Features
Who Doesn’t Love a Law Firm Rebrand? What Do Law Firms Need to Consider to Get It Right?
It is time for rebrands to become ‘business as usual’ for firms — becoming less about cosmetic changes towards being an inflection point for decisions about behavior, communications, and ambitions.
Features
Spotify Spotlight: Angry Artists, Angry Consumers Are Suing Music Streaming Giant
As a global streaming giant, Spotify is a big litigation target. As proof, the company is currently caught between new proposed class-action lawsuits filed by artists and filed by consumers.
Columns & Departments
Real Property Law
Survey Insufficient to Establish BoundaryAdverse Possession Claim Defeated for Failure to Establish Reasonable Basis for Belief of OwnershipServient Owner Prohibited from Locking Gate Over EasementShining Lights Over Neighboring Property Raises Questions of Fact About Nuisance ClaimPractical Location of Boundaries Doctrine AppliedWhen Court-Ordered License Expires, Licensor Is Entitled to Use and Occupancy
Features
Three Reasons Why Florida Commercial Real Estate Owners May Want to Continue Filing State Tax Returns
Some real estate projects may file a final sales tax return in October to report sales tax on rents related to September 2025 occupancy, the final month the sales tax on commercial leases was effective. However, there are three reasons why owners of commercial real estate projects may want to consider filing sales tax returns for three more years, even if they are merely “zero” returns.
Features
UMG’s Settlement With AI Music Platform May Prove Precedential In Copyright Cases
The world’s largest music label, Universal Music Group, has announced it reached a settlement with artificial intelligence music platform Udio in a copyright infringement suit — a decision that attorneys specializing in AI, intellectual property and entertainment law say may prove precedential down the line as artists in both the entertainment and publishing industries continue to navigate the question of fair use in pending litigation against AI firms.
Features
Ninth Circuit Pumps Brakes on CA Climate Change Disclosure Law
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit pumped the brakes on a California law requiring the state’s biggest companies to disclose their climate change-related financial risks. The law, referred to by its legislative number, SB 261, was scheduled to take effect Jan. 1.
Features
District Court Rules Backstop Fees Caused Chapter 11 Plan to Fail for Exclusivity
The “risk management” aspect of LME focuses on the compensation to be paid to the participating lenders to provide new investment and the additional time or optionality gained for the equity sponsor. Frequently the LME is followed by a bankruptcy case in which the participating lenders again attempt to exercise control over the process and their compensation through a restructuring support agreement and a prepackaged Chapter 11 plan. At least one district court has concluded that compensation payable to a subset of lender/investors in a creditor class violates this requirement, derailing a confirmed prepackaged Chapter 11 plan and remanding to the bankruptcy court to remedy.
Features
Private Equity Companies Look to Continue Inroads In Legal By Funding Lateral Partner Moves
Private equity companies, which have successfully made inroads into the legal industry, are now considering funding lateral partner moves to bring top rainmakers to midtiered firms that might not otherwise have the compensation flexibility to land top names, experts say.
Features
Clients Demand Value from Law Firms; Communicating It Maintains Trust
The firms that will navigate the next downturn best are those acting now — tightening alignment between marketing, communications, and client service teams so that everyone is telling the same value story.
Columns & Departments
Development
Special Permit Denial OverturnedNo Property Right to Short-Term RentalsZBA Interpretation of Zoning Ordinance Upheld
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