When a company is confronted with a potential scandal and considering whether to launch an investigation, general counsel tend to be involved in that decision — and for good reason. But what happens when the legal chief gets leapfrogged?
- October 01, 2021Phillip Bantz
Planning Board Took Requisite Hard Look Under SEQRA Denial of Special Use Permit Upheld
October 01, 2021ssalkinRecording Artist's Attorney Prevails in Lawsuit Brought Against Her by Client's Record Label
October 01, 2021Stan SoocherYellowstone Injunction Denied for Failure to Move on Time
October 01, 2021ssalkinThe Second Circuit applied federal bankruptcy law when holding that good faith is an affirmative defense.
October 01, 2021Michael L. CookResidential Owners Have Claim for Inadequate Quality of Hotel Unit
October 01, 2021NYRE StaffThe Van Buren decision fits into a pattern of the court's modern criminal law jurisprudence that appears motivated by concerns about the ever-expanding reach and severity of federal criminal law.
October 01, 2021Robert J. Anello and Richard F. AlbertApproval of all the co-owners of a copyrighted work is needed to grant exclusive rights to third parties. Despite that, any co-owner can sell that co-owner's exclusive ownership share to third parties without the permission of the others The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California recently released an opinion that considered the interplay of these copyright issues.
September 01, 2021Stan SoocherTo survive preemption under §301 of the Copyright Act, courts consider whether a state law claim in a lawsuit has an "extra element" that qualitatively distinguishes it from a federal copyright claim. Courts typically find that state law claims, such as breach of contract, have an extra element. Other state law claims, such as conversion, get varying court determinations as to whether they are preempted.
September 01, 2021Stan Soocher






