As featured on the NJ.com, a $2 million settlement was reached for a Middlesex County teen struck by a vehicle while seated on the curb. The Plaintiff sustained injuries resulting from the collision caused by Defendant.
read moreAs featured on the NJLawJournal.com, a $4.1 million settlement was reached on Feb. 1 in Middlesex County case, Fernandez-Hoppe v. Depena, concerning injuries sustained in an intersection collision in Cranbury, New Jersey.
read moreAs featured on the NJLawJournal.com, an $860,000 settlement was reached prior to trial in the case of a 41-year-old man and his wife involved in a car & truck crash in South Brunswick, New Jersey.
read moreAs 2022 ended, it took much of the uncertainty surrounding how a New Jersey court should address a forum selection clause when faced with a claim that the contract, as a whole, was obtained through fraud.
read moreA recent NJ LAW JOURNAL article discussed a decision issued on Aug. 17, 2022, in ‘Schwartz v. Menas,’ the Supreme Court of New Jersey joined the majority of other jurisdictions in finding that a per se ban on lost profits damages by a new business is unwarranted. Partner, Elliot Ostrove, and Associate Lucia Wa Yang composed the article that was published on the NJLJ.com.
read moreA recent NJ LAW JOURNAL article discussed the precedential ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in a matter in which Epstein Ostrove represented certain of the Defendants who reside in Germany.
read moreEpstein Ostrove attorney, Jasmine Brown Seabrooks, has been spotlighted by the New Jersey Association for Justice (NJAJ), highlighting her contributions as co-chair of the NJAJ Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee, and a co-chair of NJAJ’s Minority Trial Lawyer’s Caucus.
read moreEpstein Ostrove, LLC is proud to announce that eight of its lawyers have been included on the 2020 list of New Jersey Super Lawyers and New Jersey Super Lawyers Rising Stars in categories highlighting the depth and breadth of the Firm’s experience.
read moreEnvironmentally friendly borough’s safe-walking agenda runs into resistance from homeowners
read moreThe borough demanded that people replace their uneven sidewalk slabs, but when a court struck down that ordinance last year, people said they wanted their money back.
read moreEpstein Ostrove, LLC partners Daniel Epstein and Elliot Ostrove were named to the 2018 New Jersey Super Lawyers list. Our associates, Victor Broccoli and Vahbiz Karanjia were named to the 2018 New Jersey Rising Stars list.
read moreA New Jersey woman will receive $1.625 million as compensation for shoulder and back injuries she sustained when a piece of ceiling tile fell and struck her while she was a customer at a TGI Friday’s…
read moreA Somerset County jury awarded $860,000 to a Hillsborough man injured from being struck by a car. William Sporman was hit on July 20, 2007 in the parking lot of Harrah’s Resort Casino in Atlantic City…
read moreDefendant was acquitted of aggravated assault, armed robbery, retaliation against a federal witness, possession of weapon for an unlawful purpose, unlawful possession of a weapon and conspiracy…
read moreA decision from New Jersey’s highest court might come as a surprise to many people. Leaving your children alone in a car is not necessarily a crime.
read moreRisperdal, Seroquel and Zyprexa hit the market a decade ago, hailed as a second generation of medication for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, manic depression and other psychiatric problems that…
read moreIn AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, (2011), a 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court determined that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), pre-empts a California rule, which California courts had…
read moreAs consumers continue to buy more and more products over the Internet, courts are being presented with opportunities to examine the validity of online agreements.
read moreIn January, New Jersey adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (NJTSA), N.J.S.A 56:15-1 et seq., affording greater protection for trade secrets in New Jersey…
read moreThe borough demanded that people replace their uneven sidewalk slabs, but when a court struck down that ordinance last year, people said they wanted their money back.
read more