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Columns & Departments

Drug & Device News Image

Drug & Device News

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Bellwether Trial Opening in Vaginal Mesh MDL <br>NuvaRing Settlement in the Works

Features

Avoid Transfer Taxes? Maybe Not Image

Avoid Transfer Taxes? Maybe Not

Elias M. Zuckerman

Last month, we began discussion of a hypothetical couple's transfers of assets to one another. We continue our analysis of the tax consequences of their proposed agreement herein.

Features

Domino's Challenges Joint Employer Liability for Franchisors Image

Domino's Challenges Joint Employer Liability for Franchisors

Richard Blum & Hollis Pfitsch

After more than three years of litigation, delivery workers for four Domino's pizza restaurants in Manhattan are receiving payments for unpaid wages. The payments of nearly $1.3 million began in January and are divided among approximately 60 delivery workers. While rare, the case applied well-settled principles of joint employment under wage and hour law to bring in the franchisor.

Features

Dying Intestate After Divorce Image

Dying Intestate After Divorce

Joann T. Palumbo

I have been practicing law for over 25 years, but I am still shocked when I hear that a person who spent so much time, effort, and money in a divorce proceeding has not taken the time to confer with an attorney and sign a will.

Features

City Parkland: Invalid Lease or Permissible License? Image

City Parkland: Invalid Lease or Permissible License?

Stewart E. Sterk

When may a New York municipality authorize commercial use of parkland without express authorization of the state legislature? That question recently reached the Court of Appeals in <i>Union Square Park Community Coalition v. New York City Department of Parks and Recreation</i>, in which the court upheld an agreement between the city and a private party authorizing the latter to operate a seasonal restaurant in Union Square Park.

Columns & Departments

Court Watch Image

Court Watch

Rupert Barkoff, Lindsay A. Victor & Janice Inman

Arbitration of Trademark Dispute Not Required <br>Court Finds Tax Preparer's Operations Shady, Puts It Out of Business<br>Mode-of-Operation Liability Cannot Be Assumed

Features

Can Using Facebook Be a Firing Offense? Image

Can Using Facebook Be a Firing Offense?

Todd C. Taylor

You have likely read stories of employees being fired for poorly thought-out Facebook posts or controversial Tweets. Depending on your point of view, you may be sympathetic to the employer's desire to avoid being associated with offensive or controversial statements made by an opinionated worker ' or you may be appalled that an employer would concern itself with an employee's use of social media.

Columns & Departments

Landlord & Tenant Image

Landlord & Tenant

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Anticipatory Repudiation Raises Questions of Fact <br>Landlord Not Liable for Breaches of Its Predecessor<br>Successful Tenant Entitled To Attorneys' Fees<br>Three-Quarter House Residents Not Entitled to Rent Stablization Protection<br>Nonprimary Residence Proceeding Succeeds on Remand from Court of Appeals

Features

Tax Court Imposes New Limitation on IRA Rollovers Image

Tax Court Imposes New Limitation on IRA Rollovers

Amy Neifeld Shkedy & Rebecca Rosenberger Smolen

In <i>Bobrow v. Commissioner</i>, U.S. Tax Court Judge Joseph Nega surprisingly ruled that Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 408(d)(3)(B), which allows one tax-free 60-day rollover per year, applies to all of a taxpayer's IRAs, rather than to each IRA separately.

Features

Film Takedown Order Part of Controversy In Ninth Circuit Dispute over <i>Muslims</i> Film Image

Film Takedown Order Part of Controversy In Ninth Circuit Dispute over <i>Muslims</i> Film

Scott Graham

Controversy has followed <i>Innocence of Muslims</i> ever since the 14-minute video was uploaded to YouTube and dubbed into Arabic. After provoking violent and sometimes deadly protests around the world, the film has set off a legal firestorm at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

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