-
Guest Blogger Kate Halloran Takes The Helm
I will be on vacation for a week or so, starting this Friday. My colleague Kate Halloran has graciously agreed to take the helm here at Letters Blogatory while I am away and to post digests of current US cases as they become available. Welcome, Kate! A little bit of other Letters Blogatory news: thanks……
-
Super-Duper Disregard Of Law
At the talk I gave last week on choice of law in international IP arbitration (thanks to those who attended!), someone asked whether a mistake as to the law governing the substance of an IP dispute would justify a court in refusing recognition and enforcement of the award. I gave what I think is the……
-
New article on the US Reception of Private International Law Conventions
HT to Conflict of Laws.net for a link to a new paper by Hannah L. Buxbaum on the reception of private international law conventions, including the Hague Service, Evidence, and Apostille Conventions and the New York Convention, in the United States. The paper is available on SSRN. The paper focuses on the ways in which……
-
USLW on Hereaus Kulzer v. Biomet
U.S. Law Week reported yesterday on the Heraeus Kulzer v. Biomet case, which we covered on January 25. I’m quoted as saying that the judicial assistance statue was intended to encourage other countries to liberalize their own law regarding discovery, and that “that effort has largely failed.” Germany (where the case arose) is a case in……
-
Service By Mail Revisited
A few Letters Blogatory cases of the day have involved service by mail or by private delivery service. Service by mail is inexpensive; it provides pretty good assurance that the defendant has in fact received the papers served; and states need not permit service by mail if they have an objection to the use of……