Can the president of a small company be held personally liable for the company’s issuance of dishonored checks? Not unless the plaintiff can prove that this individual officer was personally involved in the checks’ issuance, said a New York Federal Judge. In Interstate Foods, Inc. v. Lehmann, a decision that was recently published in the [...]
In a case with salacious – and all-too-common facts – that was reported in this week’s New York Law Journal, a Westchester County court declined to dismiss the plaintiff’s claim that the defendants were diverting their assets in a desperate attempt to avoid a judgment that had been rendered against them in a breach of [...]
The fact pattern is all too familiar: D enters into a contract with small business P to jointly develop certain products, and then not only breaches the contract with P, but then breaches his fiduciary duty to P and uses the proprietary information that he gained during their alliance to try and poach P’s proprietary [...]