Retail & E-Commerce

  • November 28, 2023

    'This Is Solvable': Google, Epic Ordered To Midtrial Deal Talk

    A California federal judge on Tuesday ordered top decision-makers at Google and Epic Games to try a second time to reach a settlement in their Play Store antitrust case as the monthlong trial nears its end, saying the fight is "solvable" and comparing their hesitation to a kid eating broccoli.

  • November 28, 2023

    Rent-A-Center To Pay $9M Over 'Abusive' Debt Collection

    Rent-A-Center will pay nearly $9 million to resolve allegations that the company engaged in "abusive" debt collection practices, including filing criminal theft reports against customers who missed rental payments, the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office announced Tuesday.

  • November 28, 2023

    9th Circ. Won't Revive Shopify Consumer's Data Privacy Suit

    The Ninth Circuit in a published opinion on Tuesday upheld a lower court's order dismissing a lawsuit accusing Shopify of collecting shoppers' sensitive information without permission, saying the court lacks jurisdiction since Shopify did not expressly aim its conduct toward California.

  • November 28, 2023

    Walmart Accused Of Wage Theft By App Delivery Drivers

    Walmart misclassifies its app-based delivery workers as independent contractors and fails to provide them the guaranteed wages, breaks and benefits owed to employees, a worker alleged in a proposed class action removed to Washington federal court.

  • November 28, 2023

    Settlements Pave Way For Hundreds Of New NY Pot Stores

    Hundreds of provisionally licensed retailers whose applications were held up in litigation and five New York medical cannabis companies will be able to move forward with opening recreational marijuana stores after the state settled a pair of lawsuits this week.

  • November 28, 2023

    Carter Carburetor Hiked Prices, Walbro Blamed, Court Hears

    First Brands Group upped prices and canceled orders as soon as its subsidiary Carter Carburetor closed the deal for Walbro LLC's engine management division, then left executives at Walbro to mollify irate customers without letting them reveal who bought the company, the executives told Delaware's Court of Chancery on Tuesday.

  • November 28, 2023

    DOJ Tells Justices Latest Steel Tariff Case Same As Before

    The Biden administration has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reject the latest petition over national security tariffs on steel and aluminum, saying the case raises "substantially the same question" as the last protest the justices tossed.

  • November 28, 2023

    Crocs Muddling IP Fight, Rival Shoemaker Says

    An attorney for Joybees LLC urged a Colorado federal magistrate judge Tuesday to pause discovery in an intellectual property lawsuit brought by rival shoemaker Crocs, contending that Crocs has created a "procedural morass" by filing the lawsuit rather than bringing the claims in an existing litigation battle.

  • November 28, 2023

    Consumer Privacy Rules For AI Floated By Calif. Regulators

    The California Privacy Protection Agency revealed Monday proposed regulations to allow more consumer control over private information that could be used by artificial intelligence, floating the ability to opt out of providing such information and to obtain more information about businesses' use of the technology, in line with state consumer privacy laws.

  • November 28, 2023

    Dollar General Hit With Investor Suit Over Understaffing Woes

    Dollar General has been hit with a proposed class action by an investor alleging the discount retailer opened more stores and overcharged products to inflate the company's share price even though corporatewide staffing problems were ultimately causing merchandise losses on a grand scale, which in turn led to a drop in share prices after the issues became known.

  • November 28, 2023

    DC Court Skeptical Of Coca-Cola 'Greenwashing' Suit

    The D.C. Court of Appeals reached for — but didn't necessarily find — a limiting principle on Tuesday morning as it heard arguments over whether it should revive a lawsuit accusing Coca-Cola of making misleading statements to consumers about its sustainability efforts in order to "greenwash" its products.

  • November 28, 2023

    Real Estate Rumors: Brent Saunders, JVM, Hudson Pacific

    The CEO of Bausch + Lomb is said to be the buyer of a $35.3 million home near Miami, JVM Realty has reportedly purchased a luxury apartment building near Chicago for a price rumored to exceed $30 million and Hudson Pacific Properties is said to have sold a 5.3-acre parcel in Sillicon Valley for $43.5 million.

  • November 28, 2023

    Bakery Distributors Ask Supreme Court To Wait To Mull Case

    Workers who delivered baked goods for Flowers Foods and two subsidiaries told the U.S. Supreme Court that the companies' petition to the high court to review a First Circuit decision denying them arbitration should wait for a similar case.

