Representative Experience Archive
Chris represented homeowners and obtained a $250,000 settlement from a pesticide company.
In a class action lawsuit, Amundsen Davis brought a motion to dismiss the complaint after a thorough investigation. The plaintiff amended her complaint and dropped Amundsen Davis’s client as a defendant.
Represented a small trucking company and obtained a $7,500 settlement and written acknowledgment of liability from a repair shop.
Amundsen Davis obtained dismissal of FDCPA claims on a motion to dismiss in a putative class action lawsuit.
At the outset of the case, Amundsen Davis was able to force the plaintiff’s attorneys to substitute out the case by showing the existence of a conflict between plaintiff and the proposed class.
Amundsen Davis obtained summary judgment for a defendant who owned a ladder that was allegedly defective and caused the plaintiff significant injuries.
Dan Peters and Chris Miller obtained a favorable settlement for a national retailer accused of breaching a commercial lease agreement after filing counterclaims for trademark infringement.
The plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against our client, a motor carrier, for an alleged motor vehicle collision. The plaintiff waited almost two years to serve the defendant with a copy of the lawsuit. Amundsen Davis filed a motion to dismiss based on Illinois Supreme Court Rule 103(b) which requires plaintiffs to exercise reasonable diligence to obtain service on a defendant.
The plaintiffs filed a lawsuit alleging that agents of our client installed certain equipment in her vehicle resulting in the vehicle malfunctioning and requiring a new transmission. After the plaintiff presented her case in chief, Amundsen Davis moved for a directed verdict pointing out that the plaintiff’s evidence failed to show that the defendants actions were the cause of her damages.
The plaintiff filed a breach of contract action against a small motor carrier for claims arising out of the alleged sale of the business. Amundsen Davis filed a motion to dismiss based on Illinois Supreme Court Rule 103(b) which requires the plaintiffs to exercise reasonable diligence to obtain service on a defendant.