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The Recorder

Amerco Real Estate Company v. City of West Sacramento

By | March 13, 2014
4 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Court to Review Environmental Conservation District

The N.J. Supreme Court has agreed to hear the Griepenburg case, where it should provide important guidance to attorneys concerning the relationship between restrictive zoning, environmental and smart-growth considerations.
8 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Court Stays Ruling That Threatened COAH Board Members With Contempt

The New Jersey Supreme Court stays an appeals court order that gave the state's fair housing agency until March 26 to adopt new regulations lest its board members face sanctions for contempt.
6 minute read

Daily Business Review

Suit: Missing Roads On $200 Million Development

A homeowner association is suing Delray Beach over two roads missing for a new plan for Atlantic Crossing, a $200 million downtown development.
5 minute read

New York Law Journal

Judge Ratifies Casino Claim with Oneida Indian Nation

A district judge has ratified the casino gambling and land claim settlement that the Oneida Indians reached in 2013 with the Cuomo administration and Oneida and Madison counties.
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Nonresidential Use - Can Enforcement of Restrictions Be Waived?

In their Cooperatives and Condominiums column, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan's Richard Siegler and Eva Talel write: For a board trying to maintain a harmonious environment, a muted response, or none at all when the owner community is indifferent, may seem applicable when faced with non-residential use of a residential apartment. But while complacent deference may seem pragmatic, a hidden danger may be percolating.
12 minute read

New York Law Journal

Parkland, the Public Trust Doctrine and Prior Public Use

In his Condemnation and Tax Certiorari column, Michael Rikon, a partner of Goldstein, Rikon, Rikon & Houghton, writes that the protection of parkland falls under the broader panoply of the public trust doctrine, which holds that the government is required to maintain certain resources for the public's reasonable use, but, as the Court of Appeals determined last week, reasonable use can encompass more than one valid option.
8 minute read

New York Law Journal

Matter of Wagner v. Lake George Park Commission

Homeowner's Motion for Injunctive Relief Against Construction on Lake George Denied
1 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

In Re Archdiocesan Cemeteries, PICS Case No. 14-0167 (C.P. Philadelphia Feb. 4, 2014) Herron, J. (10 pages).

By | February 25, 2014
Jurisdiction and Service of Process • Contracts • Interpretation • Land Use and Planning
3 minute read

New York Law Journal

Private Restaurant Allowed in Union Square Park

The state does not need to approve New York City's agreement with a food vendor to run a restaurant in Union Square Park, despite a rule requiring the Legislature to say when a public park can be used for private purposes, the Court of Appeals determined Thursday.
7 minute read

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