Delaware

  • February 16, 2024

    Soroc Tech Del. Suit Alleges Fraud In $115M DecisionOne Deal

    Canada-based information technology services provider Soroc Technology Holdings LLC has sued private equity firm Oak Lane Partners and several of its top officers and affiliates in Delaware's Court of Chancery, alleging they were behind an elaborate, $115 million company sale fraud that snared Soroc.

  • February 16, 2024

    Startup Countersues Trucker Tracking Co. For Stealing Tech

    A venture capital-backed startup that sells dashboard cameras to monitor truck drivers is responding to a rival's well-publicized patent infringement case by filing its own patent lawsuit in a different federal court that mirrors many of the same allegations of technological theft but pointing them in the other direction.

  • February 16, 2024

    You Want Judge Reyna To Have Coffee With Your Brief

    U.S. Circuit Judge Jimmie V. Reyna on Friday told intellectual property attorneys that the best way to establish credibility at the Federal Circuit is through a well-written brief, saying otherwise they put him in a bad position and deprive him of coffee.

  • February 16, 2024

    The Congressman Who Reps Cannabis Reform On Capitol Hill

    Rep. Earl Blumenauer speaks to Law360 about the prospects for Congress enacting marijuana reform, why he supports moving cannabis to Schedule III and some of the drug policy triumphs and setbacks in his home state of Oregon.

  • February 16, 2024

    Up Next At High Court: Deadlines, Delivery Drivers & Smog

    The U.S. Supreme Court will be closed Monday for Presidents Day and will begin a short oral argument week on Tuesday, during which the justices will consider the deadlines for challenging a federal agency's action and bringing copyright infringement claims.

  • February 16, 2024

    Ex-Yellow Corp. Workers Push WARN Class Cert In Ch. 11

    Former employees of trucking firm Yellow Corp. told a Delaware bankruptcy court that recognizing them as a class is the best way to handle their claim that the bankrupt company didn't give them adequate warning of layoffs.

  • February 16, 2024

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    News broke last week that Delaware's Court of Chancery will say goodbye to its current longest-serving jurist, a development that quickly overshadowed a busy week of new merger and board disputes, fee rulings, settlements, and books-and-records demands.

  • February 16, 2024

    Fruit Grower Gets OK For $11M DIP Draw After Lender Deal

    Bankrupt fruit producer Prima Wawona received interim approval Friday for an $11 million draw on its $22 million in Chapter 11 financing after saying it had reached a deal with objecting lenders on the financing and was working on a deal for its overall bankruptcy plan.

  • February 16, 2024

    Former Worker Says Supercuts Owner Cut OT Rate Too Short

    A former worker is accusing the owner of about 400 Supercuts, Cost Cutters and Holiday Hair salons in seven states of shortchanging its hourly employees on their compensation by not accounting for commissions and other non-discretionary bonuses in their overtime rate calculations.

  • February 16, 2024

    Supreme Court Pauses Boy Scouts Ch. 11 Plan

    The U.S. Supreme Court temporarily paused the Boy Scouts of America's Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Friday amid a dispute over nonconsensual, third-party liability waivers included in its reorganization plan, prompting the $2.5 billion trust that is compensating victims of childhood sexual abuse to suspend operations.

  • February 15, 2024

    3rd Circ. Says Rutgers Can Mandate COVID-19 Vaccines

    The Third Circuit on Thursday upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit by Rutgers University students who challenged the school's COVID-19 vaccine policy, with the majority finding that, under the U.S. Supreme Court precedent in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, there is no fundamental right to refuse vaccinations.

  • February 15, 2024

    Del. Judge Won't Reorder Priority Scheme For Citgo Auction

    A Delaware federal judge on Thursday denied a bid from certain creditors of Venezuela for a "more equitable" distribution of proceeds from an auction for control of the U.S. oil giant Citgo slated for later this year, ruling that their motion came too late.

  • February 15, 2024

    SpaceX Heads To Texas After Musk's Tesla Pay Package Axed

    Elon Musk announced Wednesday that he is taking SpaceX's business incorporation from Delaware to Texas, after Delaware's chancellor last month struck down his proposed $55 billion Tesla pay package.

  • February 15, 2024

    IP Forecast: 'No Labels' Party Feuds With Website Over Name

    In advance of debuting candidates for its promised "Unity Ticket for 2024," third-party political group No Labels will fight next week with a website's owners who say the group's name is merely a generic phrase any candidate can use. Here's a look at that case — plus all the other major intellectual property matters on deck in the coming week.

