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Features

Electronic Cigarettes

Ronald J. Levine & Gabrielle C. Wilson

While e-cigarette manufacturers and distributors promote the potential advances of this new technology over traditional cigarettes, the degree to which e-cigarettes are safe is the topic of great debate, and the source of litigation.

Features

When There Is No License, Is There a Marriage?

Martin E. Friedlander

In Part One of this article, we asked the question: What happens when your client says he was married before, but without a license, in a religious ceremony? Since he thought that the State did not recognize his marriage, and he got a religious divorce, he assumed he was free to marry once more. Is he right?

The NLRB's 'Joint Employer' Thrust Defies 50 Years of Judicial Precedent

David J. Kaufmann

In this article, I analyze how the NLRB general counsel's approach is refuted by 50 years of virtually unanimous judicial decisions, and address a recent NLRB decision greatly expanding who may be deemed a "joint employer" (and how this decision discarded 30 years of NLRB precedent). I also discuss the harsh consequences that may pertain should the NLRB general counsel succeed in his efforts to have franchisors declared the "joint employers" of their franchisees' employees.

Columns & Departments

<i><b>At the Intersection</i></b>Manterruption Redux

Pamela Woldow & Doug Richardson

Last August and September, we published a two-part article on the phenomenon called "manterruption." We commented on some important social research discussing men's pervasive tendency to interrupt women in group meetings or settings where the power stakes were high ("manterruption") and to appropriate women's ideas as their own ("bropropriation"). These posts triggered a torrent of response, some of which was gratifying to us and some of which was pretty bewildering.

Features

<b><i>In the Spotlight:</i></b> Relocation Clauses

Mark Morfopoulos

Many landlords are faced with a dilemma when signing a deal with a small tenant. What if a larger tenant wants to lease a large block of space and a smaller tenant is already leasing some of the space that the larger tenant needs? To cover this situation, many landlords require a relocation provision to be inserted into the leases it enters into with small tenants.

Mobile Mayhem: Smartphones and Security (Or the Lack Thereof)

Adam Cohen

"It's a mobile jungle out there, and your corporate data is too valuable to just bungle through it."

Features

The Limits of Liens in Proceeds Under Article 9

Frank Peretore

This is the first in a series of articles on liens in proceeds under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC).

The Essentials of Collaboration Agreements for Literary Works

Michael I. Rudell & Neil J. Rosini

While all creative collaborations have features in common, there's a uniquely intimate and trusting nature of the relationship between someone (the subject) whose story interests the public, and a writer engaged by him or her to put that story, either jointly or singly, into concrete form (the writer).

Features

A More Equal Road to Succession in Regulated Apartments After <b><i>Obergefell</i></b> and the Marriage Equality Act

Darryl M. Vernon

For gay couples who live in rent-regulated apartments, <I>360 Associates v. Hyers and Pederson</I>, N.Y. County Civ.Ct. Index 72743/13 (2015), illustrates the resulting problems and the impact of <I>Obergefell.</I>

Columns & Departments

Landlord & Tenant

ALM Staff

Analysis of several key cases.

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