The case is Noel B. