Civil Procedure

The National Law Review covers a broad range of cases, litigation, news, and stories, as they relate to civil procedure in the United States and internationally. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Criminal Rules of Civil Procedure, guide litigation at civil and criminal levels in the United States. Further, standard federal and state courts also have general rules of civil procedure which serve as guidelines of what the court expects, how parties should interact in proceedings, and how evidence should be presented in cases. The National Law Review provides in depth analysis of the rules of procedure, and how they possibly affect the outcome of different cases at the state and federal level.

When adjudicating civil lawsuits, parties must act accordingly, not only at trial, but also in the presentation of evidence, witness statements, and how they interact outside of court. All of this is guided by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The National Law Review not only publishes updates to those rules as they are updated by the courts, but also covers topics including: issues of discovery, the complexities which e-discovery present today, use of expert testimony at trial, hearsay evidence, and other areas of trial/party interactions, which are governed by the Rules of Procedure.

The Civil Rules of Procedure also dictate the venue and jurisdiction which courts have to hear certain cases. The National Law Review covers topics including personal, subject-matter, and party jurisdiction, which dictate which courts parties can file a lawsuit it. Jurisdictional requirements further govern whether or not a case can be brought at the federal level, or first has to go through state courts. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure serve as guides in filing a civil or criminal lawsuit. Visitors to the National Law Review can find topics which cover constitutional issues, such as Article III (standing requirement), what judicial sanctions are imposed for violating the rules of procedure, how spoliation of evidence is dealt with, introducing digital evidence, and even introduction of social media evidence, as it is so highly used in today’s digital world.

The National Law Review covers cases, news, and stories which deal with the rules of procedure, litigation, and updates to the Federal Rules, which may impact parties to a lawsuit, and where they can bring a lawsuit based on those rules.

 

For hourly updates on the latest in legal, legislation, government regulation & compliance, litigation, court procedures, and corporate law news, be sure to follow the National Law Review Twitter feed, and sign up for complimentary e-news bulletins.

 

Custom text Title Sort descending Organization
Mar
13
2014
Courts Reining In What it Means to be a “Hacker” Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFA) Jackson Lewis P.C.
Jun
27
2023
Courts Weigh in on Whether Serial Litigants and ADA Testers Are Eligible to Bring ADA Cases Hunton Andrews Kurth
Apr
22
2021
Courts Will Remain Online for Longer – Procedural Changes Fast Approaching Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Apr
23
2020
Courts, Custody, & Choices: How to Address New or Existing Issues Ward and Smith, P.A.
Aug
23
2021
Courts, Like Employers, Call Audibles on Vaccines Foley & Lardner LLP
Jun
3
2014
Court’s Flawed Trial Plan Sinks Overtime Class Action against Employer, California Supreme Court Rules Jackson Lewis P.C.
Nov
19
2021
Court’s Order Ending Family Allowance To Decedent’s Wife Was Reversed Due To A Lack Of Notice To The Wife Winstead
Mar
24
2020
COVID-19 and Appellate Practice Pierce Atwood LLP
May
1
2020
COVID-19 and West Virginia’s Open Governmental Proceedings Act: How Municipalities are Continuing with Business as Usual Steptoe & Johnson PLLC
Jul
10
2020
COVID-19 Impacts in Massachusetts: SJC Sets Protocols for Entering Courthouses Beveridge & Diamond PC
May
27
2020
COVID-19 Impacts in Massachusetts: Tolling of Statutes of Limitations Ends June 30 Beveridge & Diamond PC
Apr
9
2020
COVID-19 or Not, CPSC Keeps Chugging Along ArentFox Schiff LLP
Apr
1
2020
COVID-19 Update: Are You For Real? Due Diligence in the Age of Coronavirus Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Apr
7
2020
COVID-19 Update: COVID-19 and the Courts How Court Procedures Across the Country Are Changing and What May Be Here To Stay Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Apr
15
2020
COVID-19 Update: COVID-19 and the Courts: Part II How Appellate Court Procedures Are Changing and What May Be Here to Stay Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Apr
1
2020
COVID-19 Update: Practical Guide to Electronic Signatures Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Jan
10
2022
COVID-19: Cameras in The Courtroom: Public Access to Appellate Proceedings Post-COVID-19 K&L Gates
Mar
27
2020
COVID-19: Effects on Payment Obligations of Tenants in Germany K&L Gates
May
6
2020
COVID-19: Massachusetts Joins the Five Other New England States in Temporarily Permitting Remote Notarization K&L Gates
Apr
17
2020
COVID-19: New England States Embrace Remote Notarization as Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont Temporarily Eliminate “in-Person” Requirements K&L Gates
Sep
19
2020
COVID-19: US State Policy Report – September 17-18, 2020 Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Apr
29
2020
COVID-19: Vessel Entry into U.S. Ports in the Age of a Pandemic K&L Gates
Jun
6
2016
CPSC Reaches Second Civil Penalty Agreement in As Many Weeks; Sunbeam Products to Pay $4.5 Million to Resolve Late Reporting Allegations Mintz
Nov
29
2010
Create Your Own Arbitration Provision: Two Recent Supreme Court Decisions Emphasize That Parties Have the Freedom to Define the Nature and Scope of Their Agreement to Arbitrate Gibbons P.C.
Aug
31
2015
Creative Calling Solutions v. LF Beauty -- Eighth Circuit Case Addressing Personal Jurisdiction Arising From Business Relationship With Foreign Company Armstrong Teasdale
Apr
15
2015
Creative Construction: The Ninth Circuit Relaxes Removal Statute’s Timeliness Test in Class Action Fairness Act Case Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP
Feb
27
2023
Creditor Stung By Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences Bylaws Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Sep
23
2011
Creditors of a Delaware LLC Do Not Have Standing to Sue Derivatively and Must Rely on Contractual Remedies Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Mar
30
2022
Crime-Fraud Exception to Attorney-Client Privilege Applies to Trump’s Attempt to Overturn Election ArentFox Schiff LLP
Nov
5
2014
Criminal Defendant Required to Provide Smartphone Fingerprint, but Not Passcode Covington & Burling LLP
Oct
15
2010
Croft v. Perry: Texas Pledge Survives Constitutional Challenge Hunton Andrews Kurth
Nov
3
2016
Cross-Border Discovery Issues: Basics of International Privacy Law for Commercial Litigators, Part 3 Proskauer Rose LLP
Jun
17
2022
Cruising to Arbitration Vedder Price
Oct
6
2015
Culling Me Softly: File Size, File Type and Words of Warning Jackson Lewis P.C.
Jan
29
2020
Current Treatment of Mareva Injunctions in Canada Horwood Marcus & Berk Chartered
 

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