Business Litigation

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.
Aviation Safety: ATC Reform, and What Passengers Need to Know

As global air travel reaches record highs, scrutiny intensifies over aviation safety, FAA oversight, and legislative efforts to modernize U.S. airspace.  The airline industry is on track to...

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Two Verdicts in Two Days: What the Meta Rulings in New Mexico and Los Angeles Mean for Schools

By: Shayna Sacks, Partner, Napoli Shkolnik   This week, in the span of two days, juries handed down two landmark verdicts against Meta. Together, they represent the most significant legal accountability these...

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Massachusetts Communities Are Suing Industrial Polluters Over PFAS in Their Drinking Water

By Paul Napoli, partner at Napoli Shkolnik and nationally recognized environmental attorney Across Massachusetts, communities like Pepperell, Groveland, and others have filed federal lawsuits alleging that decades of...

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