What's New?
Sooner or later virtually all businesses face the specter of a customer who owes them a significant amount of money filing for bankruptcy. Many businesses face a customer’s bankruptcy proceeding with an attitude like that of a condemned soul in Dante’s Inferno, where the sign above the entrance reads: “Abandon all hope ye who enter here.” After the initial anger and frustration subside, however, the question arises: “What do I do now?” There are many potential answers to that question, depending on such things as the size and importance of the receivables to the company, whether the bankruptcy is a
In the first episode, Bentley Tolk of Parr Brown Gee & Loveless interviews Brian S. King about discovery in ERISA litigation cases.
ABA Journal Copyright © 2004 American Bar Association AUTHOR: Jill Schachner Chanen THERE ARE MANY REASONS Joseph Condo looks back fondly on his days as a student at Rutgers School of Law in Camden, N.J., but none ranks higher than his professors. Their skilled presentations of the law and the intense classroom debates they sparked made him aspire to the lectern, too. Last year he fulfilled that dream, joining the thousands of practicing lawyers who teach each year at law schools as adjunct professors. “It’s because I’ve always enjoyed the academic environment as a student that I thought it would
The Utah Supreme Court appointed Parr Waddoups lawyer Ronald Russell to serve on the Judicial Conduct Commission. The commission investigates and makes recommendations regarding allegations of misconduct by state judges. Mr. Russell is filling a term formerly held by Gayle McKeachnie, who resigned from the commission after being appointed lieutenant governor. His term ends June 30, 2004.