New York Law Journal | Analysis
By James P. Chou and Marshall O. Dworkin | August 21, 2023
The Court of Appeals' recent decision in Gottwald v. Sebert, which took a broader approach to determining who qualifies as a "public figure" for defamation purposes may shed some light on the issue.
By Law Journal Staff | August 11, 2023
Two firms top $7 million in this metric.
By Law Journal Staff | August 11, 2023
All listed firms eclipsed $2 billion in gross revenue for fiscal 2022.
By Law Journal Staff | August 11, 2023
Kirkland & Ellis holds the top spot, followed closely by Davis Polk.
By Law Journal Staff | August 11, 2023
Wachtell tops the revenue per lawyer leaderboard by a comfortable margin.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Leslie A. Berkoff | August 7, 2023
Alternative dispute resolution has many advantages over traditional litigation, including reduced costs, expedited timelines and streamlined processes.…
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John M. Delehanty | August 7, 2023
The joint session is the only phase of the mediation in which the parties meet face to face and present their respective positions. In fact, this event may be the only time prior to trial when the parties have an opportunity to meet and address each other in person, rather than being walled off from each other through the thicket of litigation filings.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph Panetta and Ross J. Kartez | August 7, 2023
More and more, countries, courts and states are turning to mediation to solve more complex disputes due to its collaborative, cost-effective, and confidential process. It allows all parties greater control over the outcome and greater speed to resolution. Mediation is proven to help courts decrease case backlogs and help businesses resolve legal disputes quickly and efficiently.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Rich Lee and Sandra L. Musumeci | August 7, 2023
Lawyers, litigants, witnesses and court officials slogging through depositions and motions in a case that an appeals court may eventually determine should always have been before an arbitrator—as directed by a contract between the parties—does sound like a huge waste of everyone's time and money.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lisa Zeiderman and Aoife Collins | July 17, 2023
As attorneys focusing their practice on divorce, we are often involved in trying to procure a Jewish divorce, also known as a "Get" for our clients. Why does this issue arise during a civil divorce and what can be done when one spouse refuses to give the Get?
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