By Colby Hamilton | October 26, 2017
NASDAQ, the world's second-largest stock exchange, filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York Thursday against a New Jersey fund management company, claiming it is attempting to steal a number of multimillion-dollar exchange-traded funds in its care.
By Celia Ampel | October 26, 2017
U.S. Magistrate Judge Jonathan Goodman quotes Alice Cooper, making at least his third musical reference this month.
By Meredith Hobbs | October 24, 2017
Anti-global sentiment will reshape established cross-border arbitration regimes—but how that will unfold remains to be seen, according to top practitioners convened by the Atlanta International Arbitration Society.
By Anna Zhang | October 19, 2017
Chief executive Christopher Bogart talks about the excitement and challenges of the Asia market and the firm's plans for Singapore and Hong Kong.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas J. Hall | October 19, 2017
In his Commercial Division Update, Thomas J. Hall writes: The narrowness of the doctrines of impossibility and frustration of purpose—and their questionable utility for litigators—underscores the importance of striving during the contract drafting process to include contingency clauses providing for foreseeable possibilities and language making clear the contract's purpose.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | The Legal Intelligencer | October 12, 2017
A former professor who was fired after creating an online parody video depicting faculty members as Nazis can proceed with his breach of contract claims against the university where he worked, a federal court in Pennsylvania has ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | The Legal Intelligencer | October 12, 2017
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court won't disturb a state Superior Court ruling that an arbitration award in a motor vehicle accident case did not collaterally estop a plaintiff from seeking underinsured motorist benefits.
By Greg Land | Daily Report | October 6, 2017
A lawsuit accuses former UN Ambassador Andrew Young, his son Andrew "Bo" Young and Martin Luther King III of withholding $4.4 million due a longtime friend of the younger Young from the recent sale of Bounce TV.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Richard Raysman and Peter Brown | October 6, 2017
In their Privacy Matters column, Richard Raysman and Peter Brown discuss a recent SDNY decision premised on the reality that a "reasonable" Internet user would know that a blue highlighted hyperlink is the archetypal command to a user that the entirety of the referenced document can be viewed by clicking on the hyperlink.
By Charles Toutant | October 5, 2017
A federal judge in Trenton has granted preliminary approval to a $2.5 million settlement in a class action claiming that Princeton-based Heartland…
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