Press Releases
Wilson Elser Elevates 34 to Partnership in 2025
January 8, 2025
Obtained favorable decisions at the trial and appellate levels for a client in an action upon determination that a co-defendant was not acting in the scope of his employment when, with knowledge, he brought a dangerous family member to his place of employment.
Successfully argued that foster care agencies are not state actors for purposes of 42 U.S.C. 1983, thus preventing recovery of attorneys’ fees in federal litigation.
Obtained dismissal of an action brought against a community no-kill pet shelter alleging that the client negligently permitted the adoption of a dangerous animal, after the plaintiff failed to care for the animal properly.
Obtained favorable decisions at the trial and appellate levels for a client in an action upon determination that a co-defendant was not acting in the scope of his employment when, with knowledge, he brought a dangerous family member to his place of employment.
Successfully argued that foster care agencies are not state actors for purposes of 42 U.S.C. 1983, thus preventing recovery of attorneys’ fees in federal litigation.
Obtained dismissal of an action brought against a community no-kill pet shelter alleging that the client negligently permitted the adoption of a dangerous animal, after the plaintiff failed to care for the animal properly.
New York City partners Adam Guzik and Guy Levasseur obtained summary judgment for the firm’s client, the largest private-sector transit operator in North America, in New York Supreme Court, Nassau County. The matter involved a bus passenger who was injured when our client’s bus veered into a guardrail on the side of the road after a steering component failed. The court found Guy and Adam met the burden of proof in showing an emergency doctrine situation existed as a result of the sudden loss of steering with no notice, and where evidence in the form of more than 1,800 pages of maintenance records indicated the bus was well maintained. The plaintiff's expert report in opposition was deemed to be purely speculative. The sustainable verdict value at trial could have exceeded $3 million.
Adam C. Guzik and Guy J. Levasseur