The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 3, 2019
According to U.S. District Judge Harvey Bartle, the fraudulent concealment argument may have been successful in delaying the statute of limitations if the attorneys handling the plaintiffs' claims had conducted any discovery on the issue.
By Charles Toutant | August 23, 2019
A Sills Cummis arbitration agreement violated the Rules of Professional Conduct and is unenforceable because it referenced 33 pages of JAMS arbitration rules, yet the client was never given a copy of those rules, the appeals court said.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 13, 2019
The filing is the latest in an ongoing dispute over common benefit fees in the multidistrict litigation over the mesh devices. Many of the objections focused on the work done on one of the first mesh trials in the nation in Atlantic County.
By Charles Toutant | August 9, 2019
The panel found a trial judge lacked jurisdiction to cut the attorneys fee award to $359,000.
By David Gialanella | August 8, 2019
The Appellate Division's decision in the case, flowing from an injury suit against the state that once yielded a $166 million verdict, provides some guidance on appearances in cases where the lawyer might also serve as a witness.
By Jack Newsham | August 7, 2019
Real estate investor Jacob Frydman claims the firm missed the chance to file critical experts' reports in a bitter dispute with his former business partner, Eli Verschleiser.
By Charles Toutant | July 8, 2019
The trial judge erred by not allowing the plaintiff to present a "suit within a suit" to show the difference between the settlement he received in a personal injury case and the amount of money that would have been obtained by judgment, the Appellate Division said Monday as it remanded the case for trial.
By Charles Toutant | June 21, 2019
The appeals court said the evidence did not present a prima facie claim for legal malpractice, because plaintiff's claims against the Hazlet police department and one of its officers for malicious prosecution and spoliation were not ripe during the period that defendant represented her.
By Charles Toutant | June 17, 2019
A malpractice lawsuit claims the firm failed to assert statutory immunity defenses.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jon Lomurro, Gary Riveles and Abbott Brown | June 13, 2019
Model Jury Charge 5.51, Legal Malpractice, needs to be updated
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