The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Charles F. Forer | June 25, 2018
It was not the first time. Bob had lost arbitration cases before. But this one was different. Bob was sure the arbitrator had a longstanding relationship with Bob's adversary.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | June 22, 2018
A breach of contract suit over the sale of a contaminated chemical site in New Jersey can be expanded to include claims that the seller concealed information about its remediation efforts and tried to stick Ashland Inc. with the bill for the cleanup, a Delaware judge has ruled.
By Charles Toutant | June 22, 2018
Rider University announced Thursday that it had a tentative deal to sell Westminster Choir College to a Chinese company for $40 million, but two lawsuits still stand in the way of the sale.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Jeremy J. Gray | June 22, 2018
Unforeseen or uncontrollable events make the full extent of risk associated with development and commercialization unknowable.
By Erin Mulvaney | June 22, 2018
“There is a bit of a push, pull that you will continue to see,” says Michael Phillips of McGuireWoods. “The Supreme Court is knocking down obstacles and other judges are not as enthusiastic from a policy point of view. That dynamic won't end anytime soon.”
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward S. Robson | June 21, 2018
This article examines four of the most common justifications for arbitration and suggests examination of the knee-jerk impulse to include arbitration provisions in commercial agreements.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | June 20, 2018
Ten black nurses have filed a federal lawsuit against their health care employer alleging they received less pay than their white counterparts for the same work.
By Greg Land | June 20, 2018
Ted Lavender of FisherBroyles in Atlanta led a team representing a woman sued by a Colorado hospital seeking more than three times what it had already been paid for her surgery.
By Kenneth M. Block and Joshua M. Levy | June 19, 2018
In their Construction Law column, Kenneth Block and Joshua Levy explore the differences between typical contract terms and those that rise to the level of conditions precedent, the latter requiring strict compliance to avoid forfeiture.
By Charles Toutant | June 19, 2018
A New Jersey appeals court has held in a published ruling that a party seeking to foreclose on a mortgage must have both the promissory note and a valid assignment of mortgage. But in a case where Capital One Bank brought a foreclosure action on a property when it possessed the mortgage but not the note, the appeals court said irregularities did not warrant reversal.
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