By Tom McParland | June 17, 2019
Attorneys for the San Francisco-based DoorDash argued in a court filing late last week that customers who sign up to use DoorDash agree to the company's terms and conditions, which mandate binding individual arbitration for disputes and a waiver of the right to participate in class actions.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 14, 2019
Readers may have questioned the Appellate Division's opinion in Goffe v. Foulke Management Corp. We welcome the course correction and commend the Supreme Court's clarification.
By Anthony J. Diana and David G. Krone | June 12, 2019
In assessing whether or how to employ e-signatures, particularly in higher risk transactions, organizations should be careful to manage the practical issues and potential legal complexities associated with e-signatures through careful assessment and a robust governance program.
By Scott Graham | June 12, 2019
California's Viasat says it's owed more than $300 million for "theft" of its error correction technology, but Massachusetts' Acacia Communications says Viasat is simply misreading their license agreement.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Milton Springut | June 12, 2019
A recent Supreme Court decision ruled on the effect of a rejection of trademark licenses in bankruptcy. That decision is likely to have a major impact on trademark licensing practices, and counsel for parties involved with trademark licenses now need to take this decision into account when drafting these agreements.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By John M. Desiderio | June 11, 2019
In the practice of real estate law today, very few legal issues are getting as much attention and at the same time being applied incorrectly by practitioners as anticipatory repudiation (or breach) of contract. In this article, John Desiderio discusses the rules of anticipatory repudiation and attempts to discard the myths and mistruths.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Richard Raysman and Peter Brown | June 10, 2019
In their Technology Law column, Richard Raysman and Peter Brown summarize the facts and procedural history of 'Medtron Software Intelligence Corp. v. Metairie Gastroenterology', where one party learned that reliance on oral modifications to a written agreement can successfully be opposed by an adversary citing to the plain, unambiguous terms of a contract.
By Greg Land | June 6, 2019
The Court of Appeals ruling affirmed a Macon judge who said Southern Trust Insurance should have defended a multicount lawsuit and sought declaratory judgment to resolve a coverage dispute.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Orlofsky and Michael R. Darbee | June 6, 2019
The U.S. Supreme Court continues a series of victories upholding class action waivers.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | June 5, 2019
The ruling, outlined in a 12-page report from Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster, could put CompoSecure back on the hook for a nearly $17 million judgment that the state Supreme Court "reluctantly" vacated in the long-running contract dispute.
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