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Features

Development Image

Development

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

An important planning board case.

Features

Real Property Law Image

Real Property Law

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

A look at several key cases.

Landlord & Tenant Image

Landlord & Tenant

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Decision of note.

Cooperatives & Condominiums Image

Cooperatives & Condominiums

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

In-depth analysis of a recent key ruling.

Stuy Town: Redux in the Desert Image

Stuy Town: Redux in the Desert

Dean C. Waldt

The decision of the <i>New York Supreme Court in Bank of America, N.A. v. PSW NYC LLC</i> garnered national attention in 2010. The court ruled that, under the terms of an Intercreditor Agreement in common use in complex real estate loans across the United States, a mezzanine lender could not exercise its rights against its collateral without first paying off senior debt. Now the issue is causing a stir in the Arizona desert.

Features

Decisions of Interest Image

Decisions of Interest

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Analysis of a recent important ruling.

Features

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NJ & CT News

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Key happenings in neighboring states.

Split and Shared Custody Arrangements Image

Split and Shared Custody Arrangements

Jerome A. Wisselman & Lloyd C. Rosen

There are instances in which parents agree to substantially share the children's time between both their households, resulting in the children spending up to 50% of the time with the "noncustodial" parent. The Child Support Standards Act (CSSA) does not address this kind of sharing arrangement, which can lead to inequities.

Features

Divorce Granted After Trial Proves Irretrievable Breakdown Image

Divorce Granted After Trial Proves Irretrievable Breakdown

Janice G. Inman

In what was apparently the first trial of a contested no-fault divorce under New York's recently enacted Domestic Relations Law, Suffolk County Acting Supreme Court Judge James F. Quinn declared a 56-year marriage irretrievably broken and granted the plaintiff wife's request for divorce.

Features

You Can't Go Back! Or Can You? Image

You Can't Go Back! Or Can You?

Elana L. Yeger & Michael B. Solomon

In 2009 the Court of Appeals articulated a new rule for Family Law practitioners, referred to by some as the "don't look back" rule. The court in <i>Buntzman</i> simply did not want courts reviewing economic decisions made during the course of a marriage, or attempting to adjust for the fact that certain payments made from separate property may have benefited both spouses ' or even the non-titled spouse alone.

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