Law Firm Breakup Turns Ugly
A Philadelphia judge has said two former law firm partners do not have standing to sue each other over issues related to the dissolution of their former firm, including one partner accusing the other of diverting firm money to pay for child support following an affair.
May 03, 2015 at 02:02 AM
5 minute read
A Philadelphia judge has said two former law firm partners do not have standing to sue each other over issues related to the dissolution of their former firm, including one partner accusing the other of diverting firm money to pay for child support following an affair.
Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge Pamela Pryor Dembe recently filed an opinion supporting her previous decisions tossing one former partner's claims for unjust enrichment, conversion and breach of contract and fiduciary duty, and the other partner's counterclaims, including fraud, conversion, misrepresentation and negligence.
The parties in Frost v. Zeff both appealed the denial of their claims. Dembe filed her Rule 1925(a) opinion supporting her prior rulings April 27. Dembe had dismissed the claims for both parties based on standing and statute of limitations issues.
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