Delaware

  • November 18, 2025

    Delaware Chancery Atty Fee Awards Under Fire In New Report

    Attorney fees in Delaware's Court of Chancery lack "consistent benchmarks" and, for big awards, may fail to reflect "risk or performance," according to a report Tuesday that potentially ratchets up pressure on state lawmakers wary of jeopardizing Delaware's standing as the national hub for corporate law disputes.

  • November 18, 2025

    Lugano Diamonds' $12M Ch. 11 Financing Gets Interim OK

    Luxury jewelry house Lugano Diamonds & Jewelry Inc. can access up to $1.5 million in Chapter 11 financing from its majority owner as it pursues a buyer during the holiday shopping season.

  • November 18, 2025

    1st Circ. May Nix Trump Funding Freeze In 'Weird' Case

    The First Circuit on Tuesday hinted that a federal judge may have been in bounds when blocking the Trump administration from withholding certain funds for states, expressing skepticism that the judge's order was improper or overly broad.

  • November 18, 2025

    3rd Circ. Backs Burger King's Win In Miscarriage Bias Suit

    The Third Circuit upheld an arbitrator's ruling that Burger King didn't discriminate against an ex-employee's pregnancy when her superiors wouldn't relieve her when she miscarried during a shift, finding the arbitrator rationally determined that bias did not infect company decision-making.

  • November 18, 2025

    Car Services Co.'s $851M Write-Down Sparks Del. Suit

    A car services conglomerate's board and senior leadership face a stockholder derivative suit filed Tuesday in the Delaware Chancery Court alleging they ignored clear signs of operational deterioration, concealed significant deficiencies in the company's internal controls and allowed public misstatements that preceded an $851 million write-down.

  • November 18, 2025

    Judge Questions If Trump's Say-So Makes Wind Edict Legal

    A Massachusetts federal judge on Tuesday lamented a lack of clear guidance from higher courts as she considered whether wind farm permits can be put on hold indefinitely based solely on a directive from the president.

  • November 18, 2025

    Warner Bros. Appeals Village Roadshow's Ch. 11 Rights Sale

    Hollywood studio Warner Brothers asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge on Tuesday to pause the $18.5 million sale of its bankrupt former business partner Village Roadshow's derivative film rights while it challenges the deal.

  • November 18, 2025

    Chancery Rejects Mary Kay Founder's Fee Bid

    The Delaware Chancery Court has rejected the demand of Mary Kay Holding Corp.'s co-founder for corporate advancement of legal fees tied to a Texas trust battle with his son, concluding that the billion-dollar dispute stems from personal trust-administration issues, not the executive's service as a company director.

  • November 18, 2025

    NJ Township Seeks To Revise $2.5B DuPont PFAS Settlement

    Carneys Point Township, New Jersey, is aiming to intervene in the state's federal suit against E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. and others over PFAS contamination, saying a settlement of more than $2.5 billion interferes with its own claims against the company.

  • November 17, 2025

    Chancery Mulls Receiver For Foundering Gaming Chat Co.

    Saying the court stands at "the outer boundaries" of precedent, a Delaware vice chancellor on Monday declined for now to appoint a receiver for voided predecessor of online gaming chat venture TeamSpeak Inc. and ordered targeted discovery regarding the standing of a stockholder who sued the company's directors and others for alleged breaches of fiduciary duty.

  • November 17, 2025

    TerraForm Stockholders Settle Suit Over Brookfield Merger

    Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and TerraForm Power Inc. stockholders reported a tentative, undisclosed deal on Monday to end their nearly four-year Delaware Chancery Court battle over Brookfield's alleged "exploitation" of TerraForm's minority stockholders in a deal dating to 2020.

  • November 17, 2025

    Mobix Sues SPAC Backers Over Alleged $30M Funding Failure

    A California-based semiconductor-technology company has sued its former special purpose acquisition company sponsor, affiliated investment groups and their chief executive in the Delaware Chancery Court, accusing them of creating a scheme of false funding assurances that left the company undercapitalized when it entered the public markets in 2023.

  • November 17, 2025

    Del. Pushes County Property Tax Payment Deadline To Dec. 31

    Delaware extended a tax payment deadline for New Castle County property owners until the end of the year under a bill signed by the governor.

