By Chris Kercher, Rollo Baker, Kimberly Carson and Jonathan Feder | December 23, 2020
This article provides a discussion of the Delaware Court of Chancery's post-trial decision on ordinary course covenant compliance in 'AB Stable VIII v. MAPS Hotels and Resorts One', C.A. No. 2020-0310-JTL.
By Raychel Lean | December 18, 2020
The ruling underscored the limits of Florida's prevailing-party rule.
By Lidia Dinkova | December 11, 2020
The seven buyers of five Parque Towers condo units won on their claim developer J. Milton completed the tower over a year late.
By Michael A. Mora | December 11, 2020
The six Morgan Stanley financial advisers previously managed about $1.79 billion in client assets for UBS Financial Services.
By Edmund M. O'Toole | December 11, 2020
Where do things stand concerning force majeure clauses in commercial agreements and the various health-based restrictions that have made performance of many contracts impracticable, if not impossible?
By William J. Moon | December 11, 2020
Prof. Lea Brilmayer's new book, Contracts: The Five Essential Concepts, is a refreshing contribution that deserves to be in the hands of every law student, law professor, bar exam prepper, practicing lawyer, and even non-lawyers who might be curious enough to understand the legal architecture governing American contract law.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Bruce J. Bergman | December 8, 2020
In his foreclosure column, Bruce Bergman discusses three questions still causing confusion when dealing with acceleration and the statute of limitations: (1) What language actually constitutes an acceleration? (2) Does the filing of a foreclosure complaint evince an acceleration? And (3) does discontinuance of a prior foreclosure revoke an acceleration?
By Raychel Lean | December 2, 2020
A former client claimed the firm misinterpreted the terms of amended note and mortgage loan documents, but the attorneys told a different story.
By Ellen Bardash | December 1, 2020
It can reasonably be expected that in light of Laster's ruling on the scope of the material adverse effect clause, sellers moving forward will try to include general, broad language in contracts to protect themselves and buyers will challenge that, said a Quinn Emanuel lawyer in the case.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | December 1, 2020
It can reasonably be expected that in light of Laster's ruling on the scope of the material adverse effect clause, sellers moving forward will try to include general, broad language in contracts to protect themselves and buyers will challenge that, said a Quinn Emanuel lawyer in the case.
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