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Commercial Law

  • Looking Ahead: Lessons Learned.

    Part Five of a Five-Part Series.

    As Mark Twain quipped, "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated." So too is the reported retail "apocalypse" and "death" of the shopping center. In fact, U.S. retailers opened 1,326 more locations in 2017 than they closed. When restaurants are added to the mix, there were a total of 4,080 new openings in 2017 and another 5,050 openings planned this year.

    January 01, 2018Kelly D. Stohs and David P. Vallas
  • Texas businesses and their attorneys should be aware of legal and practical issues that may arise in the event of a shipping insolvency. Two particularly murky areas that have been illuminated by recent case law are maritime liens and reclamation rights.

    January 01, 2018Nicole Hay and Thomas Scannell
  • An in-depth discussion of two major rulings.

    January 01, 2018ljnstaff
  • Will Your Company Be Prepared?

    FATCA is an effort by the United States to curb tax evasion and incentivize Foreign Financial Institutions (FFI) to report the overseas assets of U.S. persons. The U.S. encourages compliance by imposing a 30% withholding penalty on all U.S. source income and sale proceeds of non-compliant foreign financial institutions.

    January 01, 2018Ashley M. Elmore Drew and Adam J. Knight
  • Where the borrower's default is not in dispute, the First Department appears to have recognized that there is little reason to delay the inevitable foreclosure. Discussion of a case in point.

    December 01, 2017Stewart E. Sterk
  • Substantive non-consolidation opinion letters have long been a regular "check-the-box" item in large commercial real estate transactions. While substantive consolidation jurisprudence has not changed materially over the past decade, these opinion letters should not be treated lightly by borrowers or their counsel.

    December 01, 2017Paul A. Rubin and Hanh V. Huynh
  • Parties in complex commercial cases that are accused of defaulting on or breaching a contract may invoke the defense of impossibility, arguing that performance of contractual obligations was rendered impossible by an intervening event. But under New York law, those arguments rarely make it past the motion stage.

    December 01, 2017Thomas J. Hall
  • Discussion of a case in which a trial court sided with the property owner/defendant where the tenant sought to terminate the lease early, but could not because it was not in compliance with one of the requirements for early termination.

    December 01, 2017ljnstaff