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Litigation

  • New York State Bar Association Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Section Annual Spring Meeting

    May 01, 2018ssalkin
  • Slip-and-Fall Victim Cannot Recover from Landlord or Tenant

    May 01, 2018ssalkin
  • The culturally conscious property owner may be interested in commissioning an artist to beautify the outdoor wall of the owner's warehouse space. However, it's important to understand the legal effect of commissioning such work and the scope of rights that the property owner acquires and surrenders as a result.

    April 01, 2018Matthew V. Wilson and Tucker Barr
  • One of the key requirements of a lease, from a landlord's viewpoint, is that it ensures the landlord has the ability to access a tenant's space. When preparing a lease for a landlord, consider including the following items to make sure that the landlord is permitted access to all spaces on the premises at all appropriate times.

    April 01, 2018Mark Morfopoulos
  • The important ongoing industry and national conversation about sexual harassment is serving as a wake-up call to entertainment companies, board members and C-suite executives about the need to be proactive when confronted with allegations of harassment or other workplace misconduct.

    April 01, 2018Carri H. Cohen, Janie F. Schulman and Joshua Hill
  • Only a small fraction of television news broadcasts are made available online. For a party to monitor and view all news coverage of an event, it would essentially have to watch and record all news broadcasts 24/7. That's exactly what media-monitoring service TVEyes did. There was no dispute that TVEyes had copied Fox News's content. Instead, the issue was whether TVEyes's service constituted fair use.

    April 01, 2018Crystal Genteman and Chris Bussert
  • Four years ago, we explored whether a commercial tenant could waive its common law right to seek a Yellowstone Injunction. At that time, there was no appellate authority directly on point. This all changed on Jan. 31, 2018, when the Appellate Division, Second Department ruled in 159 MP Corp., v Redbridge Bedford, LLC that the “commercial tenants' voluntary and limited waiver of declaratory judgment remedies in their written lease is valid and enforceable, and not violative of New York's public policy …”

    April 01, 2018Jeffrey Turkel and Joshua Kopelowitz
  • The First Circuit Widens the Controversy

    In In re Tempnology, the First Circuit held that the debtor's rejection of a trademark license strips the nondebtor licensee of any right to continue to use the trademarks. In so doing, the court takes the same approach as the Fourth Circuit and rejects the approaches advocated by the Third and Seventh Circuits.

    April 01, 2018Mark W. Page
  • No Tacking of Adverse Possession Claims
    Issues of Fact Preclude Injunction Requiring Removal of Encroachments
    Statute of Limitations Bars Foreclosure Claim
    Permission Bars Prescriptive Easement Claim

    April 01, 2018ssalkin