KINGWOOD – Two of the defendants in a lawsuit filed by the Preston County Board of Education for breach of contract are asking the circuit judge to dismiss the lawsuit.
WHEELING – A man and his wife are suing Jay-Bee Oil & Gas after they claim two supervisors created a hostile work environment and their actions constituted assault and battery.
BECKLEY – Governor-elect Jim Justice’s companies have filed an answer to BMS CAT’s lawsuit alleging they did not pay for flood restoration and cleanup work that was undertaken at The Greenbrier after the flooding in June.
BECKLEY – A flood restoration company is suing West Virginia Gov.-elect Jim Justice’s businesses for unpaid bills after cleanup crews restored parts of the Greenbrier following the floods in June.
LOGAN — A fuel supplier is suing Billy Hall d/b/a W&H Trucking, a trucking company, citing alleged failure to pay for purchased product and unjust enrichment.
HUNTINGTON – Fewer students are applying to law school but those who do apply tend to be the best prepared in decades, according to a recent recipient of a Defense Trial Counsel of West Virginia award.
CLARKSBURG – A man is suing Omega Laboratories Inc. after he claims it falsely reported his drug test results and caused him to lose his job. Shawn Michael Marsh was employed by Wyoming Casing Services and was subjected to drug testing every three months, according to a complaint filed Jan. 12 in Harrison Circuit Court and removed to federal court on Feb. 12.
HUNTINGTON – A lawsuit against Rally's alleging a former employee was fired due to reporting illegal activity was removed to federal court, where it was dismissed. The plaintiff, Jerald Pullen, was notified that unless he obtained new counsel or notified the court in writing that he would represent himself, his lawsuit would be dismissed without prejudice, according to an order filed in the U.S.
HUNTINGTON – Jenkins Fenstermaker attorneys Stephen J. Golder, Lee M. Hall, Barbara J. Keefer, Thomas E. Scarr, Robert H. Sweeney and Barry M. Taylor have been selected to the 2015 West Virginia Super Lawyers list.
CHARLESTON – Kanawha Circuit Judge James C. Stucky has granted an order permitting the state to intervene in a lawsuit against Greenbrier Emergency Services Inc. and a physician.