0 results for 'Cooper Levenson April'
Varsolona v. Breen Capital Services Corp. et al, etc.,
Neither the Tax Sale Act nor public policy requires the invalidation of private installment-payment plans (IPPs) between the owners of property subject to liens imposed by tax-sale certificates (TSCs), and servicers which pursue the collection of the TSCs and, if necessary, foreclosure, on behalf of the trusts that purchase bundles of TSCs as a part of the privatization of real estate tax collection (or "tax farming"), and the trial court erred in finding that the IPPs here were illegal; the IPPs enhanceTop 20 Personal Injury Awards of the Year
Here are the largest personal injury verdicts reported by the Law Journal for the 12 months ending Aug. 25, 2003, ranked in order of their value as of date of verdict or settlement.Swan v. Boardwalk Regency Corporation, d/b/a Caesars Atlantic City
Plaintiff was not fired in violation of a "clearly enunciated public policy" for conducting improper video surveillance in a casino, and the employer had the right to independently assess plaintiff's conduct and the bad publicity surrounding the charges and terminate plaintiff with or without cause.View more book results for the query "Cooper Levenson April"
Secure Heritage, Inc. v. City of Cape May et al,
The sections of the municipal ordinance that ban the sale of seasonal beach tags to hotels, motels, inns, bed and breakfasts, and other rental units, but permit individuals to purchase transferable seasonable beach tags are not rationally related to the intent of the ordinance ? to raise revenue for beach operations ? and violate both the federal and State constitutions, and the trial court order is affirmed insofar as it declared the provisions banning the sale and transfer of seasonal beach tags to theIneligible In-House Counsel, Multijurisdictional Practitioners and Pro Hac Vice Attorneys
Notice to the bar.Jury Divides Blame in Wrongful-Death Suit, Paring Award
An Atlantic City, N.J., jury awarded murder victim Peggy Ann Selvaggio's estate $12.6 million in a suit filed by her brothers against the man who killed Selvaggio and against Harrah's Casino Hotel, where she worked as a waitress. The suit said Harrah's failed to provide adequate security in the employee parking lot where Selvaggio was killed. In apportioning blame, the jury assigned 2 percent to Harrah's and the rest to the murderer.Ostrowski v. Cape Transit Corp. et al
Defendant's presentation of expert medical-opinion testimony that plaintiff was faking his symptoms of a serious brain injury constituted an attack on his character for truthfulness which he could rebut with his own character evidence; since defense counsel's opening statement constituted an attack on plaintiff's character, allowing him to present evidence of his own character in his case in chief was not an abuse of discretion.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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