Labor/Employment
May 9, 2002
Case Reviews Law on Summary Judgment and Hearsay
Focus Column - By Michelle A. Reinglass - In days of yore, courts granted summary-judgment motions rarely and only where it was clear as a matter of law that the plaintiff lacked the requisite facts to sustain the claims. Something happened in the ensuing 20-plus years. Judges have become far more willing, even eager, to pull the trigger and grant summary judgment, even where disputed material facts relative to the causes of action exist.




Focus Column
By Michelle A. Reinglass
In days of yore, courts granted summary-judgment motions rarely and only where it was clear as a matter of law that the plaintiff lacked the requisite facts to sustain the claims. Something happened in the e...
By Michelle A. Reinglass
In days of yore, courts granted summary-judgment motions rarely and only where it was clear as a matter of law that the plaintiff lacked the requisite facts to sustain the claims. Something happened in the e...
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