New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Francis J. Lane, III | August 3, 2020
This second of the three-part series discusses the effects that Court of Appeals reversals of settled appellate court precedent has had on the residential real estate management industry.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jay Goldberg and Alex S. Huot | July 31, 2020
The author shares his views on District Judge Allison Nathan's opinions in 'U.S. v. Ali Sadr Hashemi Nejad,' and the earlier 'U.S. v. Pizarro,' where she makes it clear that there cannot be adherence to 'Brady' by merely allowing the government to state that it is "aware of its obligation."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jason H. Berland | July 31, 2020
Practical guidance for individuals and companies to consider if served with a federal grand jury subpoena.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Elliott Scheinberg | July 30, 2020
In discussing the topic of relief grounded in the interest of justice, author Elliot Scheinberg concludes: "The lesson is to err on the side of over caution: re-dot the i's and re-cross the t's below. It seems that one cannot over preserve but only under preserve."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Peter Halprin and Andrew Nadolna | July 30, 2020
One day, the threat from COVID-19 will pass and in-person proceedings will again be an option. But will things return to how they had been or is virtual ADR here to stay?
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Colesanti and Savannah Aronson | July 29, 2020
A uniform response to the 10-year old cryptocurrency phenomenon remains only a remote possibility, as regulators waver between encouraging registration of digital offerings and halting/disciplining those online issuers offering Quixotic returns.
New York Law Journal | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Robert Rattet, Derek Wolman, William Mack, and James Glucksman | July 29, 2020
As businesses forced to close by emergency orders attempt to negotiate with landlords and other creditors and try to modify or terminate commercial leases, lawyers will need to think carefully about the doctrines of impossibility and frustration of purpose, as well as force majeure clauses.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott E. Mollen | July 28, 2020
Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein, discusses "Board of Managers of 184 Thompson Street Condominium v. 184 Thompson Street Owner LLC," where the court held that a condo conversion sponsor correctly calculated the cooperative conversion reserve fund, and "Jensen v. 1050 Pacific LLC," where a motion for receiver was denied absent allegations of waste.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Bruce J. Bergman | July 28, 2020
Assembly Bill 10553 dated May 29, 2020 proposes a ban on foreclosure actions for at least a year and creates enormous problems and confusion…
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Joseph Gallagher | July 28, 2020
On June 22, 2020, the Supreme Court saved the disgorgement remedy it called into question in 'Kokesh v. SEC,' but put the brakes on the SEC's more zealous applications that risked transforming it into an unauthorized penalty.
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