  • February 15, 2024

    AGs Press FDA On Safeguards Against Metal In Baby Food

    Attorneys general from states across the country urged the U.S. Food and Drug Administration once again on Thursday to establish requirements that baby food producers test for lead and other metals in products headed for store shelves, citing a recent wave of childhood lead poisoning connected to recalled applesauce pouches.  

  • February 15, 2024

    Court Mulls If Claims Buyer Qualifies For Special Ch. 11 Trust

    A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Thursday considered whether a company that pursues claims on behalf of medical insurers and healthcare organizations can be paid from a specialized opioid trust created by the 2022 Chapter 11 plan of Irish pharmaceutical company Mallinckrodt PLC.

  • February 15, 2024

    Investor In Battery Co. Microvast Sues Over De-SPAC Merger

    Leaders of lithium-ion battery maker Microvast Holdings Inc. and the blank-check company that took it public in July 2021 were so "personally hellbent on completing the merger" for their own benefit that they deceived public investors into approving it, a shareholder alleges in a new Delaware Chancery Court suit.

  • February 15, 2024

    Byju's Insiders Seek Ch. 11 Dismissal, Calling It Litigation Ploy

    Affiliates of Indian tech giant Byju's U.S. arm, which are embroiled in state court litigation with the company's lender, asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge to dismiss the company's Chapter 11 case, saying the bankruptcy petition was filed to stymie the ongoing state court litigation.

  • February 15, 2024

    What Rescheduling Pot Would Mean For Criminal Justice Reform

    While federal drug enforcers mull a recommendation from health regulators to loosen restrictions on marijuana, criminal justice reformers are warning that rescheduling the drug would not realize President Joe Biden's campaign promise to decriminalize marijuana.

  • February 15, 2024

    From Farm Tiffs To Time-Warner Battles, Glasscock Saw It All

    Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III, due to retire later this year, presided over a wide-ranging caseload during his long Court of Chancery career. Since joining the court, initially as a master in chancery — a position now dubbed magistrate in chancery — he took on litigation that included disputes involving some of the country's largest corporations, while also juggling cases as local as illegal junkyard disputes and, in one instance, a deep dive into colonial-era land records in a dueling deeds lawsuit.

  • February 15, 2024

    Ex-NJ Law Officers Allowed Concealed Carry, 3rd Circ. Rules

    The Third Circuit, in a precedential ruling, held that a federal statute allows former state and federal law enforcement officers in New Jersey to carry concealed firearms, rejecting the Garden State's argument that the law does not provide that right.

  • February 15, 2024

    DIP Lenders Sue Allegiance Coal Over $1.8M In Unpaid Fees

    Debtor-in-possession lenders of bankrupt mining operation Allegiance Coal USA Ltd. have filed a Chapter 11 adversary suit in Delaware, saying the company has not paid them $1.8 million in fees owed under a court-approved DIP loan order.

  • February 15, 2024

    Chancery Caseload Concerns Persist, Del. Chief Justice Says

    As the Delaware Chancery Court prepares for the departure of another one of its longest-serving judges, the First State's chief justice told state legislators Thursday that more help is needed to address ongoing concerns about burnout on the bench.

  • February 15, 2024

    Chancery Nixes Most Of Frank Founder's $835K Fee Demand

    The indicted founder of student financial planning venture Frank may not "shoehorn" new legal fee claims into a May 2023 court order that JPMorgan Chase Bank NA pay her defense on charges that she defrauded the bank when it bought her startup for $175 million in 2021, Delaware's Court of Chancery has ruled.

  • February 15, 2024

    Petition Watch: Classes, Litigation Changes & Fraud Theories

    The U.S. Supreme Court receives thousands of petitions for review each term, but only a few make the news. Here, Law360 looks at four petitions filed in the past three weeks that you might've missed, including questions over how courts should analyze class certification bids and regulations restricting specific speech for content-neutral reasons, whether plaintiffs must reestablish standing after amending lawsuits, and what constitutes fraud.

Expert Analysis

  • A Lawyer's Guide To Approaching Digital Assets In Discovery

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    The booming growth of cryptocurrency and non-fungible tokens has made digital assets relevant in many legal disputes but also poses several challenges for discovery, so lawyers must garner an understanding of the technology behind these assets, the way they function, and how they're held, says Brett Sager at Ehrenstein Sager.

  • Opinion

    High Court's Ethics Statement Places Justices Above The Law

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    The U.S. Supreme Court justices' disappointing statement on the court's ethics principles and practices reveals that not only are they satisfied with a status quo in which they are bound by fewer ethics rules than other federal judges, but also that they've twisted the few rules that do apply to them, says David Janovsky at the Project on Government Oversight.