  • November 28, 2023

    Florida, Hemp Co. Spar Over Out-Of-State Sales Under '19 Law

    A Fort Lauderdale hemp-product company is asking a federal judge to block allegedly unconstitutional stop-sale orders a Florida regulator imposed on its products, while the state regulator is pushing to have the company's suit scrapped in deference to a pending administrative hearing process.

  • November 28, 2023

    Feds Tee Up Dumping Duties On Brass Rods From 5 Countries

    The U.S. Department of Commerce are lining up preliminary tariffs rising up to 77.14% on brass rod imports from five countries, after determining that overseas producers were likely selling their products in the U.S. at artificially low prices.

  • November 28, 2023

    Law Firm Leaders Cautiously Optimistic Heading Into 2024

    Major U.S. law firms are steadfast in their commitment to the pursuit of further growth despite ongoing economic uncertainty. Here’s what the leaders of four Leaderboard firms have to say about how the legal industry is preparing for next year.

  • November 28, 2023

    The 2023 Law360 Pulse Leaderboard

    Check out the Law360 Pulse Leaderboard to see which first-in-class firms made the list this year.

  • November 28, 2023

    Mich. Con Artist Gets 17 Years For Trucking Ponzi Scheme

    A Manhattan federal judge sentenced a Michigan man who previously served time for fraud to over 17 years in prison Tuesday after he admitted taking $40 million from investors who thought they were backing a lucrative e-commerce trucking business.

  • November 27, 2023

    Google's Android Monopoly Harms Users, Stanford Prof Says

    A Stanford economics professor took the stand Monday in Epic Games' antitrust suit over Google's Android app store, saying it holds a monopoly on the market for smartphone operating systems and uses anticompetitive tactics to stifle rivals, meaning smartphone users and developers "have suffered as a result."

  • November 27, 2023

    McDonald's Asks Justices To Review Workers' No-Poach Case

    McDonald's asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to review the Seventh Circuit's revival of a proposed class action alleging the company's since-discontinued no-poach provisions in franchisee agreements violated antitrust laws.

  • November 27, 2023

    Commerce Dept. Wants Feedback On Draft DEI Principles

    The U.S. Department of Commerce asked the public on Monday for feedback on a proposed set of principles for diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility in the private sector and on the impact of so-called DEIA initiatives that already exist.

  • November 27, 2023

    Target's 'Reef-Conscious' Sunscreen Is A Lie, Suit Alleges

    Target was hit with a proposed class action on Monday in Florida federal court accusing the retailer of selling sunscreen that is falsely labeled as containing a "reef-conscious formula" when it actually uses ingredients that are harmful to coral reef ecosystems.

  • November 27, 2023

    MGA Unlikely To Get Quick Appeal Of 3rd Doll IP Trial Order

    A California federal judge overseeing rapper T.I.'s $100 million intellectual property dispute against MGA Entertainment appeared ready at a Monday hearing to stick with his tentative decision to deny the toy giant's request to pause the proceedings and certify for interlocutory appeal his ruling that ordered a third trial in the case. 

  • November 27, 2023

    Amicus Groups Tell High Court To End Chevron Deference

    Six groups, including the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and several former state supreme court judges, filed friend-of-the-court briefs on Monday urging the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a decades-old legal doctrine stating that courts must defer to federal agencies' interpretation of ambiguous laws.

  • November 27, 2023

    Trash Or Treasure, Court OKs Lifting Turkish Scrap Metal Duty

    The U.S. Court of International Trade on Monday affirmed the government's change of heart on whether a Turkish shipbuilder's duties should apply to scrap metal it sold to a rebar exporter, dismissing protests from U.S. steel producers.

Expert Analysis

  • Forecasting The Impact Of High Court Debit Card Rule Case

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    John Delionado and Aidan Gross at Hunton consider how the U.S. Supreme Court's forthcoming ruling in a retailer's suit challenging a Federal Reserve rule on debit card swipe fees could affect agency regulations both new and old, as well as the businesses that might seek to challenge them.

  • Series

    ESG Around The World: Mexico

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    ESG has yet to become part of the DNA of the Mexican business model, but huge strides are being made in that direction, as more stakeholders demand that companies adopt, at the least, a modicum of sustainability commitments and demonstrate how they will meet them, says Carlos Escoto at Galicia Abogados.

