represented by Baker Botts LLP and underwriters counsel Latham & Watkins LLP, joining a pipeline of potential post-Labor Day IPOs.

  • August 13, 2024

    Trump Remarks During Talk With Musk Were Illegal, UAW Says

    Statements former President Donald Trump made during a conversation Monday night with Tesla CEO Elon Musk about workers who go on strike violated federal labor law, according to charges the United Auto Workers filed Tuesday, which also accused Trump of unlawfully suggesting he would fire employees for striking.

  • August 13, 2024

    Contractors Owe $7M For Iron Plant Fire, Insurer Says

    An insurer for one of the world's largest steel producers told a Texas federal court that five companies it said were responsible for the design, manufacture, sale and installation of a failed component at an iron plant must foot the bill for a fire that cost the producer nearly $7 million.

  • August 13, 2024

    Australia's Orora Rejects $2.2B Lone Star Buyout Bid

    Australia's Orora Ltd. said Tuesday it has rejected a buyout offer from Dallas-based private equity firm Lone Star Funds, stating that the offer of more than $2.2 billion undervalues the packaging company. 

  • August 13, 2024

    Baker Botts Gains Mayer Brown Energy Ace In Houston

    Baker Botts LLP announced Tuesday that it has tapped a former Mayer Brown LLP attorney in Houston to lead the firm's critical minerals and metals subsector, strengthening the firm's corporate department.

  • August 13, 2024

    Baker McKenzie Guiding Flowserve On $305M Mogas Buy

    Baker McKenzie is advising environmental machinery provider Flowserve Corp. on a new agreement to buy valve-maker Mogas Industries, represented by Foley & Lardner LLP, for up to $305 million, Flowserve said in a Tuesday statement.

  • August 12, 2024

    Texas Wants Debt Relief Review In Wake Of 8th Circ. Ruling

    Texas' solicitor general on Saturday pressed the U.S. Supreme Court to shut down the Biden administration's student debt relief plan, arguing that a recent Eighth Circuit decision granting an injunction against the plan in a similar case "underscores" why the high court should grant its petition for certiorari.

  • August 12, 2024

    Shell Oil Forced Back To State Court In Texas Amputation Suit

    Shell Oil must face claims in state court it negligently caused a worker's injuries that resulted in his foot being amputated, a Texas federal judge has ruled, rejecting the company's bid to enforce two contracts that the worker never signed.

  • August 12, 2024

    Ryan LLC Gets HR Group Assist In Noncompete Fight

    The Society for Human Resource Management threw its weight behind Dallas-based tax company Ryan LLC in the company's ongoing fight to preserve noncompete agreements, saying in a Texas federal court Monday that without nationwide relief, HR professionals and companies will suffer damages "that cannot be fully calculated."

  • August 12, 2024

    Kimberly-Clark Cuts Settlement Deal In 401(k) Fee Suit

    Kimberly-Clark Corp. agreed to settle a proposed class action from participants in the toilet paper company's $4 billion employee 401(k) plan who alleged mismanagement, according to a mediator's report filed in Texas federal court.

  • August 12, 2024

    SEC, SolarWinds In Settlement Talks After Cyber Suit Trimmed

    Software company SolarWinds Corp. is in talks to settle a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission cybersecurity lawsuit after a Manhattan federal judge dismissed the majority of claims over a 2020 data breach, the parties said Monday.

  • August 12, 2024

    Judge OKs IRS To Review Bank Docs Of Exec In Bitcoin Probe

    The Internal Revenue Service can review the sequestered bank records of a cryptocurrency executive charged in a 2020 bitcoin fraud investigation, a Texas federal judge ruled, finding the agency had properly notified the executive and his company of summonses it had issued to their banks.

Expert Analysis

  • Law Firm Strategies For Successfully Navigating 2024 Trends

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    Though law firms face the dual challenge of external and internal pressures as they enter 2024, firms willing to pivot will be able to stand out by adapting to stakeholder needs and reimagining their infrastructure, says Shireen Hilal at Maior Consultants.

