Appellate

  • April 30, 2026

    Mich. Appeals Court Revives Bounce House Back Injury Suit

    A Michigan court has revived a negligence suit brought by a 29-year-old man who claims he was seriously injured when he performed a backflip in a bounce house at an indoor children's amusement facility, saying a jury should decide if Family and Friends Funland should have had an employee supervising the inflatable playscape.

  • April 30, 2026

    Maryland Judges Ask 4th Circ. To Rebuke Habeas Order Suit

    Maryland federal judges urged the Fourth Circuit to decisively affirm a decision scrapping the Trump administration's challenge of a standing order that briefly blocks the removal of noncitizens who file habeas petitions, saying the unprecedented lawsuit deserves a precedential rebuke.

  • April 30, 2026

    Wash. Justices Split Asbestos Claims Against Insulation Biz

    The Washington Supreme Court on Thursday said the estate of an oil refinery maintenance worker cannot bring certain construction-related claims against an insulation company over his asbestos exposure, yet it can still bring claims over the company's role as a seller of asbestos-containing products.

  • April 30, 2026

    Mass. AG, Auditor Brace For High-Stakes Constitutional Clash

    A closely watched separation-of-powers test is playing out in Massachusetts, where the Bay State auditor will argue to the state's top court in a hearing next week that the attorney general is stonewalling her from conducting a voter-approved audit of the state legislature.

  • April 30, 2026

    Monsanto Keeps Trial Win In Roundup Cancer Case

    A California state appeals court has affirmed a defense verdict for Monsanto in a Roundup cancer lawsuit, saying the trial court did not allow improper regulatory evidence concerning the herbicide.

  • April 30, 2026

    Texas Panel Reopens Malpractice Suit Over 'Death Penalty'

    A Texas appeals court on Thursday revived a couple's legal malpractice suit accusing their former personal injury attorney of letting their car accident claims die, finding the trial court wrongly used a death penalty discovery sanction to exclude all the couple's evidence before trial.

  • April 30, 2026

    Texas Court Rules Atty Can't Dodge Billionaire's Fraud Claims

    A Texas appeals court kept intact a suit brought by the billionaire co-founder of Rackspace Technology Inc. alleging his former attorney aided his wife in a "contentious" divorce, saying Thursday that the attorney can't use the state's anti-SLAPP law to evade the suit.

  • April 30, 2026

    Muscogee Disputes Okla. County's Jurisdiction On Tribal Land

    The Muscogee Creek Nation has taken its fight to the Tenth Circuit to block Tulsa County's district attorney from exercising criminal jurisdiction on its reservation, appealing a lower court decision allowing the prosecutor to try and punish Native Americans who aren't members of the tribe.

  • April 30, 2026

    Texas Panel Backs Amazon Over Delivery Photo Showing Child

    An Amazon package delivery driver did not invade a Texas family's privacy when a proof-of-delivery photo inadvertently included the family's naked minor child standing by the family's glass front door, a Texas appellate court ruled Thursday, affirming judgment in favor of the e-commerce giant in the family's tort lawsuit.

  • April 30, 2026

    Juror Dishonesty Doesn't Warrant New Trial, 4th Circ. Says

    The Fourth Circuit on Thursday ruled that a West Virginia man convicted of distributing fentanyl is not entitled to a new trial after it was discovered a juror in his case lied about being the subject of a massive federal corruption investigation nearly a decade before trial.

  • April 30, 2026

    Ga. Panel Scraps Sanctions Over Special Master's Unpaid Bill

    A Georgia appellate panel threw out Thursday a contempt order entered against plaintiffs suing a host of chemical companies for toxic tort claims after they failed to pay a special master's legal fees, ruling that a trial court wrongly disregarded their protests that they couldn't afford his services.

  • April 30, 2026

    Ohio Panel Strikes Curbs On 3rd-Party Tax Complaints

    Additional restrictions on third parties filing complaints about property valuation in Ohio violate the state's constitution, an Ohio appellate panel found.

  • April 30, 2026

    6th Circ. Judge Skeptical Of IRS In $24M Air Excise Tax Case

    A Sixth Circuit judge expressed confusion Thursday at the IRS' defense of a $24 million air transportation excise tax on monthly management fees paid to a private aviation company after a government attorney conceded that initial ownership payments should also have been taxed.

