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Barclays Center Contract Dispute Moves Forward
A subcontractor that worked on the Barclays Center in Brooklyn can sue the general contractor even though it signed claims releases, a Brooklyn judge has ruled, finding that extensive changes to the contract during construction may have voided those releases.Barclays Center Contract Dispute Moves Forward
A subcontractor that worked on the Barclays Center in Brooklyn can sue the general contractor even though it signed claims releases, a Brooklyn judge has ruled, finding that extensive changes to the contract during construction may have voided those releases.Linking In to a New Source of Evidence in Commercial Disputes
Authentication of social media information presents the newest layer of evidentiary challenges to admissibility.The Fine Art of Follow-up: Don't Be Obnoxious
There's a right way and a wrong way to make sure people are listening. Hounding them doesn't work.Cite as: Scarola Ellis LLP v. Padeh, 113781/09, NYLJ 1202492661418, at *1 (Sup., NY, Decided April 1, 2011)Justice Louis B. YorkDec
Cite as: Scarola Ellis, LLP v. Padeh, 113781/2009, NYLJ 1202466388780, at *1 (Sup. NY, Decided July 23, 2010)Justice Louis B. YorkDecided
'North Moore': Watershed in Construction-Law Contractual Privity?
Kevin J. Connolly, counsel to Zetlin & DeChiara LLP, writes that the construction lawyer's bag of tricks has long included the Liquidating Agreement, recognized by the courts as a valid mechanism for bridging the privity gap between owners and subcontractors. Yet age cannot wither, nor custom stale, the ingenuity of construction lawyers, who have recently opened novel prospects for this useful and flexible tool.Unlocking the Power of Early Case Assessment Workflows
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Good Legal Technology is Good Business: A Case for Bringing Employment Issues In-House
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Insights and Strategies for Effective Succession Planning in AM Law 100 Firms
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State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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