  • November 17, 2025

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court and Delaware Supreme Court last week had a dense slate of fiduciary duty battles, merger-process challenges, post-bankruptcy fights and a series of cases probing the limits of fraud pleading, credible-basis inspections and board-level disclosure duties.

  • November 17, 2025

    Diamond Co. Lugano Hits Ch. 11 With $500M+ Debt, Sale Plans

    Luxury jewelry house Lugano Diamonds & Jewelry Inc. has hit Chapter 11 in Delaware with more than $680 million in debt as it seeks to recover from its former CEO's alleged fraudulent diamond transactions.

  • November 14, 2025

    Real Estate Recap: Public RMBS Revival?

    Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission veteran's view into how public offerings of residential mortgage-backed securities could return for the first time since financial crisis-era reforms.

  • November 14, 2025

    Drug Buyers Defend Class Cert. In 3rd Circ. Generics Case

    Direct purchasers and end-payers in the sprawling multidistrict litigation over alleged price-fixing of generic drugs are fighting requests from Actavis and Mylan to undo class certification in the cases, arguing to the Third Circuit that the litigation is a classic example of a class action matter.

  • November 14, 2025

    Mawson Says Ex-CEO Misled Board To Land $2.6M Bonus

    Mawson Infrastructure Group has accused its former CEO in Delaware's Chancery Court of concealing the bitcoin mining company's deteriorating finances and the collapse of a key prospective contract so he could secure board approval for a bonus worth about $2.6 million.

  • November 14, 2025

    Judge Declines To Trim News Orgs' AI Copyright Suit

    A Manhattan federal judge declined to grant artificial intelligence firm Cohere's request to trim a copyright suit brought against it by a group of news organizations who say their content was used to train AI models, ruling that the news organizations had provided sufficient examples of allegedly infringing outputs to proceed.

  • November 14, 2025

    Del. Lawmakers OK Pushing County's Property Tax Deadline

    Delaware would extend a tax payment deadline for New Castle County property owners until the end of the year under a bill unanimously approved by state lawmakers and headed to the governor.

  • November 14, 2025

    Tricida Trustee Jackson Square Sues Over $740M Loss

    The liquidating trustee for bankrupt drug developer Tricida has filed a complaint in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware accusing seven former executives and directors, along with an investment firm, of systematically stripping more than $740 million in corporate assets through insider trading, self-approved bonuses and a deliberate failure to protect valuable tax attributes before its 2023 collapse.

  • November 14, 2025

    Non-Attys Could Help Close Georgia's Civil Justice Gap

    Low-income Georgians and rural Georgians face several barriers to accessing legal services, including living in a legal desert, according to a Georgia Supreme Court committee’s report. The panel's proposal allowing "limited licensed legal practitioners" to assist with civil housing and consumer debt matters could improve access to justice across the state.

  • November 14, 2025

    Richards Layton Seeks $36M In Home-Health Poaching Case

    Richards Layton & Finger PA asked the Delaware Chancery Court to award $36.04 million in attorneys' fees and expenses following a poaching case involving home health and hospice companies, arguing that the defendants' pervasive bad-faith conduct requires full fee-shifting under the court's 2024 posttrial ruling.

  • November 14, 2025

    Taxation With Representation: Wachtell, Paul Hastings, Sidley

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, Pfizer Inc. completes its acquisition of obesity drug developer Metsera Inc., motion and controls technologies company Parker-Hannifin Corp. acquires Filtration Group Corp., and fund administrator JTC PLC backs a cash offer in the billions from British private equity shop Permira.

  • November 13, 2025

    Coinbase Counsel's DExit Letter Triggers Class Atty Pushback

    A Grant & Eisenhofer PA principal has challenged Coinbase Global Inc.'s continued limiting of public disclosures in a Delaware Court of Chancery suit alleging insider trading ahead of a stock plunge, after the company told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday it will recharter in Texas.

Expert Analysis

  • Parenting Skills That Can Help Lawyers Thrive Professionally

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    As kids head back to school, the time is ripe for lawyers who are parents to consider how they can incorporate their parenting skills to build a deep, meaningful and sustainable legal practice, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: September Lessons

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    In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses seven decisions pertaining to attorney fees in class action settlements, the predominance requirement in automobile insurance cases, how the no mootness exception applies if the named plaintiff is potentially subject to a strong individual defense, and more.