  • April 30, 2026

    11th Circ. Won't Review SEC's $1M Penny Stock Case Win

    The Eleventh Circuit on Thursday denied a request by Spartan Securities and other defendants to reconsider an earlier ruling upholding a $1 million disgorgement award in a penny stock fraud case brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

  • April 30, 2026

    Debt Collectors Owe Charity Care Notice, Wash. Justices Say

    Just as hospitals must inform low-income patients they might qualify for financial assistance, so too must agencies collecting on medical debt, the Washington Supreme Court clarified Thursday.

  • April 30, 2026

    Netflix's 'Tiger King' Funeral Clip Was Fair Use, 10th Circ. Says

    The Tenth Circuit on Thursday said Netflix Inc. made fair use of a minutelong funeral clip in its popular "Tiger King" docuseries, holding in a precedential opinion that the streaming platform's use of the footage was "significantly transformative," departing from its earlier ruling that reached the opposite conclusion.

  • April 30, 2026

    Colo. Panel Says Deadline Rule Applies To Prisoner Appeals

    A Colorado civil procedure rule on computing filing deadlines when the deadline falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday applies to actions subject to the 28-day deadline for appeals of prison disciplinary convictions, the Colorado Court of Appeals held Thursday.

  • April 30, 2026

    Native Groups Say Justices' Voting Order 'Mocks' Democracy

    Two Indigenous groups say the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to narrow a provision of the Voting Rights Act that forbids discrimination on the basis of race "cruelly" undercuts a foundational tool for Native American voters and other minority voters to protect themselves.

  • April 30, 2026

    Mosaic's Radioactive Road Case Not Moot, Enviro Group Says

    The Center for Biological Diversity told the Eleventh Circuit on Thursday that there are still remedies to pursue if the appeals court revives its challenge to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's approval of a road that contains radioactive phosphogypsum that has already been completed.

  • April 30, 2026

    Pa. Justices Find Borough's Stormwater Charge Is Tax

    A Pennsylvania university that was charged by a borough for stormwater management services doesn't owe the amount assessed because the charges constitute a tax that the university is exempt from paying, the state's Supreme Court affirmed Thursday.

  • April 30, 2026

    4th Circ. Says Officer Not Immune In Teen's Shooting

    The Fourth Circuit has affirmed a lower court ruling that a South Carolina police officer does not have qualified immunity from a civil lawsuit alleging he illegally shot and killed a teenager who was later found to be armed while patrolling a neighborhood that was under a COVID-19 pandemic-related curfew order.

  • April 30, 2026

    Texas Justices Asked To Revive Infowars Lease To The Onion

    Victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre have asked the Texas Supreme Court to let a court-appointed receiver lease Alex Jones' website Infowars to a company linked to satire publication The Onion, a move that could hasten the delivery of funds Jones owes the families after massive defamation judgments.

  • April 30, 2026

    Pa. Justices Say DA Can't Drop Charges In Police Shooting

    Pennsylvania prosecutors cannot refuse to try a police officer who claimed he mistook his gun for a taser when he pressed his weapon to a mentally-ill man's leg and shot him in front of his mother at close range, the state's highest court said Thursday, affirming a lower court decision.

  • April 30, 2026

    Colo. Panel OKs Impact Fees On Reconstruction Projects

    Local governments can charge impact fees on new development projects as a condition of issuing a development permit, including on projects other than the development of a raw parcel of land, the Colorado Court of Appeals held Thursday.

  • April 30, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Lets Stand Walmart's Alice Win Over Q Tech Patents

    The Federal Circuit said Thursday it will not rehear arguments that Walmart infringed three content-sharing patents that were invalidated under the U.S. Supreme Court's test for assessing whether patents cover abstract subject matter.

Expert Analysis

  • Del. Blackbaud Ruling Signals A New Era For Cyberinsurance

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    The recent Delaware Supreme Court ruling in Travelers v. Blackbaud shows that cyberinsurance is moving into a second maturity phase, in which insurers will increasingly attempt to recover their payments from vendors and insureds will face new pressure to justify cyber incident reimbursements, say Steven Teppler at Mandelbaum Barrett and Jade Davis at Shumaker.

