When employees use their employers' electronic systems for personal communications and storage of personal documents, there are potential implications for the attorney-client and marital privileges.
- September 26, 2011Marjorie J. Peerce and Elizabeth S. Weinstein
Many commentators have suggested that the newly aggressive use of wiretaps will have a profound chilling effect on the practices of the financial services sector.
September 26, 2011Jonathan B. New and Sammi MalekThe "red flag" theory carries the danger of fostering undeserved prosecutions, for so much of it involves the feelings or the opinions of the prosecutor ' and conceivably of a jury.
September 26, 2011Stanley S. Arkin and Howard J. KaplanThis two-part series looks at the law governing a franchisor's ability to effectuate broadscale changes to its network. Part Two herein examines franchise network change triggered by an acquisition of the franchisor.
September 26, 2011David J. KaufmannThe common law has been displaced now in several jurisdictions where the courts are deviating from the common law rule in commercial leases and toward the imposition of an affirmative duty upon commercial landlords to undertake repairs to leased premises.
September 26, 2011Catherine L. BurnsBoth landlords and tenants need to be aware of applicable state law concerning a landlord's duty to mitigate when negotiating the default provisions of a commercial lease. A look at three separate jurisdictions.
September 26, 2011John KellyWho's going where; who's doing what.
September 26, 2011ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |Subcontractors are the most vulnerable and exposed parties in the contractual chain, more likely to be blindsided by a bankruptcy filing.
September 26, 2011Steven D. Usdin and Nella M. BloomA common belief among bankruptcy practitioners has been that disputed matters invariably sound in equity, thus posing very little danger that an attorney would ever encounter a jury. But juries can appear where one least expects them.
September 26, 2011Philip Oliss and Sarah K. RathkeInvestors deceived by a Ponzi scheme typically suffer two blows. First, they learn that they may recover only a fraction of their investment ... and second, they are also likely to be sued in so-called "claw-back" lawsuits.
September 26, 2011Paul Rubin

