-
March 10, 2026
Southdown Properties Inc., a Pennsylvania developer, has filed for Chapter 11 protections with between $1 million and $10 million in estimated liabilities and assets.
-
March 10, 2026
Citing a need for public confidence in judicial decisions, a Connecticut state court judge has set aside an agreed-upon $18.7 million judgment against a housing nonprofit, which claimed that its ex-leader "fabricated" the documents purporting to authorize the defaulted loan at issue in the case.
-
March 10, 2026
The Federal Communications Commission needs to put guardrails on the cost of adding broadband gear to utility poles because bills often take years to show up and in some cases far exceed the pole owners' estimates, a cable industry group said.
-
March 10, 2026
A Texas federal court ruled that an insurer has no further liability beyond a $250,000 policy limit it paid to a construction company for its losses stemming from a social engineering cyber theft incident.
-
March 09, 2026
A New York City contractor has no standing to sue its auto insurer over the carrier's coverage obligations to the city in a personal injury suit, a federal court ruled, saying the company is not a party to the underlying suit and hasn't established an injury that is "certainly impending."
-
March 09, 2026
A major telecom group has launched a publicity campaign to convince consumers and policymakers it's time to make the switch from copper to all-internet-based networks.
-
March 09, 2026
The Delaware Chancery Court's docket last week featured disputes spanning alleged forged board approvals at a telecom startup, evidence-destruction claims tied to WWE's blockbuster merger with UFC and investor scrutiny of a multibillion-dollar deal between Intel and the U.S. government.
-
March 09, 2026
An inspection services company will pay $530,000 to end a collective action alleging it underpaid inspectors, according to a Pennsylvania federal judge's order.
-
March 09, 2026
New Mexico extended a property tax exemption period for eligible redevelopment projects under a bill signed by the governor.
-
March 06, 2026
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including a look at the evolution of big data in real estate transactions, C-PACE financing growth according to Nuveen's head counsel, and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's recent picks to lead the city's planning department.
-
March 06, 2026
The U.S. Court of Federal Claims has said a New Jersey contractor hasn't shown that the U.S. Air Force acted illegally by giving more weight to negative past performance reviews than other factors, rejecting the firm's bid for a spot on an up to $300 million multiple award construction contract.
-
March 06, 2026
Two New Jersey trade groups said Friday that they are challenging land use rules designed to mitigate the effects of climate change that were finalized on Gov. Phil Murphy's last day in office.
-
March 06, 2026
A coalition of cities and counties led by Fresno, California, have asked a California federal court to expand an injunction stopping the Trump administration from imposing "impermissibly vague" conditions requiring compliance with immigration and diversity, equity and inclusion policies in order to receive federal transportation and other grants.
-
March 06, 2026
A Canadian sawmill can't justify its bid for immediate refunds of cash deposits it paid while it was still subject to a countervailing duty order on lumber from Canada, the U.S. Court of International Trade said Friday.
-
March 06, 2026
A Massachusetts federal judge Friday ordered the Trump administration to step up its pace in restoring a disaster mitigation funding program, nearly three months after he ordered it to do so.
-
March 06, 2026
Federal prosecutors have accused a Miami real estate developer of leading an $85 million investment fraud scheme and failing to pay both his personal income taxes and payroll taxes for his employees, the U.S. Department of Justice said Friday.
-
March 06, 2026
The Federal Communications Commission is building on its plans to help along the telecom industry's retirement of legacy copper phone lines with a new order to be voted on later this month that would strip away certain regulatory burdens.
-
March 06, 2026
Pennsylvania's labor secretary had the authority to delegate the ability to issue prevailing wage determinations in several countywide broadband improvement projects, a state appeals court said Friday, putting to rest a grievance from Verizon that the state's labor board rejected.
-
March 06, 2026
The federal government has agreed to settle its affordable housing suit against a New York village that was accused alongside a local county of failing to comply with a 2018 agreement that required the village and the county to build or rehabilitate 62 affordable housing units within seven years.
-
March 06, 2026
The U.S. Department of Commerce will conduct nine reviews of five-year-old antidumping and countervailing duty orders after having received requests to do so, it said Friday.
-
March 06, 2026
This past week in London has seen British American Tobacco sued by more than 100 investors, the government bring a claim against a COVID-19 supplier of personal protective equipment, Annington Funding sue its new corporate trustees on the Financial List, and Piers Morgan hit with a defamation claim from a pro-Israel barrister he interviewed on his YouTube channel.
-
March 05, 2026
The federal government wants to end litigation by environmental groups seeking to stop a mining company from expanding gold extraction efforts within an Alaska national park, telling a federal court that any alleged harm to the endangered beluga whales living in a nearby bay is speculative.
-
March 05, 2026
The latest bulk order from U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires on America Invents Act patent challenges instituted five petitions while denying four others on discretionary grounds, including three brought by Samsung.
-
March 05, 2026
Steel concrete-reinforcing bars imported from Algeria to the U.S. could be hit with a triple-digit duty after the U.S. Department of Commerce said Thursday that they're being sold at less than fair value.
-
March 04, 2026
A Colorado federal judge has dismissed a Denver home builder's complaint against the city contending fees and restrictions required through two ordinances violate the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment.