By Melissa Colón-Bosolet and Daniel Hay | March 6, 2023
New York's non-duplication rule will often bar a disappointed purchaser from bringing a fraud claim.
By Cedra Mayfield | March 3, 2023
"Tavern Corp.'s original surrender of the keys and the premises on October 3, 2020, was unilateral," read a Georgia Court of Appeals opinion. "Tavern Corp. did not provide notice to Phipps of the surrendering of the keys before they were sent in the mail."
By Brian Lee | March 1, 2023
The lawyers allege Transamerica failed to disclose an anti-assignment clause in the settlement agreement that prohibited their client from ever having the power to transfer his payments—a provision intended to guarantee his long-term economic security, along with protecting taxpayers from the possibility he could become dependent on public assistance.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Curtis B. Leitner and Joseph R. Scholz | March 1, 2023
In this new column, Curtis Leitner, a business litigation Partner at McCarter & English's New York City Office, together with a guest columnist, analyzes developments in New York contract law from a litigation perspective.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Adrienne B. Koch and Neil S. Miller | February 28, 2023
Real estate is a unique asset and therefore damages resulting from a breach of an agreement are often difficult to measure. As a result, parties need to give give careful thought to the remedies for a breach. In this four-part series, Adrienne Koch and Neil Miller will examine some of the remedies that should factor into that analysis, starting with liquidated damages.
By Jason Grant | February 27, 2023
The Appellate Division, First Department court also turned back the financing company's argument that Civil Practice Law and Rules 321(c), which stays an action when there's death, removal or disability of an attorney, should've paused the lawsuit.
By ALM Staff | February 27, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 24, 2023
"If the court were to assume most closed corporations give certain people all power to act on behalf of the firm ... your position is that ... those people are empowered to redeem the shares of all other shareholders for zero," Justice Brett Busby said
By Emily Saul | February 24, 2023
The complaint says the partner used the firm to boost her own separate practice. But lawyers for the defendant said she had been preparing her own action against the firm and said the complaint was preemptive.
By ALM Staff | February 23, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
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