Over the past few years, the plaintiff bar has expanded its use of improper anchoring tactics. Historically, improper anchoring was seen as a risky tactic in which a plaintiff’s counsel would suggest an outrageous figure...
Archives
About a year ago a colleague brought my attention to the increase in irrelevant, inflammatory, scandalous, and improper language in plaintiff pleadings in catastrophic injury, fire, and death cases. Since that time, the...
To appropriately preserve an issue for appeal is frankly confusing to many attorneys due to differing rules depending on the issue or procedural posture (presumably why appellate attorneys are more commonly used during...
Today’s very practical and specific alert addresses a particularly annoying bugaboo of New York wrongful death litigation that has plagued far too many mediations and risk evaluations over the past few decades. One would...
The Myth Quick! What are the rules for bifurcation of personal injury trials in the First and Second Departments? If you answered that the former defaults to unification and the latter bifurcation, you’d be espousing the...