The U.S. Supreme Court said Tuesday it would hear a fabric designer's copyright lawsuit against fast-fashion giant H&M;, tackling a question about when copyright registrations should be invalidated because of inaccuracies.
A coalition of general counsel from more than 200 corporations has signed a letter calling on Congress to substantially increase its spending for the nonprofit Legal Services Corp., which is the largest source of funding for U.S. civil legal aid organizations.
We asked eight law firm leaders about the lessons they've drawn from the pandemic and how they plan to apply them going forward. Watch the leaders responses on video in this interactive story.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to take on Johnson & Johnson's challenge to a $2.1 billion verdict awarded in Missouri to nearly two dozen women who blamed the purported asbestos in its talcum powder for their ovarian cancer, brushing aside the company's argument that too many claims were combined for a single trial.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday unanimously overturned a Ninth Circuit rule that said an asylum seeker's testimony must be treated as truthful when there had been no previous explicit finding of adverse credibility.
North Carolina-based health products company Avadim Health has filed for Chapter 11 protection in Delaware bankruptcy court with $114.8 million in debt and plans for an asset sale, saying the company has been unable to turn a profit since it was founded in 2007.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday overturned a Ninth Circuit decision limiting tribal police authority on public highways within reservation boundaries, saying the need to protect public safety requires that tribal police be able to detain non-Indian suspects.
3M was cleared of liability Friday in the second bellwether trial in a 236,000-plaintiff class action over claims its combat earplugs didn't protect service members' hearing the way they were supposed to, according to counsel for both sides.
The Federal Circuit on Friday upheld the U.S. International Trade Commission's finding that 10X Genomics infringed Bio-Rad Laboratories' patents on microfluidic chips used for genetic sequencing, rejecting 10X's argument that the ITC used an incorrect claim construction.
With the coronavirus crisis cooling down, a pressure cooker of opioid litigation is heating up with long-awaited trials across the country. Here, Law360 maps out the hottest cases and spotlights must-know details in trials that are underway or imminent.
The Federal Circuit handed Becton Dickinson a win on Friday and reversed a Patent Trial and Appeal Board decision that upheld a Baxter Corporation Englewood patent covering a method for telepharmacy and medication dose preparation, ruling the patent is invalid as obvious.
Delaware's newest vice chancellor ordered reargument Friday for three dismissal motions in cases left unsettled after the early retirement of former Chancellor Andre G. Bouchard, including a complex Kraft Heinz Co. derivative suit targeting an alleged $1.2 billion insider trade and $16 billion stock plunge.
A Florida federal judge said Friday that investors hadn't shown any "severe recklessness" on the part of Carnival Corp. in connection with the cruise line's public statements about the risks posed by COVID-19 as the pandemic was breaking out.
Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes asked a California federal judge Thursday to ramp up the screening criteria for jury selection in her upcoming fraud trial, saying the "extraordinary, highly prejudicial publicity" surrounding the downfall of the blood-testing startup requires careful scrutiny of potential juror bias.