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.
PFAS in Biosolids: 2025 Statehouses Take the Lead

For PFAS in biosolids, 2025 was the year statehouses stepped decisively into the vacuum. While federal policy is evolving, state and local governments are rapidly redrawing the rules...

Read the Article
Suspected Birth Injury? What Parents Need to Know and Do Next

Bringing a baby into the world is supposed to be joyful. When something goes wrong during pregnancy, labor, or delivery, that joy can be replaced in an instant...

Read the Article
A Traveler’s Guide to Responding to a Car Accident

The holiday season is meant for connection and celebration, but travel can add unexpected pressure. Beginning at the end of November, more drivers take to the roads, increasing...

Read the Article

Our Locations

Please Contact Us for an In-Person Appointment