John Webb Speaks At Awco 2022 Annual Conference

Practice Area: infomedia

John Webb Speaks At Awco 2022 Annual Conference

John Webb, Chair of LGWM’s Workers’ Compensation Practice Group, spoke at the Alabama Workers’ Compensation Organization (AWCO) 2022 Annual Conference.  The Conference took place November 3-4 in Birmingham, Alabama.  John teamed up with Dana Mattiace (Senior Adjuster/Team Lead) with SteadPoint Risk Management Services to provide new adjuster training for approximately 40 workers’ compensation adjusters from…
Read More

Tennessee Court Of Appeals Upholds Judgment Holding That A Contract With A Target Completion Date And Start Immediately Language Contained An Implied Time Is Of The Essence Term

In Franks v. Bilbrey, the Tennessee Court of Appeals held that a construction contract containing a target construction completion date and the phrase “start immediately” contained an implied “time is of the essence” term, which the contractor breached by delaying completion well beyond the target completion date. No. M2021-00766-COA-R3-CV, 2022 WL 4588871, at *1 (Tenn….
Read More

U.S. Department Of Labor Issues New Rule On Independent Contractor Status

On October, 11, 2022, the U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) released a proposed rule to update the test for determining whether a worker is an employee under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) or an independent contractor. The new rule significantly broadens the classification of workers as employees under the FLSA.  In January 2021, the DOL previously…
Read More

New York Registered Representative First To Be Disciplined For Violating Reg Bi

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has disciplined a formerly registered representative for violating Regulation Best Interest (“Reg BI”).  In a first-of-its-kind disciplinary action, Charles Malico of Huntington Station, New York, has been fined $5,000 and suspended for six months for “recommending a series of transactions in the account of one retail customer that was excessive…
Read More

Eleventh Circuit Rules That Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, And Rodenticide Act Does Not Preempt State Law Claims In Monsanto Roundup Litigation

In Carson v. Monsanto Company, No. 21-10994 (11th Cir. 2022), the Eleventh Circuit ruled on July 12, 2022, that the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (“FIFRA”) did not preempt a failure to warn claim brought under Georgia law. Plaintiff’s failure to warn claim arose from claims of malignant fibrous histiocytoma that he alleges was…
Read More

North Carolina Affirms Rule That In A Lawsuit With Multiple Contractors, The Statute Of Repose Runs When Each Contractor’s Work Is Completed, Not When The Entire Project Is Completed

In Gaston County Board of Education v. Shelco, LLC, 2022 WL 3363819 (N.C. App. Aug. 16, 2022), a North Carolina appellate court held that when a construction project involves multiple contractors, the statute of repose begins to run as to each contractor when its work is completed, rather than when the entire project is completed,…
Read More

Florida District Court Of Appeals Reverses Grant Of Summary Judgment To Developer That Challenged Development Density Ordinance Under Statutory Inordinate Burden Standard

In a ruling on an interlocutory appeal, the Florida District Court of Appeal for the Fifth District recently reversed a summary judgment in favor of Waters Mark Development Enterprises, LC (“WMDE”) against Brevard County (“the County”) because  WMDE had not proven that the County’s residential development density standard constituted an inordinate burden on WMDE’s use…
Read More

Eleventh Circuit Enforces Employee Arbitration Agreement, Holding That The Agreement Was Not Unconscionable

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently reversed a District Court’s decision that an employment arbitration agreement was “procedurally unconscionable”. See Lambert v. Signature Healthcare, LLC, No. 19-11900 (11th Cir. July 8, 2022). Lambert was unemployed for six months and accepted a position with Signature Healthcare.  As a condition to her employment, she was required…
Read More

Federal District Court In Florida Holds Successor Architect Statute Does Not Release Original Architect From Liability

In Hotels of Deerfield, LLC v. Studio 78, LLC, the Court held the Florida Administrative Code Section which confers “all professional and legal responsibility” to successor architects who reuse already sealed contract documents does not also release original architects from liability. Hotels of Deerfield, LLC and MHG Hotels, LLC (“Plaintiffs”) retained Studio 78, LLC and…
Read More