Law.com Subscribers SAVE 30%

Call 855-808-4530 or email [email protected] to receive your discount on a new subscription.

Columns & Departments

Landlord & Tenant Image

Landlord & Tenant

ssalkin

Tenant's Contractor Has Lien Against Landlord's Interest<br>Stipulation of Settlement Between Landlord and Tenant Did Not Release Guarantor<br>Landlord Bound By Rent Mistakenly Set By Temporary Receiver

Columns & Departments

Real Property Law Image

Real Property Law

ssalkin

Lot Owner Lacks Standing to Compel Payment of Assessments<br>No Foreclosure Jurisdiction Over Deceased Owners<br>Questions of Fact Preclude Summary Judgment on Claims of Easement By Necessity and Prescription

Columns & Departments

Development Image

Development

ssalkin

Zoning Board Bound By Prior Determination<br>Planning Board Had Rational Basis to Require Church to Record an Easement<br>Special Permit Denial Overturned<br>Restrictive Zoning Ordinance Sustained Against Multiple Challenges

Features

Perfecting Film Financiers' Liens in Copyrights Image

Perfecting Film Financiers' Liens in Copyrights

Bruce Goldner

The law on how to perfect a lien in a copyright application is foggy at best. This article sketches out pitfalls of the current process for perfecting a lien on a copyright application, and potential steps that a financier may take to help perfect and protect a film investment.

Features

Decision of Note: 6th Cir. Says No 'Magic Words' to 'Elect' Copyright Statutory Damages Image

Decision of Note: 6th Cir. Says No 'Magic Words' to 'Elect' Copyright Statutory Damages

Stan Soocher

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit decided that §504 of the U.S. Copyright Act doesn't require any “magic words incantation” for a copyright infringement plaintiff to choose a statutory damages award, that “[t]he word 'elect' does not by itself require formal procedures.”

Features

No Secondary Liability Seen Yet, By Band's Reps, for Sexual Assault Image

No Secondary Liability Seen Yet, By Band's Reps, for Sexual Assault

ssalkin

A federal judge in Camden, NJ decided that a Christian rock band's management, talent agent and lead singer weren't vicariously liable for the sexual assault of a teenage fan committed by a member of the band.

Features

11th Circuit Says Anti-SLAPP Law Doesn't Belong in Federal Court Image

11th Circuit Says Anti-SLAPP Law Doesn't Belong in Federal Court

R. Robin McDonald

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit rejected an appeal by CNN to dismiss a libel case over the cable network's 2015 investigation of infant deaths at a Florida hospital.

Features

SCOTUS Hears Arguments on Copyright Registration Approvals Image

SCOTUS Hears Arguments on Copyright Registration Approvals

Scott Graham

While hearing January 2019 oral arguments before it, the U.S. Supreme Court sounded inclined to resolve a circuit courts' split over copyright registration procedures against copyright holders.

Features

L.A. Sees Many Moves Among Entertainment Law Firms Image

L.A. Sees Many Moves Among Entertainment Law Firms

ssalkin

Entertainment practices with well-known clients are in high demand in the Los Angeles legal market, leading to a spate of lateral hires among American Lawyer 200 firms in the latter part of 2018.

Columns & Departments

Bit Parts Image

Bit Parts

Stan Soocher

Actor's Negligence Claim over Film Set Injury Preempted by California's Workers' Compensation Act<br>Nashville Federal Court Decides Record Producer Didn't Abandon Master Recordings of 1970s George Jones Album

Need Help?

  1. Prefer an IP authenticated environment? Request a transition or call 800-756-8993.
  2. Need other assistance? email Customer Service or call 1-877-256-2472.

MOST POPULAR STORIES

  • 'Customary Operations' or A Vacant Building?
    Many times, courts are faced with the question of whether a loss location is 'vacant' under a commercial property policy when trying to determine if the building owner or lessee is conducting customary operations. This article explores various decisions across the United States as to what is considered 'customary operations,' thereby rendering the property 'vacant.'
    Read More ›
  • Reining in the Inequitable Conduct Defense
    Responding to views from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and elsewhere about the unintended consequences of the current inequitable conduct doctrine, a divided <i>en banc</i> Federal Circuit decision issued on May 25, 2011 adjusted the standard of the materiality element to make this defense harder to establish.
    Read More ›
  • Authorship and Copyright In Hybrid AI-Human Collaborative Works
    The United States Copyright Office recently issued a letter ruling on the copyrightability of Kristina Kashtanova's comic book-like work, Zarya of the Dawn. The Kashtanova ruling indicates that the Copyright Office's determination of copyrightability of works involving use of AI will rely on whether the author is able to control and foresee with some measure of predictability the output of the authorial process
    Read More ›