Featured Publications

Real Estate: Alert - November 4, 2009

The Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (ILSA) is not a talisman that transforms a condo purchaser’s “buyer’s remorse” into a legally cognizable defense to a breach of contract claim, or so goes the clear implication of the Eleventh Circuit’s recent unanimous opinion, Stein v. Paradigm Mirasol, LLC. In broad context, the Court's decision is best understood as its attempt to inject some common sense into the two-year completion exemption. The ruling must be welcome news to condo developers because it is likely to dampen – at least temporarily – the recent proliferation of lawsuits from unhappy residential condo purchasers seeking to reverse or escape deals that have proven to be bad financial investments.

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Chambers USA Lists Holland & Knight Among Nation’s Top Law Firms, Earning Top Spots in Multiple Practice Areas and Markets

More than 100 Holland & Knight attorneys named America’s Leading Lawyers in 2009 Chambers USA Guide.

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In The Headlines

Trade Secret Litigation To Rise As Economy Dips
 

IP Law360

February 13, 2008
 
Paul Lannon - Boston

Paul Lannon was quoted in an article in IP Law360 about intellectual property and trade secret litigation increasing as the economy slows. "Although litigation budgets shrink during an economic downturn, which tends to discourage litigation, companies feel more desperate during those periods to protect their important assets, particularly key employees and trade secrets." He said in the article. "When there are layoffs, there's an opportunity for competitors to poach employees," Lannon added.

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