Features
Confronting Corrupt Practices: Maintaining a Moral Compass in International Business
<i>Hide a dagger in a smile. Murder with a borrowed knife. Loot a burning house.</i> If you cannot anticipate these and the other classic 'Thirty-Six Stratagems' that are widely studied and practiced in China, you may be perilously unprepared to pursue business, including legal business, in the world's largest market. And while China may be an extreme example, analogs of these deceptive and sometimes corrupt practices appear in other cultures worldwide.
Features
Landlord & Tenant
Discussion and analysis of the latest rulings.
Associates Need Financial Savvy: Ten Concepts Managing Partners Wish Associates Knew Better
A solid grasp of financial and accounting fundamentals can enormously enhance the value of a young attorney's work product. I often saw evidence of this in my previous legal administrator role for a 50-attorney Denver law firm. In my current CPA practice, in which I serve more than 20 law firms on an ongoing basis, I see the same pattern in working closely with attorneys on tax planning and compliance, financial reporting, fraud investigations, forensic accounting, and business appraisals.
Index
Everything contained in this issue in an easy-to-use list.
Features
Enforcing City-Imposed Covenants Against Successor Landowners
When the City of New York sells property subject to statutorily authorized conditions, what language in the deed is necessary to ensure that the conditions bind subsequent purchasers? That question confronted the Court of Appeals in <i>328 Owners Corp. v. 300 West 86 Oaks Corp</i>. (NYLJ 4/4/07, p. 18, col. 1), in which the Court of Appeals held that successor purchasers were bound by deed language restricting the original purchaser to use of the property for rehabilitation or conservation of the existing building or construction of one to four unit dwellings.
An Overview of Bill 152: An Act to Modernize Various Acts Administered By Or Affecting the Ministry of Government Services, 2006
Ontario was the first province in Canada to adopt a UCC Article 9 type registration system called the '<i>Personal Property Security Act</i>' or PPSA. During the early 1990s, Ontario refreshed its legislation, and other Canadian provinces soon followed with their own acts that were modeled on but not the same as the Ontario PPSA. As with any legislation, certain changes made by other provinces turned out to be superior to the act that it modeled.
Features
In the Marketplace
Highlights of the latest equipment leasing news from around the country.
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