By Emily Saul | January 5, 2024
Summations in the civil fraud trial are scheduled for Jan. 11, with a decision from Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron set to determine the future of Trump's New York holdings.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Emily Poler | January 5, 2024
The use of social media as a marketing tool has been common for just about as long as social media has existed. In some situations, particularly where an individual is very closely associated with a specific business, such fuzziness has led to disputes over who owns social media accounts. In this article, Emily Poler discusses three recent federal court decisions and how they have addressed whether a social media account belongs to an individual or a business.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | January 4, 2024
Famed attorney Alan Dershowitz, holding what he said was a file folder containing checks, said as a gesture of good faith and an effort to resolve the longest-running Chancery case after nearly 10 years.
By Brian Lee | January 3, 2024
The Court of Appeals' ruling is expected to have broad implications not just for New York—one of the hardest hit states during the pandemic—but nationally, since the court's interpretation of the policy language could impact how other courts rule on pandemic-related business interruption disputes.
By Brian Lee | January 3, 2024
E. Leo Milonas, a longtime partner at Pillsbury, oversaw the formation and implementation of the Supreme Court's Commercial Division.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas J. Hall and Judith A. Archer | December 14, 2023
This column focuses on the first ground for seeking reformation, mutual mistake and addresses recent Commercial Division decisions that have struggled with that issue.
By Emily Saul | December 8, 2023
"New York City is now a technological hub for some of the largest technology companies in the world," Seyfarth Shaw partner Tracee Davis told the New York Law Journal. "By amending the rules, it's carrying forward what the commercial division has always been; it's a place for businesses to come and utilize the expertise of the commercial division judges."
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | December 6, 2023
BitGo is seeking $100 million for a busted $1.2 billion merger. The termination fee in that complaint is thought to be the largest ever requested by a cryptocurrency company.
By Brian Lee | November 30, 2023
The Court of Appeals granted leave to appeal in September. A date for arguments has yet to be scheduled.
By Amanda O'Brien | November 21, 2023
Ward Greenberg will cease operations at the end of 2023. Hodgson Russ will add 10 litigators and assume the firm's Rochester lease, while Freeman Mathis Gary will take the other nine litigators and leases in Philadelphia, South Jersey and Delaware.
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