Recent rulings of interest to you and your practice.
- October 29, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
Analysis of recent key decisions.
October 29, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |A complete, easy-to-use listing of what's inside the newsletter.
October 29, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |The most important recent rulings.
October 29, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |In two recent cases, sponsors in New York State, the state that has the most complex regulatory scheme for the sale of condominiums in the United States, have been found to have failed to comply with the less rigorous disclosure mandated by the Interstate Land Sales Act ("ILSA").
October 29, 2010Stuart SaftThough NY Would Continue Child Support, CT Law Prevails In an unreported decision, Supreme Court, Westchester County, dismissed an action seeking continued payment of child support in accordance with New York law, as the child support order was issued by a Connecticut court and the father's discontinuance of payment was in accordance with Connecticut law. E.A. v. R.A., 28 Misc.3d 1239(A), Slip Copy, 2010 WL 3703271 (Table) N.Y.Sup.,2010 (Connolly, J.).
October 29, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |The attempt of the ex-wife of jailed attorney Marc S. Dreier to collect $7 million in support from his bankruptcy estate suffered a setback in October. Refusing to lift an automatic stay in the case, Southern District Chief Bankruptcy Judge Stuart M. Bernstein held that Elisa Dreier was not entitled to have a state judge decide whether Mr. Dreier's non-compliance with a separation agreement accelerated all of the support obligations payable under the pact.
October 29, 2010Noeleen G. WalderThe overriding policy that governs New York law with regard to custody determinations is that "there shall be no prima facie right to the custody of the child by either parent but the court shall determine what is for the best interests of the child." In more recent years, New York courts have divided "spheres," or "zones of decision-making," between the parents, in addition to determining the physical custody of the child.
October 29, 2010Bari Brandes Corbin and Evan B. Brandes

