By Patricia Kane | June 5, 2018
In their Landlord-Tenant law column, Warren A. Estis and Michael E. Feinstein write: 187th St. Bronx LLC v. Hizan Deli clarified that in a summary nonpayment proceeding, it is proper for the court, absent a showing of prejudice or surprise, to permit the landlord to amend the petition to include the unpaid rent which accrued subsequent to the filing of the petition, without having to serve a new rent demand. Given that the purpose of summary proceedings is to expeditiously resolve landlord-tenant disputes, this is a logical and appropriate result.
By Greg Land | June 5, 2018
Gay nude dance club Swinging Richards, which settled a prior Fair Labor Standards Act last year for $1.3 million, was hit with an $800,000 judgment after five dancers sued over unpaid wages.
By Charles Toutant | June 4, 2018
Four of the new hires in New Jersey will focus on violent crime, two on civil enforcement and one on immigration, according to a statement from the New Jersey U.S. Attorney's Office.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | June 4, 2018
The plaintiffs' attorney said the case may be the first use of Pennsylvania's civil rights law to hold a school district accountable in a case of student bullying.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Thomas A. Moore and Matthew Gaier | June 4, 2018
The Court of Appeals has addressed issues pertaining to the statute of limitations in medical malpractice actions in two recent decisions—one involving the time at which a wrongful birth cause of action accrues, and the other involving the continuous treatment doctrine.
By Charles Toutant | June 1, 2018
In a one-page letter that was electronically filed at 4:06 p.m. on the day before the motion hearing, Michael Warshaw of Zager Fuchs in Red Bank told the court that he and his co-counsel had been "very occupied and distracted and the opposition got away from us."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | June 1, 2018
The Superior Court issued a per curiam order agreeing to have the three-judge panel reconsider its decision in Berg v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance. The order further withdrew the panel's previous decision, and said the parties did not need to file any additional briefs regarding the case.
By Katheryn Tucker | June 1, 2018
“Michael Insalaca is partially paralyzed because the defendants put him in a seat they knew could injure and possibly kill him,” Chris Glover of Beasley Allen said.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 1, 2018
The two FTC lawyers did not violate rights of LabMD's chief-executive, the D.C. Circuit said Friday, because the agency's enforcement action against had an alternative cause: a data breach that exposed a file containing the personal information of nearly 10,000 patients.
By VerdictSearch | May 31, 2018
On Oct. 25, 2011, plaintiff Robert Dailey, 49, an installer of surveillance cameras, was driving on the Pennsylvania Turnpike outside Philadelphia when his sport utility vehicle was rear-ended by a sedan. He claimed back injuries.
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