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Archived articles from 2007

39 articles found

Russians, Texans and Arbitration

By Rob Hargrove - March 16, 2007
Earlier this week, the Fifth Circuit handed down an opinion holding that personal jurisdiction did not exist (link is to .pdf) as to several Russian companies that had been sued by a Texan company for allegedly breaching an agreement to produce natural gas from the Yuzhno-Russkoye gas field. Since the contract was executed in Russia and performance would have taken place in Russia, the Court affirmed a trial court ruling that no personal jurisdic

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More on Appealability of Arbitral Awards

By Rob Hargrove - March 15, 2007
A couple weeks ago, we talked about the basic un-appealability of arbitral awards, and the idea that any potential alternative rule must be pursued at the front-end: parties can contract for some sort of appellate review of an arbitral award, but if it’s not in the arbitration clause there is nothing beyond what the FAA or the TAA (in Texas) allows, plus extremely limited non-statutory grounds for challenging confirmation of awards. Which i

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Challenging an Arbitral Award in the CBA context

By Rob Hargrove - March 6, 2007
The Fifth Circuit just released an opinion reversing a district court’s vacatur (link is to .pdf file) of an arbitral award in the collective bargaining context. The opinion sets out the standard of review for arbitral awards when the arbitration is established by the collective bargaining process. Since this is an area in which we do not practice, I’m not offering any detail or analysis, but the opinion seemed worth noting. Resolutio

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Supreme Court Decides Six Cases Today

By Rob Hargrove - March 2, 2007
This morning, the Texas Supreme Court handed down opinions in six cases; none had anything to do with arbitration. In an opinion on interlocutory appeal of an order certifying a class, Citizens Ins. Co. of America, et al. v. Daccach, et al., the Court decertified a class and remanded the case to the trial court. The case is a potential class action involving alleged violations of the Texas Securities Act. Moki Mac River Expeditions v. Drugg invol

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Hairstylists Get Another Day in Court

By Rob Hargrove - March 1, 2007
This morning, the Third Court of Appeals issued an opinion in a procedurally complex case stemming from a group of hairstylists’ claim in quantum meruit that Supercuts failed to pay them for work done “off the clock.” The case was originally filed as a breach of contract class action in 1993; this morning’s opinion marks the fourth time the Third Court has written on it. The opinion spends a large amount of time reciting t

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Two Kinds of Arbitration

By Rob Hargrove - March 1, 2007
Frequent guest commenter Rick Freeman made an important point yesterday in a comment to our post on the Apache v. Texaco case. Rick said, commenting not only on the Apache case but also on our post about Sen. West’s proposal that information about arbitrations be compiled: Instead of a statute that says the decisions will be compiled, why not one that says that, in true arms length negotiated arbitration agreements, taxpayer financed Texas

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Mandatory Disclosure of Arbitration Info in Texas?

By Rob Hargrove - February 28, 2007
The ICM’s blog just reported that Texas Senator Royce West has proposed legislation that would require the disclosure of certain basic information about arbitrations taking place in Texas. It would allow for some basic tracking of numbers of disputes sent to arbitration and awards being made in consumer and employment cases, other than residential construction cases (John Fleming was quoted in the blog piece noting that the powerful constru

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Fifth Circuit Confirms Arbitral Award

By Rob Hargrove - February 28, 2007
Yesterday, the Fifth Circuit handed down an opinion confirming an arbitral award in favor of Texaco (link is to .pdf file) in a contract dispute over some off-shore oil exploration in the Bohai Bay of China. The opinion confirms the award with discussion of two important points, one which has been discussed at length in the Circuit, and one which has not.The arbitrator in this case awarded Texaco more than $71M, some $20M of which was an award of

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Texas Supreme Court Compels Another Arbitration

By Rob Hargrove - February 23, 2007
This morning, the Texas Supreme Court issued three opinions. The Texas Appellate Law Blog has already posted short summaries of them all (not that we have any interest in a race to do such things, but I would note that I was at the courthouse all morning and not able to check this morning’s orders as promptly as I like to). One of the opinions is another arbitration opinion, so we will discuss it in just a bit of detail. In a per curiam opi

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Judge Sparks Dismisses Case Against MySpace

By Rob Hargrove - February 15, 2007
Austin-based U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks granted MySpace.com’s Motion to Dismiss a number of claims brought by the family of a 14-year-old girl who was allegedly sexually assaulted by a 19-year-old she met on MySpace.com. Both the criminal prosecution of the 19-year-old and the civil suit against MySpace have garnered lots of attention both locally and nationally. The plaintiff in the civil case sought to apply duties developed in premis

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Disputing is published by Karl Bayer, a dispute resolution expert based in Austin, Texas. Articles published on Disputing aim to provide original insight and commentary around issues related to arbitration, mediation and the alternative dispute resolution industry.

To learn more about Karl and his team, or to schedule a mediation or arbitration with Karl’s live scheduling calendar, visit www.karlbayer.com.

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