Delaware

  • November 24, 2025

    Pittsburgh Paper Can't Beat Healthcare Order As Strike Ends

    Workers who returned to work at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on Monday after a three-year strike must be reverted to their old healthcare plans, as the Third Circuit denied the company a stay of an order making it comply with a National Labor Relations Board ruling.

  • November 24, 2025

    Chancery Delays Settlement Ruling In Peloton Risk Suit

    Saying she wants to "get it right," Delaware's chancellor indicated on Monday she would rule before year's end on the Court of Chancery's part in a proposed multicourt settlement of derivative claims accusing Peloton's top officials of cashing in on inside information about an impending treadmill recall.

  • November 24, 2025

    Biotechs Go To Del. Chancery Over Cancer Drug Rights

    A contract battle has broken out in the Delaware Chancery Court between two biotechs, each accusing the other of materially breaching a decade-old collaboration agreement governing rights to the cancer drug Jemperli.

  • November 24, 2025

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court last week delivered a packed mix of fraud allegations, merger fallout, corporate-governance reforms and jurisdictional fights, while a new academic report ignited debate over attorney fee awards in Delaware's influential corporate forum.

  • November 24, 2025

    Ophthalmic Co. Hits Ch. 11 With $64M Debt, Eyeing Sale

    Clearside Biomedical, a company developing treatments for eye diseases, has filed for Chapter 11 protection in Delaware bankruptcy court with $64 million in debt, saying it will attempt to sell its business during the case.

  • November 24, 2025

    American Signature Furniture Hits Ch. 11 With Sale Plan

    Home furnishing retailer American Signature Furniture filed for Chapter 11 protection in Delaware on Saturday with a plan to close 33 of its stores and sell the remainder of its business to affiliates of its current owners.

  • November 21, 2025

    Real Estate Recap: REIT Reporting, Defining Water

    Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including reactions from real estate attorneys in two areas primed for deregulation.

  • November 21, 2025

    Gogo Hit With $22.7M Verdict Over In-Flight Wi-Fi Patents

    A Delaware federal jury on Friday found Gogo Business Aviation infringed four patents held by rival in-flight Wi-Fi company SmartSky Networks, awarding the latter about $22.7 million in damages.

  • November 21, 2025

    Chancery Tosses Suit, $32.7M Bitcoin Co. Insurance Claim

    A bitcoin mining support venture on Friday lost a Delaware Court of Chancery suit seeking damages tied to allegations it was misled by an insurer's purported promises to pay out up to $32.7 million in customer returns on nearly $7 million in investments.

  • November 21, 2025

    Chancery Keeps Fraud Suit Over Southern Trust Sale Alive

    A Delaware vice chancellor on Friday allowed the bulk of a fraud and contract suit tied to the sale of Southern Trust Insurance Co. to move forward, ruling that the buyer had adequately alleged a yearslong scheme to falsify financials and loot the Georgia insurer ahead of its $33.2 million acquisition.

  • November 21, 2025

    Rusoro Accuses Gold Reserve Of Trying To Hinder Citgo Sale

    Rusoro Mining has accused Gold Reserve, a fellow creditor of Venezuela, of trying to undermine an auction process in Delaware federal court for Citgo Petroleum Corp.'s parent company "in any manner possible, and at any cost."

  • November 21, 2025

    3rd Circ. Panel Will Rethink Solar Panels Fraud Suit Dismissal

    The Third Circuit granted a panel rehearing Friday for an elderly New Jersey woman who accused two solar panel financiers of saddling her with a nearly $100,000 debt after she was tricked into getting rooftop solar panels she believed would be free.

  • November 21, 2025

    Nicklaus' Golf Cos. File Ch. 11 With $500M+ Liabilities

    Nicklaus Companies LLC, the sporting gear and golf course design company founded by legend Jack Nicklaus, and 11 affiliates filed for bankruptcy in Delaware on Friday, as it disputes a $50 million jury award in favor of the 85-year-old retired golfer in his defamation suit against the company.

