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June 18, 2008 |

Court Gives Chiropractors License to Manipulate 'Related' Extremities

In a decision that will ease tensions among New Jersey chiropractors, the state Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that their practice isn't limited to cricks of the spine, despite murky statutory authority.
4 minute read
August 08, 2008 |

Discovery Approved for Computer in Divorce Proceedings

A computer recovered by a woman from the trunk of a family car is subject to discovery in a matrimonial proceeding, a New York judge has ruled. The woman's husband opposed allowing her to use information gleaned from the laptop, arguing she had improperly "seized" his personal, work-issued computer. But New York Supreme Court Justice Saralee Evans found that the wife's actions did not constitute computer trespass or using a computer without authorization, as the files were on a readily accessible computer.
3 minute read
November 18, 2009 |

Realty Law Digest

Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein and an adjunct professor at St. John's University School of Law, analyzes recent decisions, including a question of liability for a sidewalk ramp on an abutting propert and another case involving a contractor caught between parties in a divorce who own the home he has been renovating.
15 minute read
April 12, 2013 |

Beretta GC Fires Off Criticism of Gun Control Legislation

Beretta USA Corp. general counsel Jeffrey Reh has found himself in the crosshairs of Maryland's gun control debate, with the state's governor on the other end of a legislative and rhetorical shootout.
4 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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April 16, 2007 |

No Boundaries For Lawyers' Good Will

Had Hartford attorney Christina Storm been more of a football fan, or her husband less of one, there might not be a Lawyers Without Borders today.
5 minute read
April 20, 2006 |

Litigators Watching Vioxx Trials Predict Merck Will Stay the Course

The split verdict in the first trial of a pair of long-term Vioxx users' cases against Merck & Co. supports its strategy of battling each claim rather than settling the more than 10,000 cases, litigators say. "Merck's clearly going to keep taking these cases into the courtroom," said Peter A. Bicks, a products liability litigator for Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe who is not involved in Vioxx litigation. Bicks said the length of jury deliberations suggested that "the case was close and winnable for Merck."
3 minute read
December 30, 2002 |

In Brief

2 minute read
February 13, 2006 |

Larbig v. Larbig

There was no abuse of discretion in denying defendant's motion to modify his alimony and child-support obligations where the motion was filed only 20 months after the judgment of divorce; the trial judge correctly refused to modify defendant's additional obligation to pay $2,600 per month for five years because it was in the nature of equitable distribution.
4 minute read
November 01, 2006 |

Can Law Firms Keep the Blogosphere at Bay?

If analysts' assertion that law firm marketing's future lies in the blogosphere is correct, what's a firm to do when an attorney or staffer publishes a blog that might harm the firm's carefully wrought image? Can an Anonymous Lawyer or Article Three Blonde damage a firm's credibility? Philip Gordon and Katherine Franklin, shareholders at Littler Mendelson, the nation's largest employment law firm, say yes. The stopgap measure is a blogging policy.
10 minute read

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