Due to the large-scale shutdowns triggered by the Coronavirus pandemic (“COVID-19”), many businesses were unable to operate fully, or not at all. Litigants across the country have sought to be relieved of their obligations under contracts as a result of the pandemic-related disruptions, under legal theories including impossibility, frustration of purpose, and force majeure. As recently decided cases demonstrate, proponents of these theories have faced uphill battles.
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- EDPA Strengthens Its Approach to White-Collar Enforcement
- Texas’s Expanded Telemarketing Restrictions Go Into Effect
- Hollywood Overruled: Real Lessons from Cinematic Litigation – Speaking of Litigation Video Podcast
- Can Silence Stop the Clock? How Secrecy May Allow Plaintiffs to Toll the Sherman Act’s Four-Year Statute of Limitations
- Discovery Pitfalls in the Age of AI