  • November 21, 2025

    3rd Circ. Rejects Boy Scout Abuse Claimants' Fee Requests

    The Third Circuit on Friday backed the denial of $21 million in counsel fees to the Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice as tort claimants in the Boy Scouts of America's bankruptcy case, ruling that the organization was not a creditor entitled to recoup money from the estate.

  • November 21, 2025

    Tech Co. Seller Says Buyer Sabotaged Deal Costing It $250M

    A French wireless-tech company has accused a Japanese semiconductor manufacturer of engineering an escape from a cross-border acquisition deal, telling the Delaware Chancery Court that the buyer's deliberate lack of transparency and sudden strategic shift doomed the transaction and left the seller facing $250 million in losses.

  • November 20, 2025

    Meta Will Pay $190M, Change Policies To End $8B Privacy Suit

    Meta Platforms Inc. has agreed to pay $190 million, as well as enhance its whistleblower program and implement a new code of conduct and insider trading policy, as part of a proposed settlement in an $8 billion privacy suit tied to the Cambridge Analytica scandal, according to several new filings Thursday.

  • November 20, 2025

    UiPath Execs Want Derivative Suit Axed Over Board Demand

    The top brass of UiPath have hit back against a derivative suit in Delaware Chancery Court, arguing the plaintiff shareholder did not make a presuit demand on the company's board and that the complaint merely copies claims from a separate federal class action that was dismissed.

  • November 20, 2025

    New Trial Bid Denied After $57M Coal Emissions IP Verdict

    A Delaware federal magistrate judge won't order a new trial after a jury found in 2024 that companies affiliated with CERT Operations owed Midwest Energy Emissions Corp. more than $57 million for infringing patents on technology for refining coal to reduce mercury in emissions from power plants.

  • November 20, 2025

    X Corp. Ends $90M Fee Suit Against Wachtell

    X Corp. has ended its California state lawsuit against Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz over $90 million in legal fees tied to the fight over Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter, according to a court filing.

  • November 20, 2025

    States Back Hockey Players In Antitrust Fight Over Contracts

    More than a dozen states have thrown their support behind current and former players in an antitrust lawsuit against the National Hockey League and its pipeline junior organizations, arguing a lower court's dismissal ignores how exclusive recruiting territories reduce competition for labor.

  • November 20, 2025

    Thomson Reuters Balks At AI Co.'s Fair Use Appeal

    Thomson Reuters wants the Third Circuit to back a district court's decision that an artificial intelligence-powered legal search engine's use of Westlaw headnotes did not constitute fair use, saying the AI company "pilfered" copyrightable content to make a competing business.

  • November 20, 2025

    Chancery Nixes Toss Of West Coast Diner Failure Suit

    Three fiduciaries of a now-shuttered Pacific states restaurant chain and its affiliates must face a claim in Delaware that they breached or aided breaches of fiduciary duties to the venture's Oregon-based affiliate, brought by an investor that pumped $18 million into the business, a vice chancellor ruled on Wednesday.

  • November 20, 2025

    Where Apple And Masimo's Watch Patent Fight Stands Now

    The high-octane fight between Apple and Masimo over smartwatch patents escalated again last week, when a California federal jury hit Apple with a $634 million infringement verdict and the U.S. International Trade Commission agreed to assess whether its redesigned products infringe Masimo's patents.

  • November 20, 2025

    Chancery Says $33M Nikola Deal 'More Than Fair'

    Delaware Chancellor Kathaleen St. J. McCormick granted final approval Thursday to a pair of settlements totaling more than $33 million, including more than $1.8 million in fees and expenses, resolving years of shareholder litigation tied to Nikola Corp.'s fraud-shadowed SPAC merger.

  • November 20, 2025

    Pa. Paper Asks 3rd Circ. To Stay Healthcare Restoration

    The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette urged the Third Circuit to pause its obligation to restore workers' union healthcare plan while it challenges a recent ruling that its shift to a company plan violated federal labor law, saying the order threatens to impose costs it can't recover if it wins its challenge.

