By Jason Grant | May 24, 2017
A Manhattan appeals court has struck the answer of New York City and the MTA in a worker-injury case after the defendants failed to produce witnesses and then produced an unprepared witness.
By Andrew Denney | May 17, 2017
Whether or not former Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard is still a man who knows too much cannot be considered in his effort to loosen the terms of his parole, a federal appellate judge said.
By Andrew Denney | May 16, 2017
Holding the Jordan-based Arab Bank liable for damages caused to the victims of terror attacks could deal a blow to legitimate banking operations in the Middle East and could negatively affect American interests in the region, an attorney for the bank argued Tuesday before a federal appeals court.
By Jason Grant | May 16, 2017
An insurer who underwrote mortgage-backed securities that failed during the 2008 housing crisis must prove all the elements of common-law fraud in its suit against Countrywide Home Loans, a Manhattan appeals court has ruled. "There is no merit to Ambac's contention that Insurance Law §3105 dispenses with the common-law requirement of proving justifiable reliance and loss causation," Justice Richter wrote for the panel.
By Jason Grant | May 9, 2017
A woman's case against a personal injury firm should go forward after the firm's expert failed to address the basis of the woman's claim and ignored her testimony at trial, a state appeals court ruled Tuesday.
By Michael Booth | May 4, 2017
The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a New York health care lawyer and a California chiropractor violated the state's Insurance Fraud Prevention Act when they helped a local chiropractor set up a multidisciplinary practice.
By Jason Grant | May 4, 2017
New York University's breach of contract lawsuit against Pfizer over hundreds of millions of dollars in cancer drug royalties must go forward, a divided Manhattan appeals court has ruled.
By Jason Grant | May 3, 2017
The Court of Appeals may weigh in on a controversial amicus brief that was the target of a blistering dissent last year when it decides whether the state Department of Health properly sanctioned construction of a 20-story nursing home next to a Manhattan elementary school.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | April 28, 2017
RICO Claims' Dismissal Denied Interlocutory Appeal; Reversal Would Not End Litigation
By Andrew Denney | April 27, 2017
A medical malpractice defendant cannot submit into evidence Facebook posts of the plaintiff allegedly discussing his physical activity because the defendant was unable to produce the person who printed out the posts to be deposed, a state appeals court ruled.
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