Events
Speaking Engagement

Choice-of-Law Issues and Proof of Foreign Law in Collision Cases

University of Texas Law School’s 33rd Annual David W. Robertson Admiralty and Maritime Law Conference


Vinson & Elkins LLP
Texas Tower
845 Texas Ave
Houston, TX 77002

Blank Rome of counsel Alan M. Weigel will serve as a speaker at the University of Texas Law School’s 33rd Annual David W. Robertson Admiralty and Maritime Law Conference, being held Friday, January 10, 2025, from 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., in Houston, Texas.

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE

The David W. Robertson Admiralty and Maritime Law Conference focuses on legal developments in the specialized area of admiralty and maritime law and offers a unique opportunity for practitioners to stay abreast of global and national developments affecting case law, contracts, and civil procedure.

Blank Rome senior counsel Michael K. Bell is a member of the conference’s Planning Committee.

ABOUT ALAN’S SESSION

Alan’s session, “Choice-of-Law Issues and Proof of Foreign Law in Collision Cases,” will take place from 4:05 to 4:35 p.m.

Alan will examine how courts analyze the choice of law factors of Lauritzen v. Larsen and its progeny in a vessel collision case, and the materials courts consider in determining foreign law, using as an example the litigation resulting from the collision of a United States warship in the Singapore Strait.

Other sessions include:

  • Recent Developments in Admiralty and Maritime Law at the National Level and in the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits
  • Knowing the Ropes: Maritime Practice in a Post-Chevron World
  • Salty, Silent, but Not Surreptitious: Update on Maritime Liens
  • The More Things Change… 30 Years of Judging Admiralty Cases
  • Robins Dry Dock and Intentional Torts
  • To Save, or Not to Save: Perspectives on Admiralty Suits in State Courts under the Saving to Suitors Clause of 28 U.S.C. 1333
  • What to Do if Your Client is Misbehaving (Part XIV)
  • Why Does a Law Firm Need a Legal Department?
  • The Potential-to-Disrupt Maritime Commerce Test for Admiralty Tort Jurisdiction

MCLE credit is available.

For more information and to register, please visit the conference webpage.