GALVESTON - Sean and Kari Tracey are suing Monster Hardwood Floors and Supply LLC, T&L Distributing LP and ITS Flooring LLC over the flooring in their Friendswood home.
GALVESTON � A Dickinson woman who is being sued for more than $26,000 arising from credit card charges by her son recently filed an original answer.
GALVESTON � A Harris County couple claims a Galveston County man to whom they sold their Friendswood residence refuses to let them retrieve their furniture and personal property, recent court documents say.
GALVESTON - Trina Shaw is seeking $3 million from Mason Friendswood OP and one of its administrators, claiming they "acted in actual malice" when they allegedly made false statements about her last July.
GALVESTON � Friendswood residents John and Laura Nagle allege a company installed doors and windows which did not comply with Texas Department of Insurance standards, recent court documents say.
This week in "Their View," seven Republican state representatives co-authored an editorial endorsing Gov. Rick Perry's "loser pays" proposal as the next logical step in our legislature's effort to enact legal reforms that make our court system fairer and less costly.
Taylor Lawsuit reform works. Nothing underscores this point more clearly than the success of the medical liability reforms enacted by Gov. Rick Perry and the Legislature in 2003 and then ratified by voters later that year.
GALVESTON � Galveston resident Arlene Anderwald is seeking $500,000 from Spring contractor Arthur Hale after she reportedly fractured her leg descending some stairs at her home.
Hurricanes are divided into five categories, depending on the force of their winds. To be considered a hurricane, a tropical storm must have sustained winds of at least 75 mph. A Category 5 hurricane, the fiercest of all, boasts winds exceeding 155 mph.
GALVESTON � Friendswood resident Laura Brower has filed suit against H.E.B. Grocery Co. LP after she slipped on a pool of water at its Friendswood store last April.
Taylor The fees paid to lawyers for Hurricane Ike litigation were excessive, said a Texas lawmaker at a meeting of the Texas House Insurance Committee on Tuesday.