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Posts for "Civil Litigation / Civil Procedure" filter
Francis Pileggi has a very detailed analysis of the Delaware Court of
Part 1 of this series, "Introduction to Alternative Dispute Resolution," can be found here.
For with law shall our land be built up and settled, and with lawlessness wasted and spoiled.
In the past, contract negotiations were typically part of a deliberative—if not formal—process, whether that process was carried out in-person, over the phone, by exchange of letters, or any combination of these types of communication. But those days are long gone. E-mail reigns supreme as the
At the New York Times, a feature on the business law decisions of the current U.S. Supreme Court.
From yesterday's post, detailing what might be humanity's earliest change of venue, to today's, with one of the latest...
In the field of law, it behooves us to remember that we stand on the shoulders of giants. The following quotes, from various ancient Mesopotamian legal codes
Eugene Volokh reports on an interesting case, Med Express Inc. v. Nicholls, Case No. 13-CIV-0351 (Ohio Comm.
The term “ADR” stands for “alternative dispute resolution.” The term ADR, when used in reference to a pending civil lawsuit, refers to the resolution of the lawsuit by means other than having a judge or jury decide the ultimate issues. ADR can be as informal as negotiations between the parties