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Leo Milonas

Leo Milonas

July 17, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Spring's Leading Decisions Offer Insights and Analysis

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith discuss recent decisions involving New York courts' long-arm jurisdiction in disputes brought against foreign defendants under a contract governed by foreign law, the three-year moratorium on tax certiorari proceedings, voting rights of part-time town residents, judicial retirement and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith

11 minute read

July 16, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Spring's Leading Decisions Offer Insights and Analysis

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith discuss recent decisions involving New York courts' long-arm jurisdiction in disputes brought against foreign defendants under a contract governed by foreign law, the three-year moratorium on tax certiorari proceedings, voting rights of part-time town residents, judicial retirement and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith

11 minute read

April 17, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Jurisdiction, Employment Law, Smoking Restrictions in State Parks

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith write: As the last shovel-full of snow melts from our memories, we review some of the quarter's leading decisions rendered by the state's intermediate appellate judges, during which the Appellate Division justices exercised measured deference to trustees, administrative agencies and the Legislature, while also expanding access to the courts to redress commercial and tortious wrongs.

By E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith

11 minute read

April 16, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Jurisdiction, Employment Law, Smoking Restrictions in State Parks

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith write: As the last shovel-full of snow melts from our memories, we review some of the quarter's leading decisions rendered by the state's intermediate appellate judges, during which the Appellate Division justices exercised measured deference to trustees, administrative agencies and the Legislature, while also expanding access to the courts to redress commercial and tortious wrongs.

By E. Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith

11 minute read

January 16, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Business Judgment Rule, Privilege, Child Support, Animal Rights

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie summarize decisions from the last quarter of 2014 involving a shareholder challenge to a fashion house's going-private transaction, the common interest doctrine, the unauthorized use of a credit card number, the application of the "fugitive disentitlement doctrine" in child support cases, the the writ of habeas corpus for animals, and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read

January 15, 2015 | New York Law Journal

Business Judgment Rule, Privilege, Child Support, Animal Rights

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie summarize decisions from the last quarter of 2014 involving a shareholder challenge to a fashion house's going-private transaction, the common interest doctrine, the unauthorized use of a credit card number, the application of the "fugitive disentitlement doctrine" in child support cases, the the writ of habeas corpus for animals, and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read

October 17, 2014 | New York Law Journal

Navigating Uncharted Legal Waters

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie report on recent decisions involving a shareholder's common-law right to corporate information, whether a murderer may indirectly inherit from his or her victim, the "knowing, intelligent and voluntary" standard for criminal defendants' waivers of appellate rights, and sealing of criminal records after completion of a judicial diversion or drug treatment program.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read

July 18, 2014 | New York Law Journal

Waiver of Right to Counsel; Defamation; Identity Theft

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie discuss recent decisions involving whether a prisoner's cell phone could be considered "dangerous contraband," what happens when a deliberating jury asks questions but reaches a verdict before receiving answers, defamation by implication, and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read

April 18, 2014 | New York Law Journal

Foreign Judgments, Insurance, Resentencing, Criminal Appeals

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, discuss recent decisions involving a lawyer's defamation suit against a former client, the enforcement in New York of a money judgment of a foreign criminal court, the Prompt Pay Law, resentencing for parolees under the Drug Law Reform Act, and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read

January 17, 2014 | New York Law Journal

Hot-Button Decisions Keep Analytical Flames Burning

In their Appellate Division Review, E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman discuss recent decisions on untimely summary judgment motions, willfulness in civil contempt applications, unlawful surveillance, reckless endangerment in a case where an HIV-positive man did not inform his partner of his status before they had unprotected sex, and more.

By E. Leo Milonas and Frederick A. Brodie

11 minute read


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