By Colleen Murphy | May 16, 2022
The same New Jersey Appellate Division panel on Monday tackled two separate cases involving the enforceability of arbitration agreements in pre-injury releases, resulting in one win and one loss for trampoline park chain Sky Zone.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | May 15, 2022
'Jeter v. Sam's Club' did not get to the jury because of the crabbed interpretation of the mode-of-operation rule adopted by the state Supreme Court.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward Solensky Jr. | May 12, 2022
A recent New Jersey Supreme Court decision is important for retail defendants who operate self-service businesses that require customers to handle the goods they seek to purchase.
By Charles Toutant | Colleen Murphy | May 11, 2022
A mother and daughter who suffered spinal injuries when their car collided with a school bus agreed to a $1.775 million settlement in their Monmouth…
By Charles Toutant | May 3, 2022
Without a recording or third-party observer, it is often difficult at trial to effectively cross-examine the defense medical expert, said plaintiff's lawyer Christina Vassiliou Harvey.
By Charles Toutant | David Gialanella | April 27, 2022
A dump truck driver who suffered spinal injuries in a collision with a street-sweeping machine accepted a $2.75 million settlement in his Middlesex…
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Walter Dana Venneman | April 21, 2022
The NJ Insurance Fair Conduct Act now allows a claimant to bring a first-party claim directly against an automobile insurer if it engages in an "unreasonable delay or unreasonable denial of a claim for payment of benefits" under UM or UIM provisions.
By Charles Toutant | April 20, 2022
"I think this sends an extremely strong message to the other dioceses that claimants and survivors will not be pushed around, that they will stand together and they will stand in unison no matter how powerful the institution is," said plaintiffs attorney Gregory Gianforcaro.
By Charles Toutant | Colleen Murphy | April 18, 2022
A woman who sustained multiple spinal injuries in a head-on crash agreed to a $1.6 million settlement in her Monmouth County suit, Cardamoni v. Brian's…
By Colleen Murphy | April 13, 2022
The court held that "notice of a claim or mere negotiations cannot serve to toll a statute of limitations. Likewise, the carrier had no affirmative obligation to remind plaintiff the statute of limitations was about to expire."
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