By Avalon Zoppo | December 21, 2022
Laws regulating social media sites and anti-SLAPP statutes are among the issues to keep on eye next year.
By Amanda Bronstad | December 19, 2022
In a Dec. 16 complaint, Johnson & Johnson subsidiary LTL Management claimed Dr. Jacqueline Moline falsified a 2019 article on which plaintiffs lawyers relied in cases linking mesothelioma to its baby powder.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Francis J. Lawall and Marcy J. McLaughlin Smith | December 15, 2022
Many practitioners have been speculating as to how courts will address the potential remedy for the unconstitutional U.S. trustee fees imposed against Chapter 11 debtors pending in U.S. trustee districts under the 2017 amendment to 28 U.S.C. Section 1930 (the 2017 amendment).
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dan Roe | December 5, 2022
Top M&A shops keep promoting deal-focused partners this promotion season while most firms under the $2 billion revenue mark pivoted to countercyclical practices in their promotions.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Andrew C. Kassner and Joseph N. Argentina Jr. | December 1, 2022
What rights does a tenant have with regard to the security deposit delivered by the tenant to the landlord to secure the tenant's performance under the lease when the landlord files for bankruptcy and rejects the lease?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Rudolph J. Di Massa Jr. and Malcolm Bates | November 10, 2022
In In re Norrenberns Foods, Case No. 21-30825, (Bankr. S.D. Ill. July 8, 2022), the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Illinois had occasion to rule on a creditor's objection to the sale of a debtor's assets.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Francis J. Lawall and Kenneth A. Listwak | October 27, 2022
In Windstream, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, on appeal, found that while certain business practices—a potentially false targeted advertising campaign—may be illegal, it did not follow that such actions were necessarily an attempt to exercise control of estate property.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ellen Bardash | October 25, 2022
The proposed class of GNC shareholders, those who held Class A common stock between February 2018 and June 2020, is represented by New Jersey attorney John Tang, who is also a named plaintiff in the case, owning nearly 8% of GNC's stock.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Justin Henry | October 14, 2022
The negligence lawsuit comes in the months following what the complaint depicts as a frenzy within Schnader Harrison as lawyers attempted to fix what's described in exhibits as a "debt disaster" for long-time clients.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Andrew C. Kassner and Joseph N. Argentina Jr. | October 13, 2022
In an opinion issued Aug. 3 in In re Hawkeye Entertainment, (Case No. 21-56264), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held all the requirements for assumption were triggered even though the defaults had been cured or were not material but the debtor could assume the lease because the defaults in bankruptcy were not material enough to require any further undertakings by the debtor going forward.
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