New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Brett S. Theisen and Mark B. Conlan | September 18, 2020
Beginning with Pier 1 and Modell's, some bankruptcy courts in retail Chapter 11 cases have been allowing debtors to suspend post-petition rent payments to their landlords, in contravention of the generally-accepted practice that such payments must continue to be made. Given the $3 trillion commercial mortgage market, this issue is of critical importance to landlords and banks.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By George W. Hicks, Jr., and Matthew C. Fagen | August 21, 2020
A discussion of several unusual aspects of bankruptcy appeals of which unseasoned practitioners should be aware.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jonathan Koevary and Robert Gagne | July 22, 2020
For those companies that filed for bankruptcy on the eve of the COVID-19 shutdowns, the strategies—and available cash flows to pay landlords—did not go as planned.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Michael Mix and Jason Gottlieb | July 8, 2020
After being forced to wait for the New York State Courts to reopen, parties flood the court with litigation concerning transactions that failed to close before the COVID-19 pandemic.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 15, 2020
Although BIPA is an Illinois statute, it is widely depended on as a predicate for class actions concerning assertions of privacy rights filed in New York and elsewhere, Shari Claire Lewis discusses in her column.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Expert Opinion
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 15, 2020
Although BIPA is an Illinois statute, it is widely depended on as a predicate for class actions concerning assertions of privacy rights filed in New York and elsewhere, Shari Claire Lewis discusses in her column.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Expert Opinion
By Ricardo Ugarte, Terence Wong, Ya'nan Zhao and M. Imad Khan | April 21, 2020
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California has permitted a party in an international commercial arbitration to take depositions and obtain documents from third parties for use in arbitration administered by the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC) in Beijing.
By Patrick Krill | March 19, 2019
The approach to work often tears through and disregards all boundaries and reasonableness.
By Payson LeMeilleur and Brandon G. Smith | October 29, 2018
Over a year ago, the Supreme Court held in TC Heartland v. Kraft Food Groups, that venue for patent suits against domestic corporations is limited to either the defendant's state of incorporation, or where the defendant has a regular place of business and committed allegedly infringing acts.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Sharon M. Porcellio | July 26, 2018
U.S. Senior District Judge Michael A. Telesca then had more than 10 briefs and supplemental letter briefs and multiple statements and counter-statements of fact and other submissions from the two parties to decide the pending summary judgment motions.
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