April 12, 2002 | New Jersey Law Journal
Lawyers Charged With Paying Staff Finders` FeesA venerable Cherry Hill firm had a longstanding custom of paying its nonlawyer employees extra to bring clients to the firm, the Office of Attorney Ethics charges in a complaint against six former partners. One worker`s "bonuses" allegedly exceeded ,000 a year.
By Charles Toutant
7 minute read
March 18, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal
Judge Won't Certify Class Action by Vioxx Users Seeking ReimbursementAn Atlantic County judge has denied a request to certify a class action against Merck & Co. on behalf of consumers for their out-of-pocket expenses for the painkiller Vioxx, which was withdrawn from the market in 2004 after a medical study linked it to heart disease.
By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
March 04, 2011 | Legaltech News
Suit Alleging 'Time Bomb' Caused Law Office Software to Crash Hits GlitchA consumer fraud suit alleging that a deliberately placed "time bomb" caused a law firm's management software to shut down can't proceed as a class action, a federal judge has ruled. Kalow & Springut, an 11-lawyer intellectual property firm, had used software made by Commence Corp. for six years when it stopped working, according to the suit.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
December 19, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal
Threats To Collect Inflated Fees Call For Lawyer's Suspension, Panel SaysA lawyer who threatened a client with criminal prosecution for theft of services and warned her that she might lose her business, her home and her professional license � all to collect an exorbitant fee � should be suspended him from practice, says New Jersey's Disciplinary Review Board.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
November 02, 2006 | National Law Journal
Sills Cummis Hopes to Lure Laterals With New OfficeSills, Cummis, Epstein & Gross has set up shop in Princeton, N.J., tapping into the area's potential for pharmaceutical and medical-device clients and for recruitment of new talent -- especially laterals disaffected with their current firms. The 160-lawyer firm has taken enough office space to accommodate 30 lawyers. Deputy managing partner R. Max Crane says he expects the new office will help lure lawyers at out-of-state firms with branches in the area, who perhaps are looking to make a move.
By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
January 24, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal
McCarter & English Building Up Its Construction Law PracticeConstruction law is booming, and McCarter & English wants to build it into a core practice area. The Newark-based firm has picked up six construction law partners from Buchanan Ingersoll's New York office, doubling the size of its construction law department. McCarter says the laterals, based in its New York office, will create a cross-disciplinary construction industry practice with experience in the transactional and dispute resolution sides of the field.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
May 25, 2006 | Law.com
Most Tier Partners Still 'On Path' to Equity Status, Survey FindsWhile nonequity partnership has transformed the old "up or out" construct at law firms, it's still mainly a bridge to full partnership rather than a final destination. Nonequity partners -- also known as "tier" or "income" partners -- have been a growing breed of big-firm lawyer since the mid-1980s. But the reasons for the hybrid status vary from firm to firm and lawyer to lawyer, as does a tier partner's relative rank. The ambiguities led Edge International's Ed Wesemann to try to quantify the practice.
By Charles Toutant
6 minute read
July 06, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal
New Judge Assignments Can't Keep Pace With AttritionDespite a last-minute spate of confirmations, there are still not enough new state court judges to counter attrition due to retirement over the past 12 months, according to the judiciary's latest general assignment order.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
July 05, 2011 | Law.com
McCarter & English Plan 'Grosses Up' Workers Insuring Same-Sex PartnersJoining a growing number of firms and companies around the country, McCarter & English has adopted a plan to offset unequal tax treatment faced by employees who cover same-sex partners in their health insurance plans, raising the gross pay of those affected with a new "gross up" policy.
By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
November 14, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal
Alcotest Dispute Spilling Over to Multiple Counties and CourtsThe battle that began in Camden County over the state's rollout of its new, computerized blood-alcohol testing device is spreading so rapidly that it's hard to discern where the front lines are.
By Charles Toutant
3 minute read
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