Carney v. Union Pacific Railroad Co.: The Illinois Supreme Court clarifies extent of liability to a subcontractor employee by an owner or general contractor
By Richard Lee Turner, Jr.
Civil Practice and Procedure,
November 2016
In its recent decision in Carney v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, the Illinois Supreme Court has offered further guidance on not only what constitutes sufficient control for purposes of liability under §414 of the Restatement, but also what is sufficient to establish duty and potential liability under the theory of “negligent hiring” of a contractor or subcontractor under Restatement (Second) of Torts §411 (1965); and, further, what is necessary to impose liability on an owner for the existence of a “dangerous condition” on the land under the Restatement (Second) of Torts §343 (1965).
Independent truck driver vs. employee
By Kenneth F. Werts
Workers’ Compensation Law,
September 2015
An examination of Steel & Machinery Transport, Inc. v. Workers’ Compensation Commission.
Southern District Of California finds home delivery drivers to be independent contractors, not employees
By William D. Brejcha
Energy, Utilities, Telecommunications, and Transportation,
June 2011
The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California analyzed each of the ten "common law factors" relating to the drivers’ employment/contractor status, ultimately concluding that plaintiffs’ evidence was insufficient to overcome the Georgia law presumption of independent contractor status for the plaintiff drivers.
Mandatory disclosure and expanded ethics requirements for government contractors
By John E. Jensen
Corporate Law Departments,
January 2009
Starting on December 12, 2008, new rules require all federal contractors to disclose to the government violations of many federal criminal laws and any false claims made to the government. These changes are likely to cause contractors to reassess their ethics and compliance programs. The changes will present contractors with challenging questions, such as whether a disclosable violation has occurred.
Government contracting
By John E. Stevens
Corporate Law Departments,
September 2007
A checklist of the basic points to be aware of.
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