  • Opinion

    FDA And Companies Must Move Quickly On Drug Recalls

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    When a drug doesn't work as promised — whether it causes harm, like eyedrops recalled last month by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, or is merely useless, like a widely used decongestant ingredient recently acknowledged by the agency to be ineffective — the public must be notified in a timely manner, says Vineet Dubey at Custodio & Dubey.

  • Crypto Has Democratized Trading In Bankruptcy Claims

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    Following the pandemic, there has been a wave of cryptocurrency bankruptcies and a related increase in access to information, allowing nontraditional bankruptcy investors to purchase claims and democratizing a once closed segment of alternative investing, says Joseph Sarachek at Strategic Liquidity.

  • The Case For Post-Bar Clerk Training Programs At Law Firms

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    In today's competitive legal hiring market, an intentionally designed training program for law school graduates awaiting bar admission can be an effective way of creating a pipeline of qualified candidates, says Brent Daub at Gilson Daub.

  • Ohio Voters Legalize Cannabis — What Comes Next?

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    This month, voters approved a citizen-initiated statute that legalizes marijuana for recreational use in Ohio, but the legalization timeline could undergo significant changes at the behest of the state's lawmakers, say Daniel Shortt and David Waxman at McGlinchey Stafford.

  • Attorneys Have An Ethical Duty To Protect The Judiciary

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    The tenor of public disagreement and debate has become increasingly hostile against judges, and though the legislative branch is trying to ameliorate this safety gap, lawyers have a moral imperative and professional requirement to stand with judges in defusing attacks against them and their rulings, says Deborah Winokur at Cozen O'Connor.

  • 'Trump Too Small' Args Show Justices Inclined To Reverse

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    The U.S. Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in the "Trump Too Small" trademark case Vidal v. Elster — and the tenor of the justices' feedback makes it clear that the refusal to register a mark under the Lanham Act most likely does not violate free speech rights, as opposed to the Federal Circuit's decision last year, says Brian Brookey at Tucker Ellis.

  • AI Can Help Lawyers Overcome The Programming Barrier

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    Legal professionals without programming expertise can use generative artificial intelligence to harness the power of automation and other technology solutions to streamline their work, without the steep learning curve traditionally associated with coding, says George Zalepa at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Preparing Law Students For A New, AI-Assisted Legal World

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    As artificial intelligence rapidly transforms the legal landscape, law schools must integrate technology and curricula that address AI’s innate challenges — from ethics to data security — to help students stay ahead of the curve, say Daniel Garrie at Law & Forensics, Ryan Abbott at JAMS and Karen Silverman at Cantellus Group.

  • Sellers Seeking Best Deal Should Focus On Terms And Price

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    Rising interest rates and a decline in the automotive mergers and acquisitions market mean that a failed deal carries greater stakes, and sellers therefore should pursue not only the optimum price but also the optimum terms to safeguard their agreement, says Joseph Aboyoun at Fox Rothschild.

  • Series

    ESG Around The World: South Korea

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    Numerous ESG trends have materialized in South Korea in the past three years, with impacts ranging from greenwashing prevention and carbon neutrality measures to workplace harassment and board diversity initiatives, say Chang Wook Min and Hyun Chan Jung at Jipyong.

  • General Counsel Need Data Literacy To Keep Up With AI

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    With the rise of accessible and powerful generative artificial intelligence solutions, it is imperative for general counsel to understand the use and application of data for myriad important activities, from evaluating the e-discovery process to monitoring compliance analytics and more, says Colin Levy at Malbek.

  • Opinion

    Civil Litigation Against Gun Businesses Can Reduce Violence

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    With mass shootings skyrocketing, and gun control legislation blocked by powerful interest groups, civil litigation can help obtain justice for victims by targeting parties responsible beyond the immediate perpetrator — including gun manufacturers, dealers and retailers, says Tom D'Amore at D'Amore Law Group.

  • Retailers: Beware Legislator And Regulator Junk Fee Focus

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    In light of the Biden administration’s recent focus on restricting so-called junk fee surcharges across industries, attorneys at Benesch discuss what retailers should know about several evolving developments, including a new California law, a proposed Federal Trade Commission rule, an expanding litigation landscape, and more.

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