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Argument Set For Hawaii Supreme Court Case On Wildfire Settlement Subrogation

HONOLULU — An amicus curiae group called the “Consolidated Class Plaintiffs” will take part in Feb. 6 oral argument after the Hawaii Supreme Court expanded the time allotted in the case concerning reserved questions on how the subrogation rights of property and casualty insurance carriers bear on a proposed global settlement of claims related to the August 2023 Maui wildfires; additionally, a pending opposed motion seeks to stay a lower court’s allocation proceeding.

Supreme Court Says Law Banning TikTok Does Not Violate 1st Amendment Rights

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on Jan. 17 held that provisions of the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act do not violate the First Amendment rights of petitioners TikTok Inc. and Tik Tok creators and a nonprofit seeking to stop the enforcement of the law that promises to ban the social network on Jan. 19 absent a corporate ownership change, finding that the act’s challenged provisions “further an important Government interest unrelated to the suppression of free expression and do not burden substantially more speech than necessary to further that interest.”

Michigan Jury Awards $133,000 To Employee Fired For Refusing COVID-19 Vaccination

DETROIT — A Michigan federal jury on Jan. 16 awarded $133,000 to a former employee of a resort after determining that his refusal to take the COVID-19 vaccine was based on a sincerely held religious belief and that the resort failed to prove that accommodating the employee’s religious beliefs would have caused it to suffer an undue hardship.

$4.95M Class Settlement Gets Preliminary OK In ERISA Tobacco Surcharge Suit

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — A Missouri federal judge on Jan. 16 granted preliminary approval to a $4.95 million class settlement proposed in a suit that was filed months before a recent wave of similar Employee Retirement Income Security Act challenges to health plans’ tobacco surcharges.

2nd Circuit: Judge Erred In Similarity Analysis In Nut Trade Dress Fight

NEW YORK — A Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel on Jan. 16 reversed a New York federal judge’s dismissal of a trade dress infringement dispute between competing nut companies, holding that the plaintiff company adequately alleged the possibility of confusion between the packaging of the companies’ respective pistachio products.

Panel Affirms Ruling In Insurers’ Indemnification Dispute Over $1M Appeal Bond

RICHMOND, Va. —The Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals affirmed a lower federal court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of a plaintiff insurer alleging a defendant insurer breached their indemnity agreement for a $1 million appeal bond, rejecting the defendant insurer’s argument that it has no duty to indemnify under the equitable estoppel theory.

Abandoned Wells, Groundwater Case Is Valid Based On Fraud Allegation, Judge Says

DENVER — A federal judge in Colorado has denied two motions to dismiss a lawsuit over abandoned hydraulic fracturing wells that the plaintiffs contend pose a threat to human health and have the potential to contaminate groundwater, ruling that the plaintiffs have “sufficiently alleged fraud with particularity” against the company and its principals.

DOL Issues Long-Awaited ‘Adequate Consideration’ Proposed Regulation For ESOPs

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) on Jan. 16 released a long-awaited revised proposed regulation and a proposed class exemption on an Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 issue that has seen significant litigation — employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) transactions.

Magistrate Judge Won’t Condition Talc Suit Dismissal On Expert Discovery

NEW YORK — A man is free to sue whomever he wants, and because dismissal with prejudice precludes any future litigation on the claims, the talc defendant will not suffer any prejudice and is not entitled to discovery into an expert on whom the plaintiff no longer relies, a federal magistrate judge in New York said Jan. 15 in recommending that the court grant the motion.

Split Federal Circuit Reverses Noninfringement Finding In Tub Patent Fight

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A largely split panel in the Federal Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals reversed multiple findings from a Rhode Island federal judge in a patent infringement dispute between two manufacturers of bathtubs for infants, including a finding of noninfringement, with the panel majority holding that there are genuine disputes of material fact as to infringement.

9th Circuit: Kinetic Sculpture Company’s Copyright Claim Survives Dismissal

SAN FRANCISCO — A Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel held that a plaintiff company adequately alleged that another company infringed on copyrighted elements of its kinetic sculptures that could be manipulated into various shapes to survive a dismissal motion; the panel reversed a California federal judge’s order dismissing the copyright infringement claim.

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8th Circuit: Floor Plans Don’t Infringe On Home Designer’s Copyright
Former Detainee Agues No Circuit Split Exists On Standing, Class Service Award
Argument Set For Hawaii Supreme Court Case On Wildfire Settlement Subrogation
Supreme Court Says Law Banning TikTok Does Not Violate 1st Amendment Rights
FTC Announces New COPPA Rule Requiring Parental Consent For Targeted Ads
Local Controversy Exception Sends Development Class Action Back To State Court
Bid To Pursue Resolution With Vesttoo Affiliate In Israel Draws Opposition
Judge Tentatively OKs $7.5M ‘Virtual Diamonds’ Refund In Gambling App Settlement
Michigan Jury Awards $133,000 To Employee Fired For Refusing COVID-19 Vaccination
$4.95M Class Settlement Gets Preliminary OK In ERISA Tobacco Surcharge Suit
2nd Circuit: Judge Erred In Similarity Analysis In Nut Trade Dress Fight
Panel Affirms Ruling In Insurers’ Indemnification Dispute Over $1M Appeal Bond
Couple Sues 3M, DuPont And Others For Cancer From Water Tainted With PFAS, AFFF
Issues Of Fact Exist As To Cause Of Insureds’ Shutdown During Wildfires
Insurer’s Denial Of Theft Claim Was Reasonable; Bad Faith Claim Fails
Partial Dismissal Recommended In $300M Ponzi Fraud Case Involving Bank, Insurers
Insureds Failed To Show Carrier’s Actions Were Unreasonable, Judge Says
Split 4th Circuit Finds MOKE Mark Genericness Finding Lacked Evidence
Federal Judge Orders EPA Decision On Refinery Hardship Petition; Appeal Expected
Shipbuilder Creditor Appeals Asbestos Debtor’s Insurer Settlement Protections
N.J. High Court Decision Is Cited In Discovery Ruling On Reinsurance Info
FDA Sets Action Levels For Lead In Processed Baby Food
Abandoned Wells, Groundwater Case Is Valid Based On Fraud Allegation, Judge Says
DOL Issues Long-Awaited ‘Adequate Consideration’ Proposed Regulation For ESOPs
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