Complex Business Litigation Attorneys

When a person intentionally interferes with your contract with another person, without justification, that causes you damages (e.g., loss of the contract), you have a claim against that third party for tortuously interfering with you and your contract counterparty.  In New York, the law does not impose the requirement that the third party interferer act with mal intent in procuring the breach of your contract.  The interferer simply must be aware that such a contract exists.  On the other hand, where a third party interferes with your prospective or existing economic relations, the law generally requires evidence that the interferer procured severance with your economic relations through wrongful means or with malicious intent.
Hit by an Uber? Who do you sue?

The short answer to this question is, if you were hit by an Uber, you sue Uber because of the respondeat superior rule. The long answer to this...

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AFFF MDL Co-Leads Secure $750 Million Settlement with Tyco Fire Products LP in AFFF MDL

In a monumental stride towards addressing the nation’s PFAS water contamination crisis, Paul Napoli, along with the co-leads of the AFFF Multi-District Litigation, have achieved a groundbreaking $750...

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Are AI’s Impacts on the Legal Profession Exciting or Scary?

When AI innovator OpenAI released ChatGPT in November of 2022, it sent shockwaves through the world, from tech leaders to academia. Quickly, stories surfaced of people using ChatGPT to “cheat,”...

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