By Colleen Murphy | July 8, 2022
A North Bergen resident who was injured in a collision with a box truck on the New Jersey Turnpike settled his Middlesex County personal…
By Charles Toutant | July 7, 2022
After Thomas was electrocuted, his clothes caught fire but bystanders were unable to provide him help or extinguish the fire, and the wire remained live for more than 10 minutes until the company shut off power to the line.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Louis Locascio | June 30, 2022
COURT WATCH: In view of inconsistent trial court rulings, Judge Sabatino saw the need for a uniform procedure to deal with a third party observing and the recording of DMEs.
By Charles Toutant | Colleen Murphy | June 30, 2022
A woman who suffered spinal injuries when her car was broadsided by a landscaping truck agreed to a $1.175 million settlement in her Camden County…
By Charles Toutant | Colleen Murphy | June 24, 2022
A man who sustained partial amputations of four fingers on his dominant right hand in a workplace accident agreed to a $1.9 million settlement of his…
By Colleen Murphy | June 21, 2022
The New Jersey Appellate Division reversed a trial judge's dismissal of a case involving a woman with preexisting injuries who brought claims for two separate car accidents in two years, holding that the burden is on the defense, not the plaintiff, to demonstrate that the alleged injuries had multiple different causes.
By Colleen Murphy | June 21, 2022
The New Jersey Appellate Division has reversed an order granting State Farm summary judgment in a breach of policy case where a man claimed that the delayed approval of a medical test caused him permanent injury.
By Colleen Murphy | June 17, 2022
"In short, the Tort Claims Act failed to identify who it is a claimant must serve with a notice of claim when suing a county," stated Fisher. "And, to be sure, it is a matter best cleared up by the Legislature."
By Charles Toutant | Colleen Murphy | June 15, 2022
A woman who sustained neck and back injuries when her car was rear-ended by a dump truck agreed on May 10 to a $2 million settlement in her Ocean County…
By Colleen Murphy | June 15, 2022
"In this appeal, plaintiff does not assert equitable tolling applies to excuse the late filing of his complaint nor does he invoke the doctrine of substantial compliance," stated Gummer. "Instead, plaintiff argues he filed his complaint timely because the Supreme Court had tolled the statute of limitations in its June 11, 2020 Fourth Omnibus Order."
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