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SOUTHEAST TEXAS RECORD

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Latest News


Municipal judge can’t simultaneously serve as a constable, Texas AG opines

By Record staff reports |
AUSTIN - A court would likely conclude that a municipal judge may not simultaneously serve as a constable, according to an opinion issued by Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Woman sues Whataburger claiming she was injured after security tried to make her leave

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - An issue with a food order has resulted in a personal injury lawsuit against Whataburger Restaurants.

Justices allow discipline action against Texas AG to go forward, dissenter argues Paxton has immunity

By Record staff reports |
DALLAS - On Thursday, the Fifth Court of Appeals found that the Commission for Lawyer Discipline sued Attorney General Ken Paxton as an individual, not in his official capacity – green lighting the state Bar’s action against him over his effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Lawyer in hot water over insurance claims deserved a hearing, Fifth Circuit rules

By John O'Brien |
NEW ORLEANS (Legal Newsline) - A lawyer who worked at a Houston law firm that has run afoul of the law will get a second chance to show he shouldn't have been suspended for nine months.

Paxton fails to obtain TRO in suit against Harris County over ‘guaranteed income’ program

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON – A district court has denied the state’s request to temporarily block Harris County from disbursing funds to families participating in Uplift Harris, a guaranteed basic income pilot program.

McKool Smith secures $142M verdict against Samsung in patent damage retrial

By Record staff reports |
PLANO - McKool Smith, along with Irell & Manella, has secured a $142 Million patent damages verdict on behalf of G+ Communications against Samsung, a press release states.

First Court denies law firm’s bid to stop 3M pre-suit depositions over dust mask clients

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - The First Court of Appeals has denied a petition challenging an order granting the 3M Company’s request to take pre-suit depositions and to obtain documents from attorney Michael Martin and the Martin Walton Law Firm.

SCOTUS sides with Texas rancher in property rights case

By Record staff reports |
WINNIE - Yesterday, the Institute for Justice scored a unanimous win in the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of Texas rancher Richie DeVillier, who is fighting for compensation after the state built a barrier along a nearby highway, allegedly causing his ranch to flood.

AGs, pro-life groups file briefs with 4th Circuit supporting W.Va. near-total abortion ban

By Chris Dickerson |
RICHMOND, Virginia – Attorneys General from 23 states as well as several pro-life groups have filed amicus briefs asking a federal appeals court to uphold West Virginia’s near-total ban on abortion.

Ferguson Law settles Orange County crash case for $2.1M

By Record staff reports |
BEAUMONT - The Ferguson Law Firm has resolved a personal injury case on behalf of an Orange County woman for $2.1 million, a press release states.

Texas justices bounce injury suit against bounce house company

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - The First Court of Appeals today affirmed a summary judgment win in favor of a bounce house company that was sued after a child fractured his leg while jumping in an inflatable bounce house.

Texas jury returns $37.5M verdict against Oncor in fatal crash suit

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - A Dallas County jury recently returned a $37.5 million verdict against Oncor Electric Delivery Co. and one of its employees in a lawsuit over an automobile collision that claimed the life of truck driver Shamsher Singh in 2021.

AGs argue Texas Bar’s action against OAG staff member will ‘open the floodgates’

By Record staff reports |
AUSTIN - Several attorneys general are arguing that if the Texas Supreme Court decides to allow a disciplinary action against First Assistant AG Brent Webster to continue it will “open the floodgates.”

Texas SC: mediation agreement doesn't apply to San Jacinto River Authority’s claims in suit over rates

By Record staff reports |
AUSTIN - The Texas Supreme Court on Friday held that a pre-suit mediation agreement does not apply to San Jacinto River Authority’s claims in a dispute over fees and rates.

Morrisey, other AGs: DOJ must reconsider ‘red flag’ gun law hub

By Chris Dickerson |
CHARLESTON — West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and other Republican AGs say a new hub created by the U.S. Department of Justice “pushes for the more aggressive use of so-called ‘red flag’ gun laws.”

Sen. Schumer introduces bill aimed at stopping ‘judge shopping’

By Record staff reports |
DALLAS - Sen. Charles Schumer made good on the warning he gave a year ago, introducing a bill yesterday aimed at stopping “judge shopping.”

Man sues claiming Miller Lite bottle was chipped, caused him to swallow glass

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - A lawsuit seeking up to $1 million in damages has been brought against Molson Coors USA over an alleged chipped beer bottle.

Liberty Justice Center receives copies of indictments for Denton ISD officials charged with election interference

By Record staff reports |
AUSTIN - The Liberty Justice Center has received copies of the indictments charging two Texas school administrators with illegal election interference.

Texas AG sues Harris County over ‘guaranteed income’ program

By Record staff reports |
AUSTIN – Attorney General Ken Paxton has sued Harris County for instituting a “guaranteed income” program that redistributes public money in a manner that allegedly violates the Texas Constitution.

No immunity for city of Houston in litigation over ambulance collision

By Record staff reports |
HOUSTON - The 14th Court of Appeals recently affirmed a ruling denying the city of Houston’s bid for governmental immunity in a lawsuit brought over an ambulance’s automobile collision.