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Features

Taming the Tenant's Form of Lease Image

Taming the Tenant's Form of Lease

Myles Hannan

Accustomed to manning the ramparts in defense of its landlord client's form of lease, it is always a bit unsettling for a landlord's lawyer to be advised by its client that "for this national tenant, we must work from the tenant's form of lease." Suddenly, instead of engaging in the familiar determination of which of the tenant's requested lease revisions are acceptable to the landlord, the lawyer is faced with determining which essential provisions of a lease from landlord's perspective are either entirely or substantially missing from the tenant's form of lease and then negotiating to include such provisions.

Features

New York's Labor Law Image

New York's Labor Law

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Both Labor Law '240(1) and '241(6) impose a nondelegable duty on property owners to provide specified protections to workers. This duty exists regardless of whether or not the owner controlled, directed, or supervised the work. As the courts have repeatedly observed, the imposition of this duty protects workers, by placing ultimate responsibility for their safety upon owners and contractors, instead of on the workers themselves.

<b>In the Spotlight</b>: Can Developers and Municipalities Play Well Together in the Green Sandbox? Image

<b>In the Spotlight</b>: Can Developers and Municipalities Play Well Together in the Green Sandbox?

Michael W. McNatt

Planning staff of municipalities often view developers with a degree of suspicion, while developers tend to see municipalities as roadblocks ' or, at the very least, speed bumps ' when it comes to building projects. Developers respond to market forces and pursue the rewards of capitalism, while municipalities are concerned about infrastructure issues and meeting the long-term needs of their citizens.

Features

Media & Communications Corner: Weaving External Marketing and Communications into Professional Development Image

Media & Communications Corner: Weaving External Marketing and Communications into Professional Development

Kevin Aschenbrenner

An interview with Sharon Meit Abrahams, Director of Professional Development, McDermott Will &amp; Emery LLP (Miami).

Features

Consent to Sublease Image

Consent to Sublease

Jay A. Gitles

Substantial portions of commercial space are commonly available via sublease. In comparison with a direct lease (which customarily becomes effective upon execution and delivery by the Landlord and the Tenant), a sublease usually only becomes effective if and when the Sublandlord and Subtenant execute and deliver the Sublease and the Master Landlord executes and delivers a Consent to Sublease.

Law Firm Leadership: Accessing the Inner Entrepreneur Image

Law Firm Leadership: Accessing the Inner Entrepreneur

David H. Freeman

Founding and/or senior partners are the finders, and they hire minders and grinders to do the bulk of the work. Then the day comes when these hires are instructed to go out and get new clients. Suddenly, a population trained to "succeed" in one way has to learn to survive in a vastly different environment.

Features

MLF 50 Deadline Extended Image

MLF 50 Deadline Extended

Elizabeth Anne 'Betiayn' Tursi

The deadline for submissions to the coveted MLF 50 ' The Top 50 Law Firms in Marketing and Communications ' has been extended to Monday, Sept. 29, 2008. Click <a href="http://www.lawjournalnewsletters.com/issues/ljn_marketing/22_3/news/150739-1.html">here</a> to see the submission criteria.

September issue in PDF format Image

September issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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Case Notes Image

Case Notes

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest product liability cases from around the country.

Features

Supreme Court Speaks Again on Punitive Damages Image

Supreme Court Speaks Again on Punitive Damages

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

On June 25, the U.S. Supreme Court decided <i>Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker</i>, a ruling likely to fortify the view that an award of punitive damages should not exceed the amount of the compensatory award. To be sure, some will argue that there are, may be, or ought to be, exceptions; some will argue that the Court was only deciding federal common law in a maritime case and not the limits of state common law; and some may say there is still support for accepting punitive awards that exceed a 1:1 ratio.

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