By Charles Toutant | December 14, 2022
Attorney Beth Baldinger said younger lawyers at her firm "only know the law through the computer. They don't get on their feet in front of a judge. It's not the same."
By Charles Toutant | December 5, 2022
During the trial, a defense lawyer was sanctioned three times, for a total of $1,500, for making statements to the jury concerning precluded evidence, according to court documents.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | November 13, 2022
Should the law be changed to allow a settlement, itself, to trigger a right to contribution? We think so.
By Colleen Murphy | October 11, 2022
The New Jersey Appellate Division weighed whether a workers' compensation judge abused his discretion in an order imposing attorney fees, costs, and sanctions for untimely payment of settlement proceeds without affording counsel the opportunity to be heard.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | September 18, 2022
Otherwise we may wake up one day in New Jersey and be barred from citing to such opinions at all.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 14, 2022
"The statistics suggest there may be something really wrong with the MDL process," said U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria, who is weighing what to do with 750 remaining Roundup lawsuits after Bayer settled most of the cases.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Marie E. Lihotz and Marianne Espinosa | September 9, 2022
APPELLATE ANSWERS: A motion for reconsideration gives the trial court—and not the litigant—a second bite at the apple to get it right.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Fitzpatrick and Mark Salah Morgan | September 8, 2022
This article provides insight, from a creditor's perspective, into the ABC process in New Jersey. "My advice to any creditors that find themselves in an ABC is to try to move it to a federal bankruptcy court as soon as possible."
By Charles Toutant | September 7, 2022
Rosemarie Arnold's law firm improperly withheld an email during discovery that shows the plaintiff perjured herself in her deposition by saying under oath that she was not intoxicated on the night in question, said Houston's lawyer Michael Reed in a court document.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Louis Locascio | August 15, 2022
COURT WATCH: The Tort Claims Act does not identify the particular county office or officer to be served.
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