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Commercial Contracts
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March 17, 2026
Jets Legend Fumbles Suit Over '30-For-30' Portrayal
A federal judge has dismissed Mark Gastineau's lawsuit over his portrayal in an ESPN "30 for 30" documentary, ruling that the New York Jets legend gave the companies broad authority to use his name, image and likeness in the film.
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March 16, 2026
PBGC Keen On Dishing Out Opinion Letters, Director Says
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. has revamped its website to encourage attorneys to seek opinion letters about how the Employee Retirement Income Security Act applies to specific scenarios. PBGC Director Janet Dhillon spoke to Law360 about that effort, the PBGC's latest financial report to Congress and her goals for the agency.
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March 16, 2026
EB-5 Investors Land Class Cert. In TD Bank Escrow Suit
A Manhattan federal judge has certified a class of EB-5 immigrant investors who claim TD Bank improperly released nearly $50 million of their funds from escrow, which allegedly caused the money to go missing and scuttled their efforts to seek visas.
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March 16, 2026
Live Nation Trial Resumes, Exec Says Competition Is Up
The antitrust trial of Live Nation picked back up Monday after a weeklong hiatus with a coalition of states in the driver's seat, after the U.S. Department of Justice settled its case against the live entertainment giant, with one of its executives testifying that competition in the concert promotion business has grown in recent years.
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March 16, 2026
Winston & Strawn Sanctioned For Trying To 'Make Up Facts'
A California federal judge sanctioned Winston & Strawn LLP on Monday for making up facts and otherwise misrepresenting the record in contract litigation over its client's app being removed from Apple's platform, then separately dismissed the case on the merits.
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March 16, 2026
Stellantis Escapes Vehicle Inventory 'Channel Stuffing' Suit
Automaker Stellantis and former executives beat a proposed securities class action accusing them of so-called channel-stuffing, after a New York federal judge found none of the suit's alleged misstatements were material, and the investors failed to plead the executives had a motive to defraud or knowingly committed the alleged wrongdoings.
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March 16, 2026
Paramount Head Countersues Over $150M 'Shakedown' Suit
Paramount President Jeff Shell fired back Monday at a $150 million lawsuit filed against him in California state court alleging he failed to pay for crisis communications services and revealed insider company information, filing counterclaims against the plaintiff he says is a professional gambler who "overplayed his hand" perpetrating a "shakedown."
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March 16, 2026
Edible Arrangements Wins Sanctions, Beats Ex-COO's Claims
A Georgia federal judge struck the answer filed by Edible Arrangements' former chief operating officer and his company as a sanction for bad faith discovery conduct, finding they hid key evidence about millions in vendor checks deposited into a personal account.
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March 16, 2026
6th Circ. Revives FedEx, Kellogg Mortality Table Suits
The Sixth Circuit on Monday revived suits against Kellogg and FedEx from retirees who alleged their former employers' outdated actuarial assumptions shortchanged their joint-and-survivor pension benefits, holding federal benefits law required employers to use reasonably up-to-date mortality tables when converting from a single-life annuity form.
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March 16, 2026
NC Judge Fast-Tracks Job Info Order For Joe Gibbs Racing
Joe Gibbs Racing LLC's former competition director has one week to turn over communications and documents about his hiring and onboarding at a rival NASCAR team after a North Carolina federal judge on Monday granted the super team's bid for expedited discovery in their ongoing trade secrets battle.
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March 16, 2026
Fox Wants Mexican Media Exec Detained Amid IP Fracas
Fox Corp. has asked a New York federal judge to detain a Mexican media executive for misusing the company's sports broadcast trademarks, arguing that the millions in monetary sanctions already ordered by the court are not an effective deterrent.
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March 16, 2026
Teamsters Push For Arbitration In Kraft Heinz Benefits Suit
A Teamsters local contended that a dispute with Kraft Heinz Co. over a healthcare benefits grievance must be arbitrated because it falls within the scope of the parties' collective bargaining agreement, the union told a Delaware federal judge.
