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4th Circuit Backs Trial Court In ERISA Plan Termination Case

RICHMOND, Va. — Concluding in an unpublished opinion that the trial court properly applied the governing principles of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, “credited evidence where warranted, and rejected claims where the proof fell short,” the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on March 3 affirmed two denials of class certification and two other rulings in a long-running case over termination of a retiree welfare benefits plan that was the subject of consolidated appeals.

Settlement Conference Set After Judgment Granted In Insurance Application Dispute

LAS VEGAS —  A Nevada federal magistrate judge ordered the parties to appear for a settlement conference after a federal judge granted in part and denied in part cross-motions for summary judgment in insureds’ suit seeking coverage for expenses in defending another suit regarding fraud-based claims.

USDA SNAP Data Request Blocked In Part Over Statutory Limitations

SAN FRANCISCO — A California federal judge partially granted a coalition of states’ motion to enforce or expand a previously issued preliminary injunction in their challenge to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s demand for the personal data of their residents who receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, ruling that although the agency’s renewed data request was not covered by the earlier order, the states are likely to succeed on their claim that the request violates disclosure safeguards and preliminarily barring the agency from withholding funding based on noncompliance.

Supreme Court Won’t Hear Copyright Arguments Over Lil Nas X Photos

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on March 2 rejected an artist’s petition for a writ of certiorari, declining to hear the artist’s argument that the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals wrongly held that copyrightability is a pure question of law when it upheld a California federal judge’s dismissal of infringement claims brought against singer and rapper Lil Nas X.

U.S. Will Argue In Review Of 5th Circuit’s Postmarked Ballot Receipt Law Ruling

WASHINGTON, D.C. — In a case in which the U.S. Supreme Court will review a Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel decision striking down a COVID-era Mississippi state law providing that mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day may be received by the registrar within five days of Election Day and still be valid, the court on March 2 granted the U.S. solicitor general’s motion to participate in oral argument as amicus curiae and for divided argument, while denying two separate motions by other respondents for divided argument.

U.S. To Pay $3.9M To North Carolina Superfund Site Owners To Settle CERCLA Suit

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — The owners of a North Carolina Superfund site contaminated with hazardous substances following decades of weapons and chemical manufacturing operations struck an agreement with the United States in a federal court to drop their claims seeking reimbursement for cleanup costs pursuant to the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 in exchange for a $3.9 million payment.

Supreme Court Denies Petition In AI Art Copyright Case

WASHINGTON, D.C. — An artist’s attempt to copyright an artificial intelligence-generated piece of art appears doomed after the U.S. Supreme Court on March 2 denied his petition for a writ of certiorari in which he argued that the Copyright Act does not impose a human authorship requirement.

Insured’s Breach Of Contract Claim In Asbestos Dispute Should Proceed, Panel Says

CINCINNATI — The Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals vacated and remanded a district court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss an insured’s amended complaint seeking coverage for underlying asbestos liabilities, determining that the insured adequately states a claim for breach of contract.

Delaware Judge: Social Media Litigation Does Not Trigger Insurers’ Duty To Defend

WILMINGTON, Del. — A Delaware judge granted primary insurers’ motion for partial summary judgment in their declaratory judgment lawsuit brought against Instagram LLC and Meta Platforms Inc. (collectively, Meta), ruling that the insurers have no duty to defend against several thousand lawsuits alleging that Meta’s platforms caused harm to children because none of the underlying allegations “whether express, inferable, or extrinsic—support a conclusion that Meta’s conduct was accidental.”

5th Circuit Affirms Standard Of Review, Denial Of ERISA Severance Benefits

NEW ORLEANS — Distinguishing a sister circuit’s ruling that upheld an award of benefits under the same Employee Retirement Income Security Act severance plan following de novo review, the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion agreed with the lower court that the abuse-of-discretion standard applies and substantial evidence supported denial of benefits under the plan’s “good reason” clause.

High Court Refuses To Hear Appeal Bond Issue Pertaining To Ohio Train Derailment

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on March 2 denied review of a petition filed by a group of individuals who objected to the $600 million class action settlement in the Ohio train derailment lawsuit and appealed a lower court’s requirements pertaining to an appeal bond in that litigation.  The petitioners had argued that “the notion an appeal bond must be separately appealed, and cannot be challenged by motion within the appeal to which it relates, represents a split of authority among circuits.”

LATEST NEWS

4th Circuit Backs Trial Court In ERISA Plan Termination Case
Professional Liability Insurer Owes No Coverage To Law Firm, N.Y. Justice Rules
Settlement Conference Set After Judgment Granted In Insurance Application Dispute
USDA SNAP Data Request Blocked In Part Over Statutory Limitations
Magistrate Deems Reserve Information ‘Relevant’ In Diocese Sex Abuse Coverage Row
High Court Won’t Review Washington State Bulkhead Construction CWA Permit Dispute
Temporary Restraining Order, Preliminary Injunction Denied In Crop Insurance Case
Ex-CEO Moves To Dismiss Counterclaims, Seeks Judgment In Claims Reserve Dispute
Policy’s Express Contract Exclusion Bars Coverage, Federal Magistrate Says
Groups Revive Case Against Federal Agencies Alleging Arctic Fracking Violations
Premises Endorsement Limits Liability To Injuries That Occurred At Insured’s Tavern
Amici File More Than 3 Dozen Briefs In Support Of Birthright Citizenship
Validity Of ‘Texas Two-Step’ Asbestos Bankruptcy Cases Presented To Supreme Court
N.J. Appeals Panel Reverses Dismissal, Arbitration Denials In Used Car Fraud Suit
Judge Overrules Magistrate’s Report In Cryptocurrency ‘Pig Butchering Scam’ Suit
Amici To High Court In Merits Briefs: Rule Geofence Warrant Unconstitutional
Judge Confirms Swiss Tribunal’s $568K Award In Dietary Supplement Dispute
Judge Dismisses Complaint Alleging Abbott Shared Medical Data With Google, Meta
Magistrate Judge Grants Preliminary OK To Japanese Alcohol Labeling Settlement
Supreme Court Won’t Hear Copyright Arguments Over Lil Nas X Photos
Judge Gives Final Approval To $7.75M Settlement In Stock-Drop Class Action
9th Circuit Denies Quick Win To Roblox Players’ Parents On Arbitration Dispute
Federal Judge Says Abstention Warranted In Insurer’s Asbestos Adversary Proceeding
Federal Circuit: Factual Questions Remain In Patent Monopolization Dispute
Utility Companies, Texas City To Pay Over $1M To Settle CERCLA Contamination Suit
Citing ‘Near Certain Harm’ If Pipeline Were Shut Down, Judge Stays Injunction
U.S. Will Argue In Review Of 5th Circuit’s Postmarked Ballot Receipt Law Ruling
U.S. To Pay $3.9M To North Carolina Superfund Site Owners To Settle CERCLA Suit
Judge Won’t Dismiss FCA Suit Alleging Fraud, Kickback ‘Scheme’ Against Hospitals
Dissenting Justice: N.Y. AI Child Porn Change Shouldn’t Upset Registration Ruling