A real estate broker's ability to keep his firm
from violating the antitrust laws is in direct proportion to his ability and willingness to educate his salespeople.
Not exact matches
Judge Wilken, and later three judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, concluded that the NCAA and its nearly 1,300 members
violated antitrust law by unlawfully conspiring to prevent players
from negotiating the monetary value of their names, images and likenesses.
As top executives
from competing newspapers met last week to consider such issues as whether to charge for online content, Editor & Publisher asks whether collective industry action would
violate antitrust law.
We think it beyond question that a union may conclude a wage agreement with the multiemployer bargaining unit without
violating the
antitrust laws, and that it may, as a matter of its own policy, and not by agreement with all or part of the employers of that unit, seek the same wages
from other employers.
That question is this: to what extent does the role the ABA and state and local bar associations play in excluding nonlawyers, be they individuals or nonlawyer - owned organizations,
from the legal services market
violate unfair competition and
antitrust laws and policies?
In June 2015, Weil persuaded a Tennessee federal court to dismiss with prejudice a putative nationwide class action (Marshall) brought by NCAA Division I student - athletes alleging that CBS, other networks, college athletic conferences, and licensors, profited
from the broadcast and use of student - athletes» names, images, and likenesses without permission,
violating Tennessee's right of publicity statute and federal
antitrust laws.
We have the resources and experience to prosecute any case,
from complex technical patent cases to the world's most sophisticated financial frauds or conspiracies that
violate the
antitrust laws.
Brokers also need policies that prohibit salespeople who blog
from making potentially libelous statements about other industry professionals or talking about commissions or business operations in ways that could
violate antitrust or fair housing
laws.
Supreme Court of the United States affirms lower court rulings that found a dental licensing board
violated federal
antitrust laws and was not immune
from antitrust scrutiny because the board was not sufficiently supervised by the state.
In its amended complaint, the DOJ says provisions in the new ILD policy that give brokers the ability to unilaterally withhold their listings
from display on competitors» websites — known as a blanket opt - out —
violates antitrust laws.