By Rachel A. Mongiello | January 1, 2018
New Jersey courts have developed limitations on choice-of-law clauses in employment agreements, in order to prevent employees from losing the valuable protections of state employment statutes.
By Michael Booth | December 27, 2017
"Unfortunately, it is not unusual for a party to attempt to back out of a settlement agreement he or she orally entered into," U.S. Magistrate Judge Joel Schneider wrote.
By Charles Toutant | December 22, 2017
The former CEO of Valeant Pharmaceuticals has been ordered to submit to binding arbitration his dispute with the company over allegedly unpaid stock options.
By Michael Booth | December 15, 2017
A decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court requires judiciary administrators to begin notifying parties litigating professional malpractice claims of their statutory obligations to file affidavits of merit and to schedule hearings to determine whether those affidavits are satisfactory.
By Michael Booth | December 8, 2017
The New Jersey Supreme Court has agreed to hear appeals in the mass tort alleging that Hoffmann-La Roche's anti-acne drug Accutane led to users developing Crohn's disease.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | December 8, 2017
A federal judge overseeing a putative class action against Prudential Insurance Co. has ruled that the company violated ERISA by using interest-bearing bank accounts to hold life insurance money instead of paying beneficiaries directly.
By David Gialanella | Amanda Bronstad | December 7, 2017
A tort reform group whose signature move is labeling purportedly pro-plaintiff judicial vicinages "hellholes" each year has given New Jersey a good roasting, though some heavenly praise was sprinkled in.
By Colby Hamilton | December 4, 2017
A woman claims the cable news company and its former host breached their settlement agreement by making false, defamatory statements after a New York Times story identified her as one of Bill O'Reilly's harassment accusers.
By Arnold N. Fishman | November 27, 2017
OP-ED: When it comes to Municipal Courts, the perfect is the enemy of the good. The world is not perfect; it is an oblate spheroid, which is sort of kind of round.
By David Gialanella | November 22, 2017
A federal judge has declined to exercise jurisdiction over a contract dispute where messages that went "into the electronic ether" were about the only thing connecting the defendant with New Jersey.
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Role TitleAssociate General Counsel, Global EmploymentGrade F13Reporting ToSenior Legal Counsel, Global EmploymentProgram/Tool/ Department/U...
Ryan & Conlon, LLP, is a boutique firm specializing in insurance defense. We are a small eclectic practice with a busy and fast paced en...
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROSECUTION PARALEGAL - NEW JERSEY OR NEW YORK OFFICESProminent mid-Atlantic law firm with multiple regional office lo...