Texas

The state of Texas is the second largest in the US by area, and population. With nearly 270,000 sq.miles in area, and over 28 million residents living in the state, the south-central state shares borders with Louisiana, Arkansas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. It is also bordered by Mexican states and the Gulf of Mexico. Houston is the state’s most populous city and 4th most populous city in the country. It was admitted as the 28th state into the union on December 29, 1845.

Texas’ economy was driven by four-prominent industries prior to WWII including cattling, timber, oil, and cotton. The discovery of oil deposits in the state led to the economic boom and was the main driving force in the state throughout the 20th century. Since 2002 Texas has been the leading state in the US in exports, and maintains the second highest GDP in the nation. Today the state is a leading producer in oil, is one of the leading states in government jobs in the tech industry, and has one of the largest economies throughout the US and worldwide.

The government of Texas was set up by the Texas Constitution, and consists of a unitary democratic state government operating under a presidential system that uses the Dillon Rule, as well as governments at the county and municipal levels.  The Dillon Rule is  a legal principle that local governments have limited authority, and can pass ordinances only in areas where they have been granted authority by the larger state government.  The executive branch of the Texas state government includes the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Comptroller of Public Accounts, Land Commissioner, Attorney General, Agriculture Commissioner, the three-member Texas Railroad Commission, the State Board of Education, and the Secretary of State.   The system in Texas limits the power of the Governor, as each executive branch member (with the exception of the Secretary of State) are elected independently.

Much like the federal government, the legislature of Texas has two houses-the Texas House of Representatives and the Senate.  Again, like the federal government, the Speaker of the House leads the House of Representatives, and the Lieutenant Governor leads the Senate. 

Texas boasts one of the most complicated judicial systems in the country.  The system is described in Article 5 of the Texas Constitution and is further defined by statute, in particular the Texas Government Code and the Texas Probate Code.  The system is complicated by multiple levels and overlapping jurisdictions, with different courts often sharing courthouses.  The court levels are: The Supreme Court, Court of Criminal Appeals, Courts of Appeals, District Courts, Probate Courts, Constitutional County Courts, Statutory County Courts at Law, Municipal Courts and the Justice of the Peace Courts.

The National Law Review covers several stories from the state of Texas and the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. Cases and stories related to telemedicine and healthcare in the state, data and cybersecurity laws, labor and employment laws, paid sick leave, insurance law, bankruptcy and tax cases, are among the different areas of law visitors will find, as they relate to Texas, on the National Law Review site.

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Jun
15
2013
“Sophisticated Plaintiff” Found to Be Adequate Class Representative in Securities Litigation Case Katten
Dec
3
2020
“See Ya Later, California!” Hewlett-Packard Moves its HQ from Silicon Valley to Texas Proskauer Rose LLP
May
16
2017
“Lone Star” Joins the Rest of Nation as Texas Passes New Telemedicine Law Foley & Lardner LLP
Apr
6
2022
“Approval to Energize” – Texas’s Power Grid Operator Issues New Guidance Foley & Lardner LLP
May
11
2020
[FCRA] Collector Tries to Avoid FCRA Claim By Contending it was an Arm of the State of Missouri — it Did not Go Well. Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Jan
22
2019
Your Get of Out Jail Free Card: Tips to Avoid Pitfalls Under the Texas Wage Theft Act Foley & Lardner LLP
May
1
2023
You Can Stand Under My Umbrella (by Clearly Manifesting It) Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
Mar
4
2019
Yes, We Have no Estoppel: Chancery Court Rules Derivative, Dismisses Diluted Stockholders' Ex-Texas Merger-Related Claims K&L Gates
Jan
6
2020
Year in Review: The Most Popular IP Posts of 2019 Mintz
Aug
1
2016
Would Anyone "Remember the Titans" If Coach Boone's Pre-Game Speeches Were Not Private? A Top Texas Court Set to Weigh In Proskauer Rose LLP
Nov
5
2019
World’s Largest Bitcoin Mining Facility to be Built in Milam County, Texas! Foley & Lardner LLP
Apr
14
2011
Workers with Intellectual Disabilities Abused by Texas-Based Company for Years, EEOC Charges U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Dec
29
2020
With Wage-Fixing Indictment, Department of Justice Initiates Long-Promised Criminal Proceedings Epstein Becker & Green, P.C.
Sep
25
2014
With Immigration: The Advent of Global Entry Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Nov
3
2022
With Election Day Around the Corner, Employers Need to Remember You May Have to Give Employees Time Off to Vote Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
Oct
9
2019
WIPEOUT!: Common Language in “Anti-Washout” Provision Violates the Rule Against Perpetuities Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP
Feb
22
2021
Winter Storms Projected to be Largest Insured Loss in Texas History: Secure your Safety and Property and Preserve your Insurance Rights Gilbert LLP
Jul
8
2021
Willful Misconduct Defined, How Broad Is That Exception to Your MSA? Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
May
9
2019
Will Texas Soon Join the Ranks of States Enacting Privacy Legislation? Jackson Lewis P.C.
Jun
6
2023
Will Mandatory Generative AI Use Certifications Become the Norm in Legal Filings? Hunton Andrews Kurth
Dec
4
2018
Will Hemp-Derived CBD Be Fully Legal with Passage of the 2018 Farm Bill? Not Quite… Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker LLP
Jun
30
2021
Wife’s Fraudulent Transfer Claim Against Husband For Transferring Business Interests To Trust Failed Due To The Statute Of Repose Winstead
Mar
25
2020
Why Wait To Appeal? Texas Has A Permissive Appeal Statute That Allows Parties To Appeal Interlocutory Orders If Certain Conditions Exist Winstead
Sep
16
2021
Why Texas’s Anti-Abortion Law is Not a Whistleblower Law Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto
Oct
8
2019
Whose Milkshake is Whose?: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Considers Whether the Rule of Capture Applies to Hydraulic Fracturing Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP
Dec
19
2023
Who Has The Duty To Prepare An Accounting When The Trustee Dies Or Becomes Incapacitated? Winstead
Feb
18
2021
Where to Open Shop: New Report Ranks the Best Places to Do Business in the U.S. Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C.
Nov
25
2019
When Summer Reading and Public Finance Tax Intersect – Tax-Exempt Bonds, Pop Culture, and the Town of Windthorst Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Apr
7
2023
When Keeping Medication Safe May Lead to Increased Liability McDermott Will & Emery
Jan
7
2022
When it Rains, It Pours: Proposed Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Rule Could Make Compliance Harder After a Catastrophe Foley & Lardner LLP
Nov
7
2019
When is a Deal a Deal? Texas Supreme Court Weighs in on Two Landmark Oil & Gas Cases Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP
Oct
1
2019
When Force Majeure is for Sure: The Business of Construction in Disaster-Prone Areas Jones Walker LLP
Feb
6
2019
When Even the Regulations Are Bigger in Texas: Limitations on Court Deference Foley & Lardner LLP
Sep
25
2017
When Disaster Strikes: IRS Guidance Gives Employers Additional Options for Assisting Employees Hit by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma Foley & Lardner LLP
Apr
21
2022
Whatever Happened to that Federal Contractor COVID Vaccine Order? Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
 

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