By J.P. Duffy, Ben Love and Lucy Winnington-Ingram | March 12, 2021
International arbitration offers numerous advantages over national court litigation for resolving most cross-border commercial life sciences disputes.
By David B. Saxe and James M. Catterson | March 12, 2021
New York should take a cue from California and other states and amend the CPLR to allow for litigants to select "private judges" to decide civil disputes through final judgment at the trial court level.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Dan Roe | March 8, 2021
The single-office law firm bested its strong 2019 performance with a conservative management structure, firm leaders said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas J. Hall and Judith Archer | February 18, 2021
In this edition of their Commercial Division Update, Thomas J. Hall and Judith Archer address several recent decisions on applications to compel or stay arbitrations that illustrate the complexities sometimes involved in resolving these applications, particularly where overlapping agreements may apply, some with arbitration clauses and some without.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | February 16, 2021
In this edition of their Southern District Civil Practice Roundup, Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood discuss a recent case which demonstrates that, due to the FAA's national policy favoring arbitration, absent exceptional circumstances a party will not be able to avoid its prior agreement to arbitrate a claim subject to the FAA.
By Meganne Tillay | February 1, 2021
The new arbitration boutique will have offices in Paris, London and New York.
By Jane Wester | January 27, 2021
The program in Manhattan Civil Court is part of the Unified Court System's statewide push to use technology and alternative dispute resolution to process cases and relieve some of the strain of the COVID-19 pandemic, which cut off access to most in-person trials.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lawrence W. Newman and David Zaslowsky | January 27, 2021
In their International Litigation column, Lawrence W. Newman and David Zaslowsky suggest that the international arbitration community might consider the concept of encouraging arbitrators, at least in some circumstances, to distribute draft awards before they are issued as final.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Samuel Estreicher | January 20, 2021
In his Arbitration column, Samuel Estreicher discusses 'Fedor v. United Healthcare', in which the Tenth Circuit made clear that that the severability doctrine does not come into play unless there is an underlying arbitration agreement, and whether such an agreement has been formed is for the arbitrator to decide. In other words, contract formation issues are for the court, not the arbitrator.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Linda Gerstel | January 8, 2021
Prescriptions for not getting burnt.
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