  • High Court Amgen Patent Ruling Promotes Medical Innovation

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's decision last week in Amgen v. Sanofi — the first to enforce the patent enablement requirement in a biotech setting — will be enormously impactful, affecting patent drafting, litigation and licensing, and investment in research and development for life-changing therapies, says Irena Royzman at Kramer Levin.

  • Bankruptcy Ruling Guides Secured Lenders On Proxy Rights

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    The Delaware bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in the case of CII Parent is an example of how a secured lender can utilize proxy rights to affect a borrower's ability to use bankruptcy as a protective tool against lender action, say David Wender and Nathaniel DeLoatch at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • A Look At Corwin Cleansing After Chancery Edgio Ruling

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    The Delaware Chancery Court's denial of Corwin cleansing in an action seeking post-closing injunctive relief in the Edgio stockholders case has potentially significant implications for corporations and their boards in the negotiation of investment agreements with significant stockholders, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Opinion

    Time For Law Schools To Rethink Unsung Role Of Adjuncts

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    As law schools prepare for the fall 2023 semester, administrators should reevaluate the role of the underappreciated, indispensable adjunct, and consider 16 concrete actions to improve the adjuncts' teaching experience, overall happiness and feeling of belonging, say T. Markus Funk at Perkins Coie, Andrew Boutros at Dechert and Eugene Volokh at UCLA.

  • Opinion

    Duty To Oversee ESG Risks Would Erode Biz Judgment Rule

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    Imposing a duty to oversee ESG business risks on directors and officers is the exact kind of second-guessing that the business judgment rule is supposed to protect against, and it could expose corporate leaders to ruinous liability and disincentivize serving on public company boards, say Stephen Leitzell and Richard Horvath at Dechert.

  • Tips For In-House Legal Leaders In A Challenging Economy

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    Amid today's economic and geopolitical uncertainty, in-house legal teams are running lean and facing increased scrutiny and unique issues, but can step up and find innovative ways to manage outcomes and capitalize on good business opportunities, says Tim Parilla at LinkSquares.

  • What Associates Need To Know Before Switching Law Firms

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    The days of staying at the same firm for the duration of one's career are mostly a thing of the past as lateral moves by lawyers are commonplace, but there are several obstacles that associates should consider before making a move, say attorneys at HWG.

  • A Case For Sharing Mediation Statements With Counterparties

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    In light of a potential growing mediation trend of only submitting statements to the mediator, litigants should think critically about the pros and cons of exchanging statements with opposing parties as it could boost the chances of reaching a settlement, says Arthur Eidelhoch at Eidelhoch Mediation.

  • Tackling Long-Tail Legacy Liability Risk: A Defendant's Toolkit

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    Johnson & Johnson was recently rebuffed in its efforts to employ the "Texas Two-Step," which is likely to affect this increasingly popular method to isolate and spin off large asbestos and talc liabilities, but companies have multiple options to reduce long-tail legacy liability risk, says Stephen Hoke at Hoke LLC.

  • A Potent Tool For Boards In Derivative Litigation

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    The recent Delaware Chancery Court ruling in Baker Hughes illustrates the crucial role special litigation committees play in maintaining board control over derivative litigation, even when the plaintiffs have excused demand on the board to bring the litigation based on the board's nonindependence or conflicts, say attorneys at Fried Frank.

  • Preparing For Legal Scrutiny Of Data Retention Policies

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    Two recent cases involving Google and Meta should serve as a call to action for companies to ensure their data retention policies are updated and properly implemented to the degree of being able to withstand judicial scrutiny, especially as more data is generated by emerging technologies, say Jack Kallus and Labeed Choudhry at Kaufman Dolowich.

  • FTX Proceedings Highlight D&O Issues Amid Bankruptcy

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    A Delaware bankruptcy judge’s recent refusal of Samuel Bankman-Fried's request to access FTX's directors and officers coverage serves as a reminder of the interplay of bankruptcy law and D&O insurance policies, and some best practices for policyholders when pursuing D&O coverage during bankruptcy, say Geoffrey Fehling and Justin Paget at Hunton.

  • Fed. Circ. Ruling Can Serve To Guide Patent Range Claims

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    The Federal Circuit's recent UCB v. Actavis Laboratories decision explains the ways patent range overlap may affect validity, consolidates multiple lines of case law in this area, and provides a road map for practitioners to understand how lower courts may consider such cases going forward, say Luke Reilly and Katherine Helm at Dechert.

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