New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Yolanda Kanes, Maryann Stallone and Amanda Leone | January 21, 2020
While the New York legislature may have had the best of intentions when it drafted and enacted the elective share statute, over the last decade, opportunistic individuals have increasingly abused the statute to take advantage of our most vulnerable citizens: the elderly.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By New Jersey Law Journal | January 20, 2020
In this special supplement: When does a spouse's online "venting" about marital woes rise to the level of harassment? What is the standard for relocating with a child within the state of New Jersey? What should you do if you believe your client is mentally ill?
By Sharon L. Klein | January 17, 2020
Review some of the significant developments, lessons and reminders from 2019.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Sharon L. Klein | January 17, 2020
Review some of the significant developments, lessons and reminders from 2019.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Tracy Julian | January 17, 2020
In seeking to protect the client's best interests pursuant to RPC 1.14(b), the attorney or the court may consider whether the appointment of a guardian ad litem or general guardian is appropriate, depending upon the degree to which the client is believed to have diminished capacity.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Brian P. McCann and Kristen E. Marinaccio | January 16, 2020
Considering that both interstate and intrastate relocation cases are now assessed under the same best-interest standard, it is interesting that the burden still shifts, somewhat arbitrarily, depending on whether the move is within New Jersey or across the state line.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Bari Weinberger | January 15, 2020
Civil remedies related to bad behavior on social media, including proving damages in related marital tort claims, continue to tread in uncertain waters. But when a vindictive spouse's problematic actions on social media rise to the level of criminal behavior, New Jersey has some of the strictest laws on the books.
By Jane Wester | January 9, 2020
Justice Shlomo Hagler said he understood that child support is an urgent matter for the custodial parents and especially for their children, but he said there's debate over whether the 90-day timeline laid out in the family court rule is meant literally.
By Katheryn Tucker | January 8, 2020
"What we have here is a very complicated divorce case," said the husband's attorney, R. Scott Berryman of Berryman Family Law.
By Robert Storace | January 7, 2020
The Connecticut Supreme Court has decided a parental rights case involving a father who sought custody of his young son after being released from prison. The Supreme Court said the boy, who was about 2 years old when his father went to prison, had no memories or feelings toward his father, and denied the father's petition for custody.
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