The Securities and Exchange Commission reported its first enforcement action earlier this month against a company that inserted restrictive language in an employee confidentiality agreement to impede the whistleblower reporting process. In this action, the SEC charged that engineering firm KBR, Inc. violated whistleblower protection rule 21F-17 under the Dodd-Frank…
Articles Posted in Commercial Litigation
NEW JERSEY’S BAN THE BOX EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, 2015
New Jersey’s “Ban the Box” law goes into effect next week on March 1, 2015. Employers in New Jersey may no longer have an employment application that contains either a box that must be marked or a question asked that relate to an applicant’s criminal record or lack thereof. Employers…
BUSINESSES MUST BE REGISTERED TO DO BUSINESS IN PENNSYLVANIA IN ORDER TO BRING LAWSUIT TO VERDICT
Foreign corporations may not transact business in Pennsylvania without first obtaining a Certificate of Authority from the Secretary of the Commonwealth. All that is required is a simple application, docketing statement and a small fee. The specific requirements are clearly set forth on the Pennsylvania Department of State’s website. What…
NEW JERSEY SUPREME COURT SETS TEST TO DETERMINE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR STATUS
On January 14, 2015, in a unanimous decision, the New Jersey Supreme determined that the ABC test is the proper test an employer must use to determine if its workers are independent contractors or employees. Of all the various tests used by New Jersey and other states, the ABC test…
COMPLEX BUSINESS LITIGATION PROGRAM ESTABLISHED IN NEW JERSEY
On November 13, 2014 the New Jersey Supreme Court added New Jersey to the growing number of states that have established complex business litigation programs. Effective January 1, 2015, designated judges in each county will provide individualized case management to complex commercial and construction cases that meet the required criteria.…
Pennsylvania’s Breach of Personal Information Notification Act
Last month I had a business client come into my office concerned about a data breach. A disgruntled former employee hacked into the company server. While it appears this employee did not enter into any sensitive areas on the server, my client wanted to know what his responsibilities were with…
NEW JERSEY SUPREME COURT TIGHTENS REQUIREMENTS FOR CONSUMER ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS
On September 23, 2014, the New Jersey Supreme Court in a unanimous decision held that an arbitration clause in a consumer contract was unenforceable because it did not clearly and unambiguously signal to the consumer that she was surrendering her right to pursue her claims in court. The Court was…
PENNSYLVANIA HAS NEW POWER OF ATTORNEY REQUIREMENTS
On July 15, 2014 House Law 1429 went into effect and drastically changed what is required under financial powers of attorney (POAs). The new law was in response to rising incidents of elder abuse where agents placed their own self-interests before the principal. As such, the new law, among many…
LAWYERS CAN DELETE CIRCULAR 230 WARNINGS ON EMAILS
For those of us that actually read the bottom of their lawyer‘s email you probably noticed the arcane “IRS Circular 230 Disclosure” that stated the advice contained in this email is not intended and cannot be used for tax avoidance purposes etc… You then probably thought to yourself, but I…
COURT CONTINUES TO MISUNDERSTAND HOW WE USE TECHNOLOGY
The Supreme Court continued its trend of significant decisions today, issuing rulings in favor of copyright holders over technological innovation (ABC v Aereo) and in favor of upholding privacy rights in the face of police searches (Riley v California). While the decisions were broad in scope, they also both created…