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Declaring Digital Documents As Records Image

Declaring Digital Documents As Records

Eric Mosca

Many law firms have joined the quest to go 'paperless.' This holy grail of efficiency and order in the digital age has been touted for years as being just over the horizon. The answer to the question 'how do we get there?' has been just as elusive. In a world where so many attorneys and support staff still rely on hard copy versions of documents, the only way to quickly go paperless has involved massive amounts of document imaging, even when many of the documents being scanned originated in an electronic format.

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In the Marketplace Image

In the Marketplace

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Who's Going Where; Who's Doing What.

Shortfall Fees in Factoring Pact Image

Shortfall Fees in Factoring Pact

Shlomit Ophir-Harel & Chaim Rybak

In a recent decision, Judge Shira A. Scheindlin of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York applied New Jersey law in ruling that a shortfall fee charged by a factoring company was enforceable, pursuant to an alternative fee structure under a certain factoring agreement.

Inaccurate Financing Statement Image

Inaccurate Financing Statement

Adam J. Schlagman

Sure, it happens. People make mistakes. But, when does a mistake made on a financing statement render it 'seriously misleading' under revised Uniform Commercial Code '9-506 and thus ineffective to perfect an asserted security interest? The Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida recently addressed this issue in the case of <i>In re John's Bean Farm of Homestead Inc.</i>

Lease Voided Due to Vendor' Default Image

Lease Voided Due to Vendor' Default

Robert M. Tils

On Oct. 31, 2007, a trial-level court in New York issued a decision finding that an equipment lease 'fail[ed] for lack of consideration' when the bankrupt vendor did not deliver the leased equipment, even though the lessee had signed a lease amendment ... a look at the ruling.

Who Benefits? Image

Who Benefits?

Anthony Michael Sabino

An anlysis of the recent case of <i>Rush v. U.S. Bancorp Equipment Finance, Inc.</i>, __ S.D. Rep. ___ (2007 SD 119, Nov. 14, 2007). There, the plaintiff put forth the novel contention that the creditor/defendant should have protected the debtor's financial condition by perfecting the creditor's interest.

Features

e-Working For a Living Image

e-Working For a Living

Stanley P. Jaskiewicz

No one would deny that those in the e-commerce economy 'work hard for the money,' in the words of nascent e-commerce entrepreneur and one-time disco queen Donna Summer. But is 'workin' for a living' any different for an e-commerce manager or executive than for the rest of us? To consider how dot-com employment has evolved over the past few years, I looked at a random sample of recent employment agreements to identify current practices and techniques in e-commerce employment contracting.

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Movers & Shakers

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Who's doing what; who's going where.

Features

Case Briefs Image

Case Briefs

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

Features

So What Does Your Fidelity Policy Actually Cover? Image

So What Does Your Fidelity Policy Actually Cover?

John N. Ellison & Luke E. Debevec

Businesses purchase fidelity insurance to cover their losses from crime such as employee theft and forgery. This need is usually most pronounced for banks and other financial service firms, where employees have access to enormous amounts of money. For these policyholders, misplaced trust in a resourceful employee can result in millions of dollars disappearing from the policyholder or its clients with only a few keystrokes.

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