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21 Aug 2012, 7:35 pm by Mark Moller
  The classic example is Pennoyer v. [read post]
8 Aug 2012, 3:25 am by Lisa Stam
In Brito v Canac Kitchens, the employee became permanently disabled and did not recover. [read post]
6 Jul 2012, 3:47 am by Russ Bensing
That doesn’t get your client completely off the hook. [read post]
22 Jun 2012, 12:35 pm by Bruce E. Boyden
The venerable X-COM was famous for this sort of thing, due in no small part to the simple mechanic that the player could choose names for each of his or her soldiers. [read post]
12 Apr 2012, 10:37 am
A Nova Scotia lawyer is on the hook for $28,000 owed to a former client after the province’s court of appeal overturned a lower court ruling that found paid accounts were not subject to assessment.In a 3-0 decision in Mor-Town Developments Ltd. v. [read post]
30 Mar 2012, 9:31 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Small is also big: models of socially mediated/curated legal forms are becoming popular; some are free/nonprofit and others proprietary; many use as loss leader. [read post]
24 Mar 2012, 2:59 pm by Eugene Volokh
He can say, “I heard V threaten to kill me, saw him reaching for his waistband, and was sure that he was going to shoot me”; and unless the jury concludes beyond a reasonable doubt that D — again, the only witness — is lying, D will be off the hook, even if D was well aware that V was no threat at all and just wanted to kill him. [read post]