SCOTUS Guides Lower Court to Stay in Its Lane
Departure from party presentation principle found to be abuse of discretion, according to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Volume 48, Issue 4
Departure from party presentation principle found to be abuse of discretion, according to the U.S. Supreme Court.
An employee job change with the same employer may require a new noncompete agreement, states an appellate court.
A district court concludes that possession alone is sufficient under the state's uniform trade secrets act.
Many questions arise with the rapidly developing AI available for public use—and the law is having trouble keeping up.
A good demonstrative exhibit can add kinetic energy and color to highlight testimony that would otherwise be static, undifferentiated, or unapproachable.
A new resource for cutting-edge electronic discovery that every lawyer needs to practice in the ever-evolving digital world.
Navigating the evolving ESI preservation requirements to stay on the right side of a Rule 37 motion.
Counsel disqualified for using a mask to hide that he was providing answers during a video deposition, case not dismissed
Irrelevant personal attacks by counsel from both parties in a motion violate professional ethics standards
The rule did not apply because only the deponent lied and not the attorney, so long as the attorney did not use the false testimony