By Ellen Bardash | May 10, 2021
The bill as introduced by state Sen. Bryan Townsend, D-Newark, would phase in additional legal representation over a period of up to three years until enough is available to cover those who need it.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | May 10, 2021
We believe there is a solution, but it requires the Legislature to act. There is still an opportunity to divert the coming flood of evictions into safer channels where it can be absorbed over time.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Warren A. Estis and Jeffrey Turkel | May 4, 2021
More than a year has passed since the Court of Appeals' ruling in Regina Metro. Co. v. NYSDHCR and the First Department has since issued various decisions interpreting the scope of the decision. In their Rent Stabilization column, Warren Estis and Jeffrey Turkel discuss two lines of cases, both relating to the issue of fraud as it impacts the four-year look-back rule.
By Angela Morris | April 28, 2021
The lawsuit gives a look behind the curtains at an investigatory hearing that normally would have remained shrouded in secrecy.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Kevin W. Weber and Kevin H. Gilmore | April 28, 2021
Commercial landlords are eager to remove non-paying tenants in order for their properties to once again become revenue generators. Do these landlords have a viable self-help option under New Jersey law?
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott E. Mollen | April 27, 2021
Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein, discusses "2857 Sedwick Ave. LLC v. Drummond,"Bowery 263 Condo Inc. v. D.N.P. 336 Convent Ave. LLC," and " Similis Mgmt. LLC v. Dzganiya."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Megan E. Moyer and Kevin M. Levy | April 26, 2021
Wouldn't it be nice to win your client's court case before even filing the complaint? In Pennsylvania, a properly drafted confession of judgment clause in a commercial lease can accomplish just that.
By Charles Toutant | April 22, 2021
More than 50,000 eviction cases are pending statewide and another 194,000 filings are expected by 2022, the judiciary said. Since the start of the pandemic, Gov. Phil Murphy has issued a series of executive orders suspending evictions.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Scott R. Lippert and Darcy Baboulis-Gyscek | April 21, 2021
Now that we have lived through a long-term force majeure event, what have we learned for purposes of drafting a fair provision? The first consideration that comes to mind is the definition itself—the existence of a pandemic should count as a force majeure event.
By Scott E. Mollen | April 20, 2021
Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein, discusses "Schwesinger v. Perlis," where the landlord failed to prove its tenants engaged in acts proscribed by COVID-19 Emergency Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention Act after the effective date, and " DeSuze v. Ammon," where a tenants' claims in a rent challenge were held time-barred and not saved by the continuing violation doctrine.
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