  • The Most-Read Legal Industry Law360 Guest Articles Of 2023

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    A range of legal industry topics drew readers' attention in Law360's Expert Analysis section this year, from associate retention strategies to ethical billing practices.

  • Inside Higher Education's New FCA Liability Challenges

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    As the educational sector expands its use of government funding, schools are at increased risk under the False Claims Act, but recent settlements offer valuable lessons about new theories of liability they may face and specific procedures to reduce their exposure, say James Zelenay and Jeremy Ochsenbein at Gibson Dunn.

  • 5 Most Notable Class Action Standing Cases Of 2023

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    Key appellate class action decisions this past year continued the trend of a more demanding approach to the threshold issue of standing during each phase of litigation, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Attorneys' Busiest Times Can Be Business Opportunities

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    Attorneys who resolve to grow their revenue and client base in 2024 should be careful not to abandon their goals when they get too busy with client work, because these periods of zero bandwidth can actually be a catalyst for future growth, says Amy Drysdale at Alchemy Consulting.

  • In The World Of Legal Ethics, 10 Trends To Note From 2023

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    Lucian Pera at Adams and Reese and Trisha Rich at Holland & Knight identify the top legal ethics trends from 2023 — including issues related to hot documents, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity — that lawyers should be aware of to put their best foot forward.

  • Lessons Learned From 2023's Top ADA Decisions

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    This year saw the courts delving into the complexities of employee accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act in the post-pandemic workplace, going beyond bright-line rules with fact-intensive inquiries that are likely to create uncertainty for employers, says Linda Dwoskin at Dechert.

  • A Year Of Transition At The Agenda-Setting 5th Circ.

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    Under the spotlight of hot issues this year, the Fifth Circuit has appeared to be an ideological court generating controversial decisions and attracting certiorari-grants — but in the shadows and liminal spaces of the everyday issues, the court and its members operate in a much more nuanced and less-divisive way, says Tad Bartlett at Fishman Haygood.

  • The Key Laws Retailers Should Pay Attention To In 2024

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    2024 promises to be another transformative year for retailers as they navigate the evolving regulatory landscape, particularly surrounding data privacy and sustainability laws, meaning companies should make it a practice to keep track of new legislation and invest in compliance efforts early on, say attorneys at Benesch.

  • What's Ahead For Immigrant Employee Rights Enforcement

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    The U.S. Department of Justice’s increased enforcement related to immigration-based employment discrimination is coupled with pending constitutional challenges to administrative tribunals, suggesting employers should leverage those headwinds when facing investigations or class action-style litigation, say attorneys at Jones Day.

  • How Attorneys Can Be More Efficient This Holiday Season

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    Attorneys should consider a few key tips to speed up their work during the holidays so they can join the festivities — from streamlining the document review process to creating similar folder structures, says Bennett Rawicki at Hilgers Graben.

  • 5 Trends To Watch In Property And Casualty Class Actions

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    In 2023, class action decisions have altered the landscape for five major types of claims affecting property and casualty insurers — total loss vehicle valuation, labor depreciation, other structural loss estimating theories, total loss vehicle tax and regulatory fees, and New Mexico's uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage sale requirements, say Mark Johnson and Mathew Drocton at BakerHostetler.

  • Series

    Children's Book Writing Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Becoming a children's book author has opened doors to incredible new experiences of which I barely dared to dream, but the process has also changed my life by serving as a reminder that strong writing, networking and public speaking skills are hugely beneficial to a legal career, says Shaunna Bailey at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Parsing 2023's Energy Markets Enforcement

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    A review of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's and Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recently released fiscal year 2023 enforcement reports highlight the significant energy market enforcement activities, litigation pursued and settlements reached by both agencies, as well as their respective strategic goals and focus areas, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • FDA's Recent Litigation Records Are Strong, But Imperfect

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    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has notched its share of litigation wins in recent years thanks to a number of key advantages, but the FDA has been less successful in certain highly visible arenas, Jonathan Berman and Colleen Heisey at Jones Day.

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