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March 16, 2026
Del. Chancery Restores CEO In Survival Game Dispute
A Delaware Chancery Court judge has ordered the reinstatement of the chief executive of a video game studio acquired by South Korean gaming company Krafton Inc., finding Monday that the company breached a merger agreement when it fired the studio's leadership amid a dispute over a potential $250 million earnout tied to the release of Subnautica 2.
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March 16, 2026
Texas Justices Say Settlement Doesn't Block Indemnity
The Texas Supreme Court will allow an engineering company to seek indemnity from one of its subcontractors for an injury suit settlement, saying nothing in the law blocks it from pursuing a comparative indemnity clause in the contract.
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March 16, 2026
NC Seller Can't Duck $200M Apartment Complex Sale Suit
A North Carolina federal judge ruled that an apartment complex owner and affiliated entities can't avoid claims that they improperly held on to a potential buyer's deposit after environmental contamination thwarted a nearly $200 million deal to buy 10 properties.
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March 16, 2026
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court's docket last week featured disputes including an $83.75 million settlement tied to a renewable energy merger, fraud claims in a fertilizer company acquisition and a developer's fight for control of a major Philadelphia redevelopment project.
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March 16, 2026
Sen. Warren Probes Auto Lenders On Military Borrower Rates
The U.S. Senate Banking Committee's top Democrat pressed major auto lenders for underwriting information on military service members, noting they pay higher rates on average while statutory lending protections for service members exempt many auto loans.
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March 13, 2026
Adobe Inks $150M Deal In DOJ Suit Over App Subscriptions
Adobe Inc. will pay $75 million in civil penalties and offer customers $75 million in free services under a tentative deal to resolve the U.S. Department of Justice's lawsuit over the company's software subscription practices, including an early termination fee that prosecutors had described as "a bit like heroin" for the company.
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March 13, 2026
States To Head Live Nation Antitrust Trial After Feds Settle
Over two dozen states and the District of Columbia are forging ahead with monopolization claims against Live Nation in Manhattan federal court after the federal government unexpectedly agreed to settle with the live entertainment giant after a week of trial.
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March 13, 2026
Dorsey Defends Twitter Bot Count In Trial Over Musk Takeover
Ex-Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey stood by 2022 company statements that bots made up less than 5% of accounts on the platform during video depositions shown Friday in a California federal trial over investor claims that Elon Musk deliberately tanked the company's stock with misstatements about fake accounts to renegotiate the $44 billion deal.
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March 13, 2026
How The Iran War Has Snarled Global Oil & Gas Shipping
The Iran war has effectively closed a key global shipping lane for oil and gas, and the resulting logjam is causing major headaches for companies responsible for transporting oil and gas from the Middle East to global markets.
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March 13, 2026
Ga. Appeals Court Revises Alter Ego Rulings In $900K Case
A Georgia appeals court broke from prior rulings and held that state law recognizes the horizontal alter ego theory of liability between sibling companies, upholding a roughly $900,000 verdict against two related turf installation companies involved in a contract dispute with their supplier.
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March 13, 2026
6th Circ.: Mich. Island Can Regulate Ferry Fares, Not Parking
The Sixth Circuit has partly lifted a lower court order blocking a northern Michigan island from enforcing a new ferry ordinance, ruling the city can regulate ferry rates while the case proceeds but likely cannot control parking prices at mainland parking lots.
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March 13, 2026
PE Firm Seeks To Block Calif. Suit Over $17.5M Deal
A private equity investment firm has asked the Delaware Chancery Court to block two former sellers of behavioral health facilities from pursuing a parallel lawsuit in California, arguing that the claims violate contractual provisions requiring any related disputes to be litigated in Delaware.
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March 13, 2026
Texas Justices Overturn $26M Equinor Verdict
The Texas Supreme Court on Friday overturned a $26 million judgment against Equinor Energy LP, undoing a jury's finding that it violated an exclusivity clause in a contract to supply water for fracking.
Expert Analysis
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Welcome To Miami
After nearly 20 years in operation, the Miami Complex Business Litigation Division is a pioneer upon which other jurisdictions in the state have been modeled, adopting many innovations to keep its cases running more efficiently and staffing experienced judges who are accustomed to hearing business disputes, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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What Law Firm Liability Risks In 2025 Signal For Year To Come
Trends and statistics reveal that law firms of all sizes and practice areas remained attractive litigation targets this year, so firms must take concrete steps to avoid professional liability risks in the year to come, say Douglas Richmond and Andrew Ricke at Lockton Companies.
