Legal in Nebraska

Nebraska Legal Intel

Friday, May 22, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on legal developments in Nebraska. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on nebraska legal headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Arbitration clauses that survive judicial review.

Arbitration clauses are most often struck down for procedural unconscionability — surprise placement, font that hides them, or no opportunity to negotiate — rather than substantive issues. A clause that is conspicuous, separately initialed, and accompanies a clear written notice of waiver of jury trial survives review in most jurisdictions.

Why It Matters

A void arbitration clause means the dispute lands in court, often with discovery and jury exposure that the clause was meant to prevent. Drafting discipline at contract formation is cheap; defending the clause years later is not.

2.2

The engagement-letter clause that prevents most fee disputes.

A clear scope-of-work paragraph — naming the specific matter, what is included, and what is explicitly excluded — eliminates roughly 70% of fee disputes by attorneys who track them. Generic "represent client in connection with X matter" language invites assumption-based conflict when adjacent issues surface mid-engagement.

Why It Matters

Fee disputes are the leading bar-complaint trigger and are nearly always preventable at contract formation. The cost of a 30-minute scope conversation is trivial against the cost of a fee-arbitration filing.

2.3

When to send a litigation hold letter.

A preservation (litigation hold) letter is appropriate as soon as litigation is reasonably anticipated, not just after a complaint is filed. The letter should identify the matter, the document categories at issue, and the recipient's preservation duty. Failure to send one is the leading evidence of spoliation in subsequent motion practice.

Why It Matters

Sanctions for spoliation can include adverse-inference instructions, monetary fines, and in severe cases default judgment. The cost of issuing a hold letter is one paralegal hour.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 22, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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Nebraska Legal Intel - 2026-05-22 | Axiom Synapse | Local Intel