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Features

Recent Court Rulings on 'Embedding' Foreshadow Split In Circuits Image

Recent Court Rulings on 'Embedding' Foreshadow Split In Circuits

Tamerlin Godley and Kiaura Clark

When and how can someone else's visual content be displayed on a website without the website operator running afoul of copyright law? When and how can someone else display the website operator's visual content? A recent ruling on a popular practice at the center of these issues for entertainment and media companies may upend the current paradigm.

Features

Consultants Lose Bid for Percentage of Record Label Image

Consultants Lose Bid for Percentage of Record Label

Greg Land

A successful Atlanta-based hip-hop and R&B label beat back the efforts of a Los Angeles consulting firm to lay claim to hundreds of thousands of dollars and a large chunk of the company itself, when a jury declared that the record company owed the consultants less than $3,500.

Columns & Departments

Fresh Filings Image

Fresh Filings

ljnstaff

Notable court filings in entertainment law.

Features

Update On Bankruptcy Appellate Practice: Part One — Appellate Standing Image

Update On Bankruptcy Appellate Practice: Part One — Appellate Standing

Michael L. Cook

Recent cases show that appellate courts continue to wrestle with standing, jurisdiction, mootness, excusable neglect and finality, among other things. The following overview, in a series of installments, shows what the courts have been addressing during just the past three years. This first installment will cover appellate standing.

Features

Guidance on Distributions As 'Disbursements' and U.S. Trustee Fees Image

Guidance on Distributions As 'Disbursements' and U.S. Trustee Fees

Francis J. Lawall & Marcy J. McLaughlin Smith

In a recent case from the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, In re Paragon Offshore PLC, the bankruptcy court provided guidance on whether a post-plan effective date litigation trust's distributions constituted disbursements subject to the U.S. Trustee fee "tax."

Features

Pros and Cons of Master Leases Image

Pros and Cons of Master Leases

Peter E. Fisch & Salvatore Gogliormella

Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code grants debtors the ability to assume or reject any executory contract or unexpired lease. Debtors must assume or reject a lease in its entirety and are not free under Section 365 to assume only favorable provisions of a lease. Courts, however, have consistently held that they will not find a multi-property master lease to be a unitary lease merely because such properties are demised in a single document.

Features

SCOTUS Passes on Bankruptcy Law Cases, Leaving Circuit Court Splits Image

SCOTUS Passes on Bankruptcy Law Cases, Leaving Circuit Court Splits

Corinne Ball

'Purdue Pharma' Looms Although four cases presenting important bankruptcy issues were teed up for the Supreme Court's consideration this term, the Court denied certiorari for each. Each of these petitions involve splits among the circuit courts of appeals, influencing choice of venue and the extent to which bankruptcy decisions are subject to meaningful appeal.

Features

Pleading Alter Ego Liability In Commercial Lease Disputes Image

Pleading Alter Ego Liability In Commercial Lease Disputes

Efrem Z. Fischer & Edward E. Klein

The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged commercial landlords to rely on various legal theories to protect their legitimate rights. As federal, state and local governments enact laws to protect tenants from evictions and/or the enforcement of personal lease guarantees, a landlord's counsel must seek avenues to press its clients' rights against any entity who may be liable for outstanding rent arrears due and owing under a commercial lease.

Features

State Attorneys General Issue Support for Bankruptcy Venue Reform Legislation Image

State Attorneys General Issue Support for Bankruptcy Venue Reform Legislation

P.J. D'Annunzio

Attorneys general from 41 states, along with Puerto Rico and Guam, have issued a statement in support of legislation before Congress geared toward stopping corporations from venue-shopping bankruptcy cases.

Features

Implications of Second Circuit Ruling on Fugitive Disentitlement Image

Implications of Second Circuit Ruling on Fugitive Disentitlement

Elkan Abramowitz & Jonathan S. Sack

Historically, the "fugitive disentitlement" doctrine has foreclosed challenges to criminal charges by a defendant who does not physically submit to a U.S. court's jurisdiction. As a consequence, to make even threshold challenges to an indictment, a defendant who lives abroad must leave home, waive the right to oppose extradition, and risk pre-trial detention in the United States.

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MOST POPULAR STORIES

  • Major Differences In UK, U.S. Copyright Laws
    This article highlights how copyright law in the United Kingdom differs from U.S. copyright law, and points out differences that may be crucial to entertainment and media businesses familiar with U.S law that are interested in operating in the United Kingdom or under UK law. The article also briefly addresses contrasts in UK and U.S. trademark law.
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  • Legal Possession: What Does It Mean?
    Possession of real property is a matter of physical fact. Having the right or legal entitlement to possession is not "possession," possession is "the fact of having or holding property in one's power." That power means having physical dominion and control over the property.
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  • The Stranger to the Deed Rule
    In 1987, a unanimous Court of Appeals reaffirmed the vitality of the "stranger to the deed" rule, which holds that if a grantor executes a deed to a grantee purporting to create an easement in a third party, the easement is invalid. Daniello v. Wagner, decided by the Second Department on November 29th, makes it clear that not all grantors (or their lawyers) have received the Court of Appeals' message, suggesting that the rule needs re-examination.
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