New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Rachel Sollecito | May 11, 2018
A plaintiff would face difficulty asserting his employer's discrimination was the reason underlying an adverse employment action if there were pre-programmed, universal metrics by which to flag a terminable offense triggered by an event.
By Amanda Bronstad | May 10, 2018
In a marked shift from the first hearing in the opioid litigation, a federal judge praised lawyers for getting closer to reaching a global settlement…
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher P. Massaro, Jenny R. Flom and Michael J. Kearney | April 30, 2018
A look at nonjudicial settlement agreements under the New Jersey Uniform Trust Code
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Philip Kirchner | April 26, 2018
It might depend upon which court you ask. New Jersey's state courts, in many cases, appear to have applied a more stringent standard of review than their federal counterparts.
By Michael Booth | March 14, 2018
A New Jersey appeals court ruled Wednesday that, absent specific contractual language, in-person arbitration cannot be compelled.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Harry Giacometti and Damien Tancredi | March 14, 2018
When faced with a suit for actions taken in the course of a trustee's appointment, the trustee should first consider whether the plaintiff complied with the Barton Doctrine.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry J. Schindler and Joshua M. Herman | March 14, 2018
A well-drafted petition for inter partes review signals to a patent owner that it has something to lose, should discussions be unsuccessful.
By Jason Grant | March 8, 2018
Manhattan Federal Judge Jed Rakoff fiercely criticized the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and the federal judiciary as a whole, for repeatedly upholding U.S. companies' use of mandatory arbitration clauses that consumers sign on to via internet-based customer agreements that appear on screens.
By Charles Toutant | March 7, 2018
A Superior Court judge in Camden has ordered the New Jersey Attorney General's office to stand by its agreement to pay $1.3 million to settle a suit by a former detective who said he suffered retribution for reporting sexual harassment.
By Charles Toutant | March 2, 2018
A federal judge in Trenton, New Jersey, has denied Morgan Stanley's motion to compel arbitration of a wrongful termination suit, finding room for debate over whether the company's email delivery of the mandatory arbitration policy to employees constitutes notice and assent.
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