  • How A High Court Music Piracy Ruling Shrinks ISP Liability

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent opinion in Cox Communications Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment, which concerned the boundaries of contributory copyright infringement for internet service providers, dramatically lessens both the risk that an ISP will be held contributorily liable and, relatedly, the incentives an ISP may have to help combat online copyright infringement, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Opinion

    AI Presents A Make-Or-Break Moment For Outside Counsel

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    The rapid adoption of artificial intelligence by corporate legal departments is forcing a long-overdue reset of the relationship between inside and outside counsel, and introducing a significant opportunity to shed frustrating inefficiencies and strengthen collaboration for firms willing to embrace the shift, says Intel Chief Legal Officer April Miller Boise.

  • 8 Tariff Refund Questions For Restructuring Professionals

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    For restructuring and turnaround professionals, seeking refunds following the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision invalidating tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act raises several questions about how to capture legitimate recoveries while protecting an enterprise from the consequences of its own history, says Jonny Frank and Laura Greenman at StoneTurn, and Andrew Popescu at Province.

  • Series

    Watching Hallmark Movies Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    I realize you may be judging me for watching, and actually enjoying, Hallmark Channel movies, but the escapism and storylines actually demonstrate qualities and actions that lead to an efficient, productive and positive legal practice, says Karen Ross at Tucker Ellis.

  • Fed. Circ. In February: When Grammar Trumps Patent Specs

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    The Federal Circuit's decision in Netflix v. DivX last month highlights the challenge of interpreting potentially misplaced modifiers in complicated technological patents, and the potential for grammatical rules to provide a default interpretation for unclear claim language, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.

  • Acquiring Co-Insurer Coverage Aid In Fla. Builder Defect Suits

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    With the recent influx of Florida construction defect lawsuits putting builder’s insurance carriers in the crosshairs, parties must actively seek new methods tailored to the state to compel as many subcontractors, carriers and co-insurers as possible to share the expense and risk of their defense, says Nick Richardson at Segal McCambridge.

  • New Orphan Drug Law Provides A Key Fix For Pharma Cos.

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    The Consolidated Appropriations Act enacted last month restores the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's long-standing interpretation of "same disease or condition," related to orphan drug exclusivity, resolving years of regulatory uncertainty and litigation that have discouraged rare disease research, say attorneys at Spencer Fane.

  • What 2nd Circ. Discovery Stay Means For Sovereign Litigation

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    The Second Circuit’s recent stay of a postjudgment discovery order against Argentine officials in an oil investment dispute is worth examining in its full doctrinal and practical context, as limiting enforcement efforts that pry into foreign governments' internal workings could quietly reshape the trajectory of sovereign litigation in the U.S., says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Employment Cases Offer Arbitration Clause Drafting Lessons

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    Two recent federal court decisions granting employers' motions to compel arbitration highlight that companies can improve their chances of avoiding court by approaching arbitration clauses as a series of related drafting choices, anticipating disputes on the arbitral seat, hearing location and governing law, say attorneys at Krevolin Horst.

  • Moderna Case Highlights Overlooked Hurdle In Biopharma IP

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    The recent settlement of the patent litigation involving Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine in Delaware federal court shows that patent portfolios covering enabling platform technologies can create significant freedom-to-operate risk even when their owners are not direct competitors developing the therapeutic product, says Olga Berson at Thompson Coburn.

  • 3 Policy Lines To Revisit After Justices Nix Emergency Tariffs

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's invalidation of President Donald Trump's emergency-based tariffs could expose businesses to allegations of misrepresenting tariff effects and raise the prospect of consumer actions seeking refunds — underscoring the need for policyholders to potentially reposition their insurance portfolios, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Emissions Permits May Not Override Pollution Exclusions

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    Two recent coverage rulings from the Illinois Supreme Court and the Third Circuit suggest a trend among appellate courts to deny coverage under pollution exclusions, even when the emissions happened pursuant to a government permit, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • 5 Tips For Navigating Your Firm's All-Attorney Summit

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Law firm retreats should be approached strategically, as they present valuable opportunities to advance both the firm's objectives and attorneys' professional development through meaningful participation, building and strengthening internal relationships, and proactive follow-up, says James Argionis at Cozen O’Connor.

  • What's At Stake In High Court's Venue Dispute Case

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s eventual ruling in Abouammo v. U.S. could fundamentally reshape venue rules for federal criminal prosecutions, highlighting why defense counsel should ensure preservation of colorable venue challenges, particularly where the government's chosen forum lacks a direct connection to the defendant's physical acts, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.

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