When You Aren’t Paid for the Work You’ve Done in New York

It should come as no surprise that this has increasingly become one of the most common – if not the most common – form of breach of contract as the economy has continued to falter. Some customers have professed their desire to pay your bills, but “they just don’t have the money right now.” More [...]

CBS Sues Writer, Claiming He Breached Contract By Re-Selling Series

Sometimes the details of a breach of contract claim are so juicy it is hard to remain objective. And I readily admit, after reading a rendition of the detailed allegations in the lawsuit that CBS brought against one of its writers, Lukas Reiter, it is hard not to believe or side with CBS. In essence, [...]

Why Investigating Jurors’ Social Networks May Be a Bad Idea

This is a whole new world of creepy. In an ethics opinion that was recently handed down, the New York County Lawyers Association’s Committee on Professional Ethics wrote that it is both “proper and ethical” for attorneys to vet prospective jurors by “passively” investigating the jurors’ social networking profiles, i.e., viewing what is publicly available [...]

Is “Civil Litigation” an Oxymoron?

In a breach of contract and non-compete case I was recently hired to defend, I had a very odd first phone conversation with my adversary. And at the end of the call, I told him that I would be following up with a short e-mail memorializing our “pleasant conversation.” His response took me by surprise: [...]