By Adam Leitman Bailey and Dov Treiman | October 17, 2023
A discussion of the anti-harassment housing ordinance, which the authors describe as a "wild hodgepodge of prohibited conducts."
By Scott Mollen | October 10, 2023
Scott Mollen discusses "Hansen Family Invs., LLC v. Rabadi," involving a dispute arising from a failed sale of a condominium apartment, and "COD LLC v. Ljuljdjuraj," where the court held that a fired building superintendent had tenancy rights under his lease.
By Bruce J. Bergman | October 10, 2023
Bruce Bergman discusses 'Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB v. Racer,' which deals with the "once believed innocuous 30-day notice requirement," and more specifically, when borrowers deny receipt, whether the foreclosing party can prove the notice was sent.
By Jason Bergman | October 10, 2023
The purpose of the voluntary payment doctrine is to bar recovery of payments voluntarily made with full knowledge of the facts and in the absence of fraud or mistake of material fact or law. The applicable law is presented in a recent case: 'ECI Financial Corp. v. Resurrection Temple of Our Lord, Inc.'
By Emily Saul | October 5, 2023
In addition to dismissal, the motion seeks hearings over alleged selective prosecution and purported leaks of grand jury material.
By Emily Saul | October 5, 2023
The bar association said Trump's statements about Judge Arthur Engoron and his court staff crossed the line from free speech into harassment.
By Emily Saul | October 4, 2023
In a win for RMBS investors, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Andrew Borrok of the Commercial Division found that petitioners must recalculate the amount paid by trust servicers in instances involving the "clean up call" provisions.
By NYLJ Staff | October 3, 2023
"Whatever the nature of the crisis, we have seen it before, know how to handle it and have the bandwidth to be on top of it immediately."
By Emily Saul | October 3, 2023
Donald Trump claims he was unfairly denied a jury trial in his business fraud case, and his lawyers never filed a jury demand. But observers think the law is murky enough to warrant litigation.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | October 3, 2023
Scott Mollen discusses "Mrishaj v. Moore," which held that RPAPL §853 does not protect shareholders against misconduct by neighboring shareholders, and "Kennedy Plaza Tower v. Leffler" where the court held that an ERAP application cannot be used to delay eviction.
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