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Articles Posted in Lawyers and Legal Malpractice

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LLC Transparency (New York) and the CTA (Federal) Compliance becomes reality and potentially expensive.

Corporate Compliance UPDATE—(January 10, 2024). LLCs have been a favored entity for real estate for many years in New York.  Times are changing.  For those of you who own a beneficial interest in a New York Limited Liability Company, you need to contact your attorney.  Effective January 1, 2024, LLCs…

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Privacy and Social Media: How Your “Private” Content is Still Discoverable in a Lawsuit.

With all of the “fake news” making history in our world, it is important to remember that, as ubiquitous as Facebook may be, what you post may not be so “fake” when it comes to your personal litigation position.   If you have a lawsuit, whether it involves claims for personal…

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The new leader of Legal Malpractice Claims– HIre the Right Real Estate Lawyer.

The American Bar Association just released the latest survey of legal malpractice claims showing some interesting results. For the first time, real estate claims represented the greatest number of claims (20.33%), followed by plaintiffs’ personal injury (15.59%), family law (12.14%), estates, trust and probate (10.67%), and collection and bankruptcy (9.2%).…

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Punitive Damages: A New Risk in Legal Malpractice in New York?

A Florida Court recently affirmed a significant award of punitive damages against a law firm in a legal malpractice case, raising the question: could this happen in New York? See Young v. Becker & Poliakoff, P.A., No. 4D09-4869 (Fla. 4th DCA May 23, 2012). In the Young case, the plaintiff…

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A Decision Heard ‘Round the Legal World—Fischer & Mandell LLP v. Citibank.’

In February 2011, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (including New York) handed down a decision that should have every attorney dotting their “I’s” and crossing their “T’s.” In Fischer & Mandell LLP v. Citibank, 632 F.3d 793 (2d Cir. 2001), the court affirmed summary judgment against a…

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So Your Attorney Told You Not to Talk to the Other Party in New York?

Every day parties hire lawyers to “resolve” a dispute, to “negotiate” a transaction, to “settle” a matter that has arisen between two entities or individuals. The attorney often jumps into the fray (swords raised), has discussions with the other lawyer, and, sometimes, those communications get garbled leaving the process damaged,…

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Attorney Fee Disputes in New York and Part 137 de novo review.

So, you signed the retainer with an attorney, litigated a case or resolved the matter, but now have a fee dispute with your lawyer over fees, malpractice, or something else. You are considering a lawsuit against that attorney, or that attorney may have sued you to recover her fees. You…

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Attorney Malpractice, Title Insurance to Prescriptive Easements, No Access in New York.

The plaintiff in McColgan v. Brewer owned a part of what was a larger parcel of property owned by M. Kelley. During construction of the New York State Thruway, the state of New York acquired the middle part of the original Kelley parcel. As a result, Kelley owned two separate…

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Attorney Ethics May Result in Attorney Liability to Clients and Third Parties in New York.

As much as the law changes, it stays the same. Oliver Wendell Holmes, an original legal theorist, revolutionized the understanding of law when he reconceived common law as a theory of social inquiry. Arguing that the law was, in fact, a social reconstruction of ever-changing historical contexts, we are more…

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Does Settlement Bar Legal Malpractice in New York?

Does a client have the right to bring a legal malpractice case against the attorney who forced, recommended, or otherwise allowed the client to knowingly accept in New York? Generally, New York does not bar claims for legal malpractice arising from a litigation settled by the former client. A client…

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