By Kevin R. Centurrino | July 24, 2017
The IRS recently enacted Rev. Proc. 2017-34, which provides a permanent simplified method for certain estates to obtain an extension of time to elect portability.
By David Gialanella | July 19, 2017
A putative class action based on a collection letter's alleged misinformation about the debt's effects on credit rating is headed to discovery, thanks to a Newark federal judge's holding that the claimed "informational injury" is sufficient for standing.
By Stephanie Forshee | July 18, 2017
The Inclusion Initiative involves big players such as Prudential Financial, Wal-Mart and Coca-Cola.
By Marcia Coyle | July 6, 2017
The recent switch by the Trump administration's U.S. Justice Department from opposing to defending bans on class actions in workplace arbitration agreements will have consequences beyond a trio of challenges the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear this fall. The government this week, citing the high court switch, said it will no longer defend a class action provision in the U.S. Labor Department's fiduciary rule.
By Charles Toutant | July 6, 2017
The U.S. Supreme Court's 2016 holding in that a technical violation of a statute is insufficient to establish Article III standing does not preclude a suit over a potential disclosure of information by barcodes on debt collection letters, a federal judge in Newark has ruled.
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | July 6, 2017
Appointment of Receiver in Foreclosure of Single-Family Residence Inequitable and in Contravention of Fair Foreclosure Act
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | June 29, 2017
Entire Controversy Rule Barred Claims Arising from Servicer's Conduct During Underlying Foreclosure Proceeding
By Charles Toutant | June 28, 2017
A federal judge in Camden granted preliminary approval on Tuesday to a $9 million settlement by TD Bank of litigation over coin-counting machines that allegedly shortchanged customers.
By Tony Mauro | June 26, 2017
In a 5-4 ruling delivered at its final sitting, the court strictly interpreted deadlines for opting out of ongoing securities litigation.
By Michael Booth | June 16, 2017
The New Jersey Supreme Court has agreed to determine whether Princeton-based Heartland Payment Systems will be allowed to collect more than $2 million in counsel fees after it successfully fought an ex-employee's whistleblower and breach-of-contract lawsuit.
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