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.

 

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Dec
16
2021
Why Does The SEC Staff Forbid Accurate Statements? Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Aug
17
2011
Why Do We Have Appellate Lawyers? Hunton Andrews Kurth
Dec
7
2015
Why Courts Should Give Legislature Benefit Of Doubt Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Jun
21
2022
Why Alexander Hamilton Could Hold No Office In Nevada Or Even California Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Nov
22
2021
Who’s in Charge Here? Federal Circuit Says An Arbitrator, not District Court, Should Decide Arbitrability Mintz
May
25
2022
Whose Law Applies To LLC Alter Ego Claims? Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Apr
15
2024
Whodunit: Humana Out of TCPA Case After Denying Relationship With Lead Seller–But That Begs The Question Troutman Amin, LLP
Dec
12
2022
Who Qualifies As An Expert Witness? Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Oct
27
2017
Who is Justice Joan Larsen? Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Mar
1
2021
Who Has Standing in a Data Breach Litigation? In The Third Circuit, Fear of Speculative Future Harm Still Doesn’t Cut It Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Nov
11
2012
Who Decides Arbitrability: The Court Or The Arbitrator? Armstrong Teasdale
Sep
2
2013
Who Arbitrates Arbitrability? McDermott Will & Emery
Mar
30
2013
Whitestone Marketing Accuses ProGraphics of a Not-So-Smart Move of Infringing Smart Campaign® Trademark Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP
Apr
21
2024
Whistleblowers Needed: Government Loses $233 to $521 Billion Annually to Fraud According to New GAO Report Tycko & Zavareei LLP
Aug
16
2021
Whistleblowers are Big Losers in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto
Apr
12
2022
Whistleblower Receives $5 Million of $20 Million Settlement in Impermissible Medicaid Donations False Claims Act Case Tycko & Zavareei LLP
Dec
24
2014
Whistleblower Entitled to Receive $57.6 Million for Exposing Countrywide Home Mortgage Loan Scheme Tycko & Zavareei LLP
Mar
14
2013
Which Comes First – The Consolidation Order or the Venue Transfer? Hunton Andrews Kurth
May
19
2020
Where Should This Case Go? Appeals Court Tosses Venue Motion to Dismiss McDermott Will & Emery
Jul
20
2023
Where Can a Corporation Be Sued For, Well, Anything? (an Evolving Test) Babst, Calland, Clements & Zomnir, P.C.
Jul
12
2021
When “Substantially Similar” Means “Fundamentally Identical”: Delaware Court Enforces Related Claim Provision to Deny D&O Coverage for Securities Class Action Hunton Andrews Kurth
Jan
7
2020
When Trade Secrets or Confidential Business Information Are Stolen, Can You Recover Pre-Judgment Interest in Massachusetts? Robinson & Cole LLP
Apr
22
2020
When the PTAB Weighs Evidence of Secondary Considerations, Volume Matters Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
Jul
18
2013
When The Parent Is A Blue Hen And The Subsidiary Is A 49er, What Law Governs? Re: Conflict of Law Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Oct
29
2021
When State Law Permits Discovery of Sensitive Peer Review Information Polsinelli PC
Jan
24
2024
When Should Prior Precedent Be Overruled? Pierce Atwood LLP
Apr
7
2015
When Pretrial Motions Go Rogue, Count on Captain Justice IMS Legal Strategies
Jun
7
2013
When Officers Must Indemnify The Corporation In California Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Dec
22
2012
When Numbers Count Barnes & Thornburg LLP
Nov
19
2020
When Jurors Want to Quarantine Mid-Trial… McDermott Will & Emery
Sep
21
2021
When It Isn’t Better Late Than Never: ALJ Reins in on Redesigns First Disclosed in the Last Week of Fact Discovery Mintz
Aug
8
2023
When It Comes to Service Not Every Domestic Corporation Is a Corporation Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Nov
27
2013
When It Comes To Proxy Statements, The U.S. District Courts May Not Be So Exclusive After All Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
Nov
27
2012
When Is Facebook Activity "Solicitation?" Barnes & Thornburg LLP
Oct
4
2013
When Is Anything Really Final? Re: Copyright Infringement McDermott Will & Emery
 

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