Vol. 66 No. 2, April 1999
Index
- Assault on protective orders.
- International Association of Defense Counsel Tenets of Professionalism.
- Technology in the courtroom: computerized exhibits and how to present them.
- Avoiding traps for the unwary: understanding U.S. government reimbursement rights.
- Municipal corporations: proving improper motives of multiple member policymakers.
- Pitfalls of multistate and international practice: avoiding the eye of the storm in Australia.
- Admissibility v. sufficiency: the dilemma of expert evidence in toxic tort cases.
- High-speed police chases and section 1983: why a definitive liability standard may not matter.
- Protective orders and confidentiality agreements: they need protecting from legislators.
- Fortuity, reinsurers and year 2000 problem: will these theories carry the day?
- Breach of fiduciary duty and punitive damages.
- Daubert principles apply beyond "scientific" experts.
- Insurer not vicariously liable for defense goof-ups.
- Bad science beats good in bad carpet case.
- Fraud on FDA claim survives preemption.
- McCarran-Ferguson Act No Defense Against RICO.
- Attenuated Contacts Support Law Firm's Disqualification.
- Insurer Can't Sue Insured for Reverse Bad Faith.
- 11th Amendment, Abstention Nip Lawyer's Federal Suit.
- Dismissal Too Draconian for Evidence Spoliation.
- Accountants Owe Duty to Insurance Commissioner.
- Foreign Legal Consultant Rule Can't Support Discipline.
- Mixed Results for Diet-Drug Medical Monitoring Claims.
- Excluding Documents that "Petition" the FDA.
- Indirect or Consequential Loss Exclusion: Coming Of Age.
- Can E-mail Be Protected by Attorney-client Privilege?
- Dismissal for Spoliation to Thwart Causation Defense.