Expert Analysis

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: The Perils Of Digital Data Protocols

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    Though stipulated protocols governing the treatment of electronically stored information in litigation are meant to streamline discovery, recent disputes demonstrate that certain missteps in the process can lead to significant inefficiencies, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Preparing For Corporate Work

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    Law school often doesn't cover the business strategy, financial fluency and negotiation skills needed for a successful corporate or transactional law practice, but there are practical ways to gain relevant experience and achieve the mindset shifts critical to a thriving career in this space, says Dakota Forsyth at Olshan Frome.

  • A Cold War-Era History Lesson On Due Process

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    The landmark Harry Bridges case from the mid-20th century Red Scare offers important insights on why lawyers must be free of government reprisal, no matter who their client is, says Peter Afrasiabi at One LLP.

  • Series

    Improv Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Improv keeps me grounded and connected to what matters most, including in my legal career where it has helped me to maintain a balance between being analytical, precise and professional, and creative, authentic and open-minded, says Justine Gottshall at InfoLawGroup.

  • How BigLaw Executive Orders May Affect Smaller Firms

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    Because of the types of cases they take on, solo practitioners, small law firms and public interest attorneys may find themselves more dramatically affected by the collective impact of recent government action involving the legal industry than even the BigLaw firms named in the executive orders, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.

  • Opinion

    Lawsuits Shouldn't Be Shadow Assets For Foreign Capital

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    Third-party litigation financing amplifies inefficiencies from litigation and facilitates national exposure to foreign influence in the U.S. justice system, so full disclosure of financing arrangements should be required as a matter of institutional integrity, says Roland Eisenhuth at the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.

  • 2 Del. Rulings Reinforce Proof Needed For Records Demands

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    Two recent Delaware Court of Chancery decisions involving Amazon and Paramount Global illustrate the significance of the credible basis standard on books and records requests, underscoring that stockholders seeking to investigate wrongdoing must come forward with actual evidence of misconduct — not mere allegations, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • How To Accelerate Your Post-Attorney Career Transition

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    Professionals seeking to transition to nonattorney careers may encounter skepticism as nontraditional candidates, but there are opportunities for thought leadership and to leverage speaking and writing to accelerate a post-attorney career transition, say Janet Falk at Falk Communications and Evgeny Efremkin at Toronto Metropolitan University.

  • A Higher Bar For Expert Witnesses In Drug Patent Litigation

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    With recent decisions emphasizing courts' growing insistence on robust methodologies in pharmaceutical patent disputes, litigators must be strategic in how they utilize expert testimony and adapt to venue-specific expectations, says Jeremy Scholem at WIT Legal.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Be An Indispensable Associate

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    While law school teaches you to research, write and think critically, it often overlooks the professional skills you will need to make yourself an essential team player when transitioning from a summer to full-time associate, say attorneys at Stinson.

  • Protecting Brand Identity In An AI-Driven Marketplace

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    A lawsuit recently filed in New York federal court marks a critical moment in the intersection of artificial intelligence and trademark law, underscoring the importance of — and challenges surrounding — IP owners' ability to protect their brands as AI-generated content continues to grow, says Wendy Heilbut at Heilbut LLC.

  • Series

    Birding Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Observing and documenting birds in their natural habitats fosters patience, sharpens observational skills and provides moments of pure wonder — qualities that foster personal growth and enrich my legal career, says Allison Raley at Arnall Golden.

  • How Del. Law Rework Limits Corporate Records Requests

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    Newly enacted amendments to a section of the Delaware General Corporation Law that allows stockholders and beneficial owners to demand inspection of Delaware corporations' books and records likely curtails the scope of such inspections and aids defendants in framing motions to dismiss at the pleading stage, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.

  • Inside State AGs' Arguments Defending The CFPB

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    Recent amicus briefs filed by a coalition of 23 attorneys general argue that the Trump administration's efforts to dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will irreparably harm consumers in several key areas, making clear that states are preparing to fill in any enforcement gaps, say attorneys at Kelley Drye.

  • An Update On IPR Issue Preclusion In District Court Litigation

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    Two recent Federal Circuit rulings have resolved a district court split regarding issue preclusion based on Patent Trial and Appeal Board outcomes, potentially counseling petitioners in favor of challenging not only all the claims of an asserted patent, but also related patents that have not yet been raised in district court, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

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