Washington State Business and Real Estate Lawyer David C. Tingstad | 4/1/2026
The Washington State Legislature has just declared “… all noncompetition covenants are void and unenforceable.” In the same statute, the legislature substantially restricted a business’ ability to enforce nonsolicitation agreements. The statute goes on to provide that all employers must notify all current and former employees and independent contractors that their noncompetition agreement is unenforceable.… Read More
Washington State Divorce & Family Law Lawyer Amanda N. Gamble | 3/31/2026
The decision to call a family law attorney is not one you are making lightly. There are likely a lot of questions running through your mind. How long does this process take? When will I see my kids? How am I going to pay for this? Will I be able to support myself after the… Read More
Washington State Real Estate Law Lawyer Babak Shamsi | 3/31/2026
This may (holding my breath) be my final article about the legal dispute saga between Compass Real Estate and Zillow, which erupted in the summer of 2025. You can find my previous articles regarding this topic here, here, here, here, and here to the extent you wish to have more background on the development of the dispute and the outcome of the… Read More
A cautionary example for Washington businesses: a "manager" title can still lead to overtime liability Many Washington employers assume that paying a salary and giving an employee a "manager" title is enough to treat the role as overtime-exempt. In practice, that assumption can be expensive. A recent lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for… Read More
Washington State Business Lawyer C. Michael Kvistad | 3/16/2026
This is Part 4 of my four‑part series on indemnification clauses. In Part 3, we looked at baskets and caps, the tools that limit when indemnity starts and how far it goes. Now we turn to carve‑outs and survival periods, two concepts that can quietly expand or extend liability. These terms often appear deep in… Read More
Washington State Real Estate Law Lawyer Babak Shamsi | 3/9/2026
In December of 2025, the Seattle City Council approved an update in zoning regulations, effective on January 21st of this year, permitting certain types of ground-floor retail businesses to operate in residential city blocks. Limitations on the type of businesses include: (1) a size restriction of up to 2,500 square feet; (2) a requirement that the… Read More