HOUSTON – A state appeals court has rejected a man's appeal in his failed personal-injury case, saying he was not diligent enough in his attempts to serve process on one of two companies he alleged were liable in his claims.
GALVESTON – The purported shooting of a homeless man at a local express hotel almost two years ago has resulted in a lawsuit, recent Galveston County District Court records show.
AUSTIN – On April 24, Attorney General Ken Paxton commended Texas Solicitor General Scott Keller and a top lawyer for the U.S. Department of Justice after they presented powerful oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court in defense of Texas’ redistricting maps.
AUSTIN – On Jan. 23, Attorney General Ken Paxton praised President Donald Trump’s nomination of Deputy Solicitor General J. Campbell Barker to the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
GALVESTON – A Galveston County couple has filed suit against their League City landlord alleging they were retaliated against after the residence was damaged by Hurricane Harvey.
SHERMAN — A Denton resident is suing the Republic at Denton, The Scion Group LLC, DP Funding Corp., Kristin Keller, Ronald Manning and others, citing alleged breach of housing agreement.
FORT WORTH – The Second Court of Appeals recently affirmed a lower court’s ruling to not grant a motion to dismiss a medical malpractice complaint against a nursing facility.
AUSTIN – Texas House Bill 2, which was enacted in 2013 and
deals with the safety and availability of abortion clinics in the state,
returned to the spotlight earlier this year with arguments made by the Texas
Attorney General’s Office before the U.S. Supreme Court in March in defense of
a lawsuit directly tied to the provisions of the law.
The Texas Attorney General’s Office presented its case for why an injunction should remain in effect against the Obama Administration’s executive action on immigration before the U.S. Supreme Court Monday.
In 2012, President Obama began introducing his policy on illegal immigration, starting with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which stated that individuals who had been brought to the country as children would not be deported.
A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit brought against AkinMears by a former employee who alleged the Houston law firm fired him to avoid paying him millions of dollars.
As the size and complexity of transvaginal mesh MDLs continue to attract considerable attention, so do the details of how some of their claims made it to court.
A tentative settlement has been reached in a lawsuit brought against AkinMears by a former employee who alleges the Houston firm, which he describes as a “mort tort warehouse,” fired him to avoid paying him millions of dollars.