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.

 

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Sep
22
2021
TCPA Litigation Update — Sixth Circuit Holds TCPA Claims Arising Between November 2015 and July 2020 Are Viable Mintz
Jun
9
2023
The Supreme Court Solidifies the Securities Act’s Tracing Requirement for Section 11 Plaintiffs Mintz
Jul
11
2023
Recent Second Circuit Opinion Underscores the Importance of Engaging Experienced Counsel to File and Perfect Class Action Claims Mintz
Aug
25
2023
The Federal Government Says The 6th Circuit and 1st Circuit Now Have Different Superfund Rules But The Supreme Court Shouldn't Do Anything About That! Mintz
Feb
22
2012
Recent Second Circuit Decision Invalidating Class Action Waiver Highlights Actions by Lower Courts to Limit and Distinguish AT&T Mobility, LLC v. Concepcion Mintz
Mar
29
2012
FTC Petitions for Rare Supreme Court Review of Hospital Acquisition Mintz
Jul
2
2013
Privacy Monday: Privacy Tidbits to Start Your Week Mintz
Nov
15
2013
Class Action Trends [VIDEO] Mintz
Feb
21
2014
2, 4, 6, 8…NFL Cheerleaders Not “Rah Rah-ing” About Pay Rate Mintz
Jul
24
2015
Immigration-Related Documents and Information Not Discoverable in Wage and Hour Lawsuit Mintz
Jan
29
2020
Congressional Privacy Action – Part 2: The House Mintz
Feb
16
2023
Fifth Circuit Provides New Guidance on Evaluating Confidential Witnesses Mintz
Aug
2
2012
Theft of Employee Data from Third-Party Vendor Exposes Employer and Vendor to Privacy Class Action Mintz
Dec
9
2012
Not Just Age Claims Anymore? Bill Introduced in the New York City Council Mintz
Dec
21
2012
Merck Compelled to Disclose Documents; Confidentiality and Privilege Waived with Prior Disclosure to Government Mintz
Apr
6
2013
Sixth Circuit Rules No False Claims Act (FCA) Liability Based on Violation of Medicare Requirements Mintz
Dec
23
2013
On the 11th Day of Privacy, class counsel served on me…… Mintz
Apr
25
2014
And the Tie Goes to … Due Process re: Creditor Claims Mintz
Jun
30
2014
California Supreme Court Upholds Employment Class Action Waivers, but Rejects Waivers of PAGA Claims (Private Attorneys General Act) Mintz
Dec
30
2014
Delaware Supreme Court Holds That Court of Chancery Can Restrict Forum Where Books and Records Can Be Used Mintz
Sep
3
2015
Restatement of Liability Insurance and the Expanded Duty to Settle: Windfall for Claimants' Mintz
Dec
29
2015
Review of 2015 Federal Circuit Decisions Addressing IPR Claim Construction and Procedural Issues Mintz
Jul
26
2016
SEC Adopts Amendments Updating its Rules of Practice for Administrative Proceedings Mintz
May
15
2020
Federal Circuit Upholds Application of Dedication-Disclosure Doctrine at the Pleading Stage Mintz
Jun
22
2020
FINRA Revises Rule 4530 Problem Codes for Regulation Best Interest Mintz
Sep
8
2020
AB 5 “2.0” – California Tweaks its Independent Contractor Ban Mintz
Jun
8
2021
PTAB Admits Mistake, Reverses, and Institutes Mintz
Nov
22
2021
Who’s in Charge Here? Federal Circuit Says An Arbitrator, not District Court, Should Decide Arbitrability Mintz
Aug
28
2023
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Adopts Updated Standard for Pleading Title VII Claims Mintz
Feb
23
2012
Supreme Court Leaves Intact Decision Refusing to Extend the Fair Labor Standards Act's Anti-Retaliation Provision to Prospective Employees Mintz
Jul
2
2012
Sixth Circuit Uses Some Old Supreme Court Cases To Give Robinson-Patman Act New Life Mintz
Oct
22
2014
Title VII Severance Agreement Issue Remains in Legal Limbo: Judge Tosses EEOC’s Suit Against CVS Solely on Procedural Grounds Mintz
Jul
28
2015
NLRB Removes Blanket Exemption on Mandatory Disclosure for Witness Statements. What’s an Employer To Do? Mintz
Dec
6
2016
Away Game: Canadian Supreme Court Allows Superior Court Judges to Determine Settlement Motions Outside of their Home Provinces Mintz
Nov
20
2019
Counterproductive and Cost-Increasing Litigation Tactics Are Objectively Unreasonable in Section 285 Attorney Fee Award Analysis Mintz
 

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