Lawyers representing Ryerson, Inc., a metal roofing company, were called upon recently to defend the company against the claims of two homeowners who alleged that Ryerson failed to honor the warranty on its roofing system and that such failure violated the Virginia Consumer Protection Act (“VCPA”). The lawyers argued that…
The Virginia Business Litigation Blog
Judge Cacheris Permits Vicarious Copyright Infringement Claim to Proceed
Recovering damages for copyright infringement may be difficult in situations where the infringing party is “dummy” or “shell” corporation with no assets that can be used to satisfy a judgment. Sometimes, however, there may be a parent corporation or other entity that may be held liable on a theory of…
Discrimination Claims in Virginia Must Be Brought Promptly
Virginia is a “deferral state” for Title VII purposes, meaning that it has a state law prohibiting discriminatory employment practices and has a state or local agency (e.g., the Virginia Council on Human Rights) authorized to grant relief from such practices. To allege discriminatory employment practices in deferral states like…
Virginia Trade Secrets Act Analyzed by Fairfax Court
What is a trade secret? In Virginia, trade secrets generally consist of commercial information that (1) derives independent economic value from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other businesses which would benefit from its disclosure; and (2) is the subject of reasonable…
Noncompete Agreements: Getting Them to Stick
Non-competition and non-solicitation clauses found in employment agreements often do not provide employers with the protection the employers assume they are getting. Virginia courts will refuse to enforce such “noncompetes” if they are written in vague terms or if they are broader than necessary to meet the employer’s legitimate business…
Protect Your Trademark in Virginia Through the ACPA
Lawyers around the country have come to learn of the Eastern District of Virginia’s legendary “rocket docket.” With divisions located in Alexandria, Norfolk, Richmond, and Newport News, Virginia’s federal court is known as the most efficient in the country for handling intellectual property cases and complex business litigation. Also known…
Virginia Architects Entitled to Copyright Protection
Architectural drawings are not entitled to a great deal of protection under the United States copyright laws, but to the extent a drawing contains a creative, original combination or arrangement of spaces and design elements, the work will be entitled to some level of copyright protection against acts of infringement.…
Pay-When-Paid Clauses Enforceable in Virginia
Virginia, unlike some other states, adheres to a policy favoring freedom to contract. Virginia law treats most businesses and individuals as presumptively capable of negotiating in their own best interests, and when a deal is reached and a contract is signed, courts rarely interfere with the result, however unfair that…
Proving Loss Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Too often, disgruntled departing employees will abuse their employer’s computer system on their way out, snooping into coworkers’ email accounts, erasing important files, downloading trade secrets or other confidential commercial information, or intentionally infecting computers with viruses. In recent years, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) has become an…
Real Estate Fraud Litigation Proceeds Against Juno Loudoun and Ritz Carlton
When a couple of home buyers in Loudoun County filed a lawsuit against Ritz-Carlton and a Loudoun developer, they chose Loudoun County Circuit Court as the forum. The immediate response of the defendants’ lawyers was to remove the case to federal court, where summary judgment is much easier to obtain…