Alternative Dispute Resolution, Family
Pyrrhic victories and the cost of family law litigation
By Scott M. Gordon
Like King Pyrrhus and the Romans, most family law litigants come to the dispute with limited resources. In many, if not most c...
Appellate Practice, Family
Appeals in family law before a final judgment is entered
By Claudia Ribet
Waiting for a final judgment in a family law matter means that litigants may be required to delay a long time before they can ...
These profiles are created by crime laboratories every day — used to bring a name to unidentified remains, or to exonerate tho...
Civil Rights, Corporate, Labor/Employment
Gender diversity initiatives will continue to bring women into boardrooms
By Caitlin Sanders
Although the ultimate fate of SB 826 is currently uncertain, we can be certain that today’s society will continue to prioritiz...
9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Civil Litigation
Is TCPA doomed?
By A. Paul Heeringa
A recent 9th Circuit opinion sets up a possible showdown in the Supreme Court that could (in theory) not only resolve the curr...
State Bar & Bar Associations, Law Practice
Legal innovation report: part promising, part unexceptionable
By Don Willenburg
It is both unfortunate and telling that the State Bar of California rolled out proposals involving technology and access to ju...
State Bar & Bar Associations, Law Practice
Is nonlawyer ownership signaling the end for solo/small firms?
By Joe Donnini
Some kind of change is likely, but rather than lament or voice resistance rooted in primarily protectionist motivations, explo...
Are colleges places of robust, open debate or suffocating cloisters where only approved ideas can be expressed?
California Supreme Court, Constitutional Law, Criminal
Ruling helps protect the constitutional rights of children
By Jamie Lee Williams
The California Supreme Court has rejected the government's attempt to require a youth probationer, as a condition of release, ...
California Supreme Court, Civil Litigation
Class ascertainability decision leaves open questions
By Michael J. Stortz, Neal R. Marder
In a narrow ruling, the California Supreme Court held that a proposed class must be defined by objective criteria.
Administrative/Regulatory, Environmental & Energy
New rules may affect scope of the ESA
By Angela Jean Levin, Andrea Wortzel
One of the key initiatives of Trump’s presidency has been the reduction of regulatory burdens for infrastructure and domestic ...
Which expenses are business and which are personal? You might think it’s obvious, but your view and the IRS view may differ. T...
Corporate, Labor/Employment
California gender diversity bill faces legal challenge
By Maj Vaseghi, Sarah M. Ray
As many will recall, in 2018 then-California Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law Senate Bill 826, which instituted gender quotas ...
Family
Shared kids and DVROs can put parties in a precarious position
By Lisa H. Meyer, Eric W. Meyer
When the protected party and restrained party share children together, they are placed in a precarious position where they mus...
As recently as in the lifetime of some of us, the United States made an offer to buy the giant island. In 1946, we were ready ...
Law Office Management, Law Practice
When a large law firm dissolves
By Daniel O'Rielly, Dena Roche
The news this month that law firm LeClairRyan has decided to dissolve and shut down may not have come as much of a shock to th...
Despite the multiple, massive data breaches reported by corporations over the last two years, it may be that the least secure ...
Criminal, Judges and Judiciary
Issuing a gun violence restraining order in California
By Dean Hansell, Marina Melikyan
This article describes the scope and the circumstances under which a court will issue a GVRO. It also identifies several techn...
California Courts of Appeal, Civil Litigation
No tort duty of care when reviewing loan modification applications
By Regina McClendon, Lindsey Kress
The 2nd District Court of Appeal recently weighed in on the split among the courts of appeal as to whether a lender owes a tor...
California Courts of Appeal, Constitutional Law, Criminal
The Jagged Shore
By Brian M. Hoffstadt
The shore defining the boundary of indigent defendants' constitutional right to forestall or forego liability for certain asse...
Cryptocurrency owners beware: IRS Letters are in the mail
By Travis W. Thompson
By the end of August 2019, more than 10,000 taxpayers will receive letters related to their virtual or cryptocurrency transact...
President Donald Trump’s recent musings about a U.S. purchase of Greenland have provoked mockery from Denmark to El Centro. I...
Family
Assisted reproductive technology can help women become financially stable
By Evie P. Jeang
The “ART” industry is a new arena that allows women, in countries such as India, to obtain financial wealth while helping a fa...
9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, California Supreme Court, Labor/Employment
Are time studies still useful in California wage and hour litigation?
By Gregory V. Mersol
A recent pair of cases from the California Supreme Court and the 9th Circuit cast doubt on the utility of time studies under C...
Intellectual Property, International Law
US and Chinese patents: commonalities and distinctions
By Kory Christensen
Despite the trend toward harmonization of patent laws throughout the world, many differences still exist between countries. Th...
Labor/Employment
Dynamex upheaval of the gig economy could take years to sort out
By Ronald L. Zambrano
The fallout from the landmark California Supreme Court decision will be lengthy and far-reaching for the companies, the employ...
California Supreme Court, Civil Litigation
Court creates bad precedent by injecting tort principles into an inverse condemnation analysis
By Mark S. Roth
By injecting tort principles into an inverse condemnation analysis, a recent California Supreme Court decision presents a subs...
Appellate Practice, Civil Litigation, Law Practice
Appellate Adventures, Chapter 13, "How Do I Present the Outline of Argument?"
By Myron Moskovitz
Starring ace trial lawyer Flash Feinberg and his trusty sidekick Professor Plato
I am a teacher of argument and a student of history. As I contemplate the viciousness of contemporary rhetoric, I think back t...
Criminal, Letters
Let’s see what the People think of the felony murder rule
By Marc Debbaudt
Someone is willing to commit a crime. They habor the intent to break the law. They are willing to breach our social contract f...