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February 14, 2005 |

Gorman v. Waters & Bugbee, Inc.

The 26-week period from certain specified events within which an employer must make a voluntary tender of permanent disability to an employee injured at work in order to receive the benefit of a reduced contribution toward the employee's attorneys' fee is a bright-line rule; where, as here, the employer does not make the tender within that time, it may not receive the statutory benefit; the substantial-compliance doctrine is inapplicable to this statutory benefit.
7 minute read
July 31, 2002 |

Donors' Heirs Charge Princeton With Misusing Diplomat School Endowment

In 1961, Charles and Marie Robertson donated $35 million to Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The donation, now a $600 million endowment, funds most of the school's programs, designed to groom students for foreign service careers. But the Robertsons' heirs, unsatisfied by how they say the money has been used, now want the money back to give to another school.
3 minute read
July 29, 2002 |

Donors` Heirs Charge Princeton With Misusing Diplomat School Endowment

Heirs to the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. fortune that created a multimillion-dollar endowment at Princeton University`s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs claim the university violated the foundation`s charter - and the donors` intent - by commingling the endowment with the university`s other funds.
3 minute read
July 13, 2012 |

Verdict Search

Verdicts and settlements in New Jersey state and federal courts.
3 minute read
October 09, 2013 |

Collecting Fees After the Demise of the Retaining Lien

No, you cannot keep your client's papers until he pays that outstanding bill for legal services rendered. But there are other ways to collect payment.
6 minute read
March 14, 2005 |

Court Puts Chink in Public Entities' Discretionary-Immunity Shield

Compliance with a safety manual does not automatically protect public agencies from being sued for negligence, the state Supreme Court has ruled.
4 minute read
January 29, 2007 |

New Laws on Auto Accident Reports, Workers' Comp and Sex Offenders

New laws make it easier for lawyers to get hold of automobile accident reports, allow injured employees to keep more of the money they recover when they sue third parties, and increase penalties for failure to comply with Megan's Law.
4 minute read
March 15, 2013 |

Third Circuit Revives Basketball Referee's Gender-Bias Lawsuit

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reinstated a gender-discrimination case brought by a basketball referee after a New Jersey district judge dismissed her claims.
5 minute read
March 08, 2012 |

Reverse-Mortgage Payments Deemed Assets Eligible for Garnishment

Monthly payments from a reverse mortgage are fair game for execution to satisfy a civil judgment, a state appeals court says.
4 minute read
July 05, 2007 |

Garrett v. Matisa

An attorney moving to withdraw because he cannot locate his client must certify that despite diligent efforts he has been unable to locate and actually serve the client with notice, and on such a showing the motion may be served by publication.
4 minute read

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