By Brian Lee | March 18, 2024
In one of a number of key lawsuits to watch against Waste Management of New York, the Appellate Division, Fourth Department issued an unsigned memorandum decision in favor of the trash collector on March 15, reversing a lower court judge's ruling.
By Everett Catts | December 6, 2023
Cook County, Illinois; California; New York City and South Carolina asbestos litigation ranked second through fifth.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By David W. Lowden | October 2, 2023
A Law Journal contributor wonders if the judge in Donald Trump's civil fraud case in Manhattan correctly understood the scope of the New York State Executive Law provision which he relied upon to call for such "cancellation" and dissolution of the former president's LLCs.
By Emily Saul | September 28, 2023
The Appellate Division, First Department panel vacated an interim stay of the trial Thursday afternoon.
By Andrew Goldenberg | June 30, 2023
A discussion of the recent NY Court of Appeals decision Gottwald v. Sebert, including the implications it has on the retroactive application of the 2020 amendments to New York's anti-SLAPP statute.
By Dan Roe | April 7, 2023
With less than half of its 2018 head count, Boies Schiller is running lean and sitting on a pile of lucrative cases.
By Ellen Bardash | March 21, 2023
Counsel for Fox News and its parent corporation Fox Corp. maintained coverage of tampering allegations around the 2020 presidential election was presented in the proper context.
By Jason Grant | March 10, 2023
"There is no stated rationale as to why extreme and outrageous conduct would be a required element for both an intentional act as well as a negligent act," wrote appellate Justice Troy K. Webber. "As such, we now hold that extreme and outrageous conduct is not an essential element of a cause of action to recover damages for negligent infliction of emotional distress."
By ALM Staff | January 13, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Emily Saul | December 28, 2022
As part of the suit, lead-plaintiff and partner Larry Hutcher alleged MSGE was in violation of New York Arts and Cultural Affairs Law when it declined to honor his two season passes to the New York Knicks. The action also alleged that the company policy violated the firm's lawyers' civil rights.
Presented by BigVoodoo
This conference aims to help insurers and litigators better manage complex claims and litigation.
Recognizing innovation in the legal technology sector for working on precedent-setting, game-changing projects and initiatives.
Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
McCarter & English is actively seeking a 5th-6th year trademark associate who has trademark prosecution, licensing and litigation experi...
**PLEASE READ THE COMPLETE AD BEFORE APPLYING***Established 25-year boutique Plaintiff's Personal Injury Law Firm in the Dadeland area seeki...
Our client, a multi-state full-service boutique, is seeking to add a senior construction litigation associate to their Florida team. Qualif...