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People in the News—Feb. 29, 2024—Saul Ewing, Hamburg Rubin
Saul Ewing partner and tax and employee benefits group chair, David G. Shapiro, has been appointed to serve as a regent of the American College of Tax Counsel, effective March 1.Book Review: Make Space on Your Shelf for Ryan McCarl's 'Elegant Legal Writing'
This book is for anyone who writes legal documents. It focuses on litigation and offers many examples from litigation documents, but it also contains tips for transactional practitioners and other writers.Yale's Heather Gerken Aims to Pave the Way for Women in Leadership
"I was overwhelmed by how welcomed I was," Gerken told Law.com in a recent interview. "I would walk down the halls and have older male alumni reach out and say, 'It's about time!'"Insulate Clients From Fraud Claims With Integration-Plus Contract Clauses
A contracting party defending against a fraudulent inducement claim will frequently invoke two related, yet distinct, defenses: the gist of the action doctrine and the parol evidence rule. The three recent Third Circuit cases cited above illustrate the importance of knowing the differences between the two concepts and conducting the proper analysis of their potential applicability.View more book results for the query "*"
Appellate Division Reverses Trial Court's Dismissal of Lawsuit
"But trial court judges must tread carefully in granting a dismissal with prejudice, knowing that, unless the circumstances are egregious with multiple failures to comply with a court order and discovery requests, their decision may be reversed by the Appellate Division," writes litigation attorney Betsy G. Ramos.Supreme Court To Decide Scope of Key Federal Corruption Statute
Section 666 of Title 18 has become one of the most important legal tools used in the federal prosecution of state and local corruption. It will soon be taken up by the Supreme Court. This article discusses another important federal anti-corruption statute, 18 U.S.C. §201. It then describes the competing interpretations of Section 666 and concludes with comments on the implications of a Supreme Court decision in 'United States v. Snyder'.'Don't Row the Boat': Survival Tips for Divorce Attorneys
"When you get into a boat with a client, you lack the clear separation required to give an impartial, factual view of their situation from a legal perspective," writes family law attorney Holly R. Davis.Issues Under the Corporate Transparency Act for Trusts
On Jan. 1, 2024, the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) came into force, requiring the vast majority of small limited liability companies, corporations…The CFPB Limits Intra-Agency Appeal Rights
The CFPB adopted a new intra-agency appeals process on Feb. 22, 2024. While the CFPB described its new rules as resulting from its review of revisions that other regulators have made to their intra-agency appeals processes over the past decade, the rules are most noteworthy for how they deny rights that other regulators of financial institutions provide.Trending Stories
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