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1st-Of-Its-Kind NIL Claim Raises Liability Coverage Questions
The University of Georgia Athletic Association recently sought to compel arbitration against former UGA football player Damon Wilson in a first-of-its-kind legal action for breach of a name, image and likeness contract, highlighting questions around student-athlete employment classification and professional liability insurance coverage, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.
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AI Evidence Rule Tweaks Encourage Judicial Guardrails
Recent additions to a committee note on proposed Rule of Evidence 707 — governing evidence generated by artificial intelligence — seek to mitigate potential dangers that may arise once machine outputs are introduced at trial, encouraging judges to perform critical gatekeeping functions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.
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Where Things Stand At The CFPB As Funding Dries Up
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is on pace to run out of funding in the new year, threatening current and future rulemaking efforts, but a rapid series of recent actions still carries significant implications for regulated entities and warrants careful monitoring in the remaining weeks of the year, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Getting The Message Across
Communications and brand strategy during a law firm merger represent a crucial thread that runs through every stage of a combination and should include clear messaging, leverage modern marketing tools and embrace the chance to evolve, says Ashley Horne at Womble Bond.
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Opinion
Horizontal Stare Decisis Should Not Be Casually Discarded
Eliminating the so-called law of the circuit doctrine — as recently proposed by a Fifth Circuit judge, echoing Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurrence in Loper Bright — would undermine public confidence in the judiciary’s independence and create costly uncertainty for litigants, says Lawrence Bluestone at Genova Burns.
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10 Commandments For Agentic AI Tools In The Legal Industry
Though agentic artificial intelligence has demonstrated significant promise for optimizing legal work, it presents numerous risks, so specific ethical obligations should be built into the knowledge base of every agentic AI tool used in the legal industry, says Steven Cordero at Akerman LLP.
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Series
Preaching Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Becoming a Gospel preacher has enhanced my success as a trial lawyer by teaching me the importance of credibility, relatability, persuasiveness and thorough preparation for my congregants, the same skills needed with judges and juries in the courtroom, says Reginald Harris at Stinson.
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FTC Focus: Amazon's $2.5B Pact Broadens Regulatory Span
Amazon's $2.5 billion deal with the Federal Trade Commission offers takeaways for counsel managing risk across both consumer protection and competition portfolios, including that design strategies once evaluated solely for conversion may now be scrutinized for their competitive effects, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practicing Client-Led Litigation
New litigators can better help their corporate clients achieve their overall objectives when they move beyond simply fighting for legal victory to a client-led approach that resolves the legal dispute while balancing the company's competing out-of-court priorities, says Chelsea Ireland at Cohen Ziffer.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: How To Build On Cultural Fit
Law firm mergers should start with people, then move to strategy: A two-level screening that puts finding a cultural fit at the pinnacle of the process can unearth shared values that are instrumental to deciding to move forward with a combination, says Matthew Madsen at Harrison.
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Why Justices Must Act To End Freight Broker Liability Split
The Sixth Circuit's recent ruling in Cox v. Total Quality Logistics Inc., affirming states' authority over negligence claims against transportation brokers, deepens an existing circuit split, creating an untenable situation where laws between neighboring states conflict in seven distinct instances — and making U.S. Supreme Court intervention essential, says Steven Saal at Lucosky Brookman.
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Fashion Giants' €157M Fine Shows Price-Fixing Not In Vogue
The European Commission’s recent substantial fining of fashion houses Gucci, Chloé and Loewe for resale price maintenance in a distribution agreement demonstrates that a wide range of activities is considered illegal, and that enforcement under EU competition law remains a priority, says Matthew Hall at McGuireWoods.
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'Measure Twice, Cut Once' Also Applies To Builders' Insurance
A New York federal court's recent decision in Ohio Security Insurance v. Southwest Marine and General Insurance, denying additional insured coverage, shows why it's key to apply the caution of "measure twice, cut once" to construction contracts and insurance policy language, say attorneys at Reed Smith.