  • Series

    Teaching Trial Advocacy Makes Us Better Lawyers

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    Teaching trial advocacy skills to other lawyers makes us better litigators because it makes us question our default methods, connect to young attorneys with new perspectives and focus on the needs of the real people at the heart of every trial, say Reuben Guttman, Veronica Finkelstein and Joleen Youngers.

  • The Crucial Question Left Unanswered In EpicentRx Decision

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    The California Supreme Court recently issued its long-awaited decision in EpicentRx Inc. v. Superior Court, resolving a dispute regarding the enforceability of forum selection clauses, but the question remains whether private companies can trust that courts will continue to consistently enforce forum selection clauses in corporate charters, says John Yow at Yow PC.

  • Why EpicentRx Ruling Is A Major Win For Business Certainty

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    The California Supreme Court's recent decision in EpicentRx v. Superior Court removes a significant source of uncertainty that plagued commercial litigation in California by clarifying that forum selection clauses shouldn't be invalidated solely because the selected forum lacks the right to a jury trial, say attorneys at Clark Hill.

  • Series

    Adapting To Private Practice: From Texas AUSA To BigLaw

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    As I learned when I transitioned from an assistant U.S. attorney to a BigLaw partner, the move from government to private practice is not without its hurdles, but it offers immense potential for growth and the opportunity to use highly transferable skills developed in public service, says Jeffery Vaden at Bracewell.

  • Drafting M&A Docs After Delaware Corp. Law Amendments

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    Attorneys at Greenberg Traurig discuss how the March and June amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law affect the drafting of corporate and M&A documents, including board resolutions, governing documents, and books and records demands.

  • Advice For 1st-Gen Lawyers Entering The Legal Profession

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    Nikki Hurtado at The Ferraro Law Firm tells her story of being a first-generation lawyer and how others who begin their professional journeys without the benefit of playbooks handed down by relatives can turn this disadvantage into their greatest strength.

  • Series

    Coaching Cheerleading Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    At first glance, cheerleading and litigation may seem like worlds apart, but both require precision, adaptability, leadership and the ability to stay composed under pressure — all of which have sharpened how I approach my work in the emotionally complex world of mass torts and personal injury, says Rashanda Bruce at Robins Kaplan.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Make A Deal

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    Preparing lawyers for the nuances of a transactional practice is not a strong suit for most law schools, but, in practice, there are six principles that can help young M&A lawyers become seasoned, trusted deal advisers, says Chuck Morton at Venable.

  • From Clerkship To Law Firm: 5 Transition Tips For Associates

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Transitioning from a judicial clerkship to an associate position at a law firm may seem daunting, but by using knowledge gained while clerking, being mindful of key differences and taking advantage of professional development opportunities, these attorneys can flourish in private practice, say attorneys at Lowenstein Sandler.

  • Associates Can Earn Credibility By Investing In Relationships

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    As the class of 2025 prepares to join law firms this fall, new associates must adapt to office dynamics and establish credible reputations — which require quiet, consistent relationship-building skills as much as legal acumen, says Kyle Forges at Bast Amron.

  • Lessons From 7th Circ.'s Deleted Chat Sanctions Ruling

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    The Seventh Circuit’s recent decision in Pable v. Chicago Transit Authority, affirming the dismissal of an ex-employee’s retaliation claims, highlights the importance of properly handling the preservation of ephemeral messages and clarifies key sanctions issues, says Philip Favro at Favro Law.

  • Series

    Quilting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Turning intricate patterns of fabric and thread into quilts has taught me that craftsmanship, creative problem-solving and dedication to incremental progress are essential to creating something lasting that will help another person — just like in law, says Veronica McMillan at Kramon & Graham.

  • 3rd Circ. FMLA Suit Revival Offers Notice Rule Lessons

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    In Walker v. SEPTA, the Third Circuit reinstated a former Philadelphia bus driver's Family and Medical Leave Act lawsuit, finding the notice standard is not particularly onerous, which underscores employers' responsibilities to recognize and document leave requests, and to avoid penalizing workers for protected absences, say Fiona Ong and Leah Shepherd at Ogletree.

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