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December issue in PDF format Image

December issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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The Leasing Hotline Image

The Leasing Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest commercial leasing cases from around the country.

Features

Understanding and Utilizing Percentage Rent Provisions Image

Understanding and Utilizing Percentage Rent Provisions

Myles Hannan

As retailers like to say, 'The three most important factors in retailing are location, location, location.' The real value of a retail lease, however, resides in the volume of sales produced at the location; therefore, the provider of the location — namely, the landlord — is a key player in the retailer's success. That is why percentage rent has developed in retail leases as a way by which the landlord that provides a successful location might share to some degree in that success.

Features

In the Spotlight: Silica Liability and the Premises Owner Image

In the Spotlight: Silica Liability and the Premises Owner

William E. Meyer, Jr., Andrew Young, & Beth Blackwood

Part One of this series explored the reasons why landlords should be concerned about silicosis litigation. This conclusion suggests some measures that landlords can take to avoid ' or at least reduce ' such litigation.

Features

Considerations in Drafting and Negotiating Early Lease Terminations Image

Considerations in Drafting and Negotiating Early Lease Terminations

John H. Lewis

The first impression one may have when preparing to draft an early termination agreement is that such a document should be a simple matter. It is true that simplicity and brevity in drafting are, in most circumstances, admirable qualities, and it is equally true that we frequently draft and negotiate documents that are much more complex than most lease termination agreements. Nevertheless, as with any effort to document a transaction, care must be taken in the preparation and negotiation of such an agreement to avoid overlooking potential risks and to protect the client's interests. This article explores some considerations in documenting the early termination of a lease, though not necessarily in order of importance. Although some specific suggestions are made and some sample provisions are included, the primary intent of this discussion is to alert the leasing practitioner to various issues and pitfalls that may be encountered.

Features

Employers Beware EEOC Information Request Image

Employers Beware EEOC Information Request

Mark Blondman & Brooke Iley

Understandably, companies have become more sensitive about protecting confidential, proprietary business information from disclosure to competitors and others outside the company.<br>A recent ruling by the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, <i>Venetian Casino Report v. EEOC</i>, 2006 WL 2806568 (D.D. Cir. 2006), demonstrates that such disclosures may occur in the most unexpected ways.

Features

Business Crimes Hotline Image

Business Crimes Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

National rulings of interest.

In the Courts Image

In the Courts

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

Stock Option Backdating Image

Stock Option Backdating

Michael E. Clark

Just as the business community began making headway with Congress to reduce Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) obligations, a new type of corporate wrongdoing has been revealed ' backdated stock options used by the executives at many companies and some directors to convert their options at the most opportune times and at the expense of other shareholders and investors. What is troubling is how the boards of directors at so many companies could have approved the backdating or not known about it after SOX and the recent wave of high-profile corporate fraud investigations and prosecutions.

One Size Fits All? Image

One Size Fits All?

Jefferson M. Gray

Today, a Procrustean 'one-size-fits-all' approach increasingly characterizes federal appellate practice, particularly for attorneys who handle complex conspiracy or white-collar cases. While page limits for appellate briefs date back to at least the 1940s, within the past 20 years they have been applied with a new and sometimes surprising inflexibility. No matter how long the trial, how complicated its facts, or how numerous the appellate issues may be, the day has passed when counsel can assume that requests to file a brief in excess of the standard word limits will be granted.

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