June 12, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal
A Hard Shingle To HangThe deal sweetener that would place Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger & Vecchione's name atop a Newark skyscraper is getting a sour reaction from other law firms in the building. The tenants don't much care for being housed in a structure on which the name "Gibbons" looms large above the 30th floor - especially since they were never offered the same marquee billing.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
June 13, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal
Riker, Danzig Opens in London, With Eye on Insurance BusinessA Morristown, N.J., firm is hopping the pond in hopes of improving its foothold in London's insurance and reinsurance industries.
By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
April 14, 2010 | New Jersey Law Journal
Circuit Hears Appeal of Jets Fans' Suit Over Patriots' Secret Taping of SignalsA lawyer cum New York Jets fan got another shot Wednesday at convincing a federal court that the New England Patriots should pay damages to ticket holders for the franchise's clandestine videotaping of rival coaches' hand signals.
By Charles Toutant and Shannon P. Duffy
5 minute read
August 14, 2009 | Law.com
ExxonMobil Rebuffed in Claim to Reduce Damages in Natural Resource SuitA New Jersey Superior Court judge has rejected an effort by ExxonMobil to limit its damages for harming natural resources at two refinery sites. The judge denied the company's motion to dismiss the state's claims that the public trust doctrine can be used for recovery of damages for pollution on private property, in this case uplands and tidal lands. The judge had ruled earlier that the state could pursue ExxonMobil for natural resource damages done by the refineries.
By Charles Toutant
3 minute read
November 14, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal
Wal-Mart Class-Action Plaintiffs' Lawyers Wield 'Smoking Gun'Plaintiffs' lawyers in a federal class-action suit in Newark, challenging the labor practices of the world's biggest corporation, Wal-Mart, think they've got a fighting chance, now that they hold the fruits of a federal criminal probe.
By Charles Toutant
7 minute read
January 02, 2008 | National Law Journal
N.J. Firms Becoming Partner-HeavyThe ratio of lawyers to partners at the largest New Jersey firms has been dropping for the past three years, an indication that firms are putting more reliance on partners as billing engines. Managing partners, consultants and analysts say there has been a restructuring of law firm staffing, due to organizational economies and client demands. They say the traditional pyramidal structure of law firms is changing due to increased expectations by corporate clients that senior lawyers will handle the work.
By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
June 28, 2011 | New Jersey Law Journal
Corporate Veil-Piercing Principles Apply to N.J. Limited PartnershipsA state appeals court on Tuesday extended corporate veil-piercing to limited partnerships under certain conditions, but found it inapplicable to a Voorhees nursing home's parent in a negligence suit.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
January 26, 2006 | The Legal Intelligencer
Rolling Dice on Indian LawNative American law, long a well-established practice area west of the Mississippi, is gaining ground at eastern law firms as tribes displaced in the 19th century seek to reclaim ancestral lands - and make them instantly profitable.
By Charles Toutant
8 minute read
September 11, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal
Jobs at New Jersey's Top Law Firms Static for Women, Down for MinoritiesIn a year marked by troubled economic times, progress has been elusive for the numbers of minority and women lawyers at the state's 20 largest law firms. The proportion of lawyers who are black, Hispanic or Asian declined slightly over last year, while that of women lawyers remained about the same.
By Charles Toutant
5 minute read
April 02, 2008 | New Jersey Law Journal
Legal Services Looks to State To Plug IOLTA Funding GapWith its revenue from its largest single funding source plummeting to about half what it was last year, Legal Services of New Jersey is asking the state to help make up the difference.
By By Charles Toutant
4 minute read
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