By Scott Mollen | February 4, 2025
Scott Mollen discusses “Wong v. Board of Managers of One Sunset Park Condominium” where unit owners sued a condominium board for failure to maintain adequate fire insurance.
By Gary M. Rosenberg and Alex M. Estis | February 3, 2025
The New York real estate industry has seen more legislative reform within the past five years than ever before. With all the recent protection provided to tenants, the question is now raised—can a landlord require a tenant to pay rent and/or use and occupancy during the pendency of a case? The answer is simply, “Yes.”
By Carla Varriale-Barker | February 3, 2025
With Governor Kathy Hochul recently signing the Fashion Workers Act into law, New York has taken a step forward in protecting the rights and interests of the state’s modeling industry. Carla Varriale-Barker discusses the implications of the Act and how it is an opportunity to advance basic protections and oversight in the industry.
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | February 3, 2025
The authors write "What happens when the two collide – when how we usually would treat paper or email discovery might not be directly applicable or workable for newer forms of e-discovery data? For example, how do we reconcile text messages, which often reflect streams of consciousness over time, with the traditional notion of 'document' discovery?"
By Jessica Copeland and Ariyana DeWitz | February 3, 2025
The New York Office of Attorney General is holding organizations accountable for the failure to implement mandated cybersecurity safeguards, resulting in the loss of personal and private information. In 2024, the AG entered into several settlement agreements totaling approximately $70 million dollars. In this article, Jessica Copeland and Ariyana DeWitz of Bond, Schoeneck & King discuss a few notable settlements.
By Andrew Berks | January 31, 2025
"Last week the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in Lynk Labs v. Samsung, decided a prior art issue in one of the thornier aspects of determining dates when a reference can be considered prior art for anticipation and obviousness arguments."
By Thomas W. Simcoe and Delaney M. R. Knapp | January 31, 2025
The article is a look at lessons learned and best practices from 10 years (plus a little more) since the Not-for-Profit Corporation Law was amended to add a whistleblower policy requirement, based on our work with hundreds of clients that have a adopted them, and a smaller subset that have had to undertake investigations in response to whistleblower reports.
By Dylan Mitchell | January 30, 2025
“Despite the multitude of factors and considerations that comprise the best interests doctrine, the current (and, potentially, dangerous) matrimonial zeitgeist is to sometimes favor a ‘rule of thumb’ approach rather than a true best interests analysis.”
New York Law Journal | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Joseph Burns | October 23, 2024
Fusion voting was once common and widespread in American politics. It allows one party to cross-endorse the candidate of another political party. By the early 20th century, most states prohibited fusion voting—but not New York.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Howard Rosenberg | October 15, 2024
Howard Rosenberg, partner and head of talent intelligence & acquisitions at Baretz+Brunelle, explores whether "talent finance" is the new litigation finance, where outside funding could come into a law firm by way of the talent pipeline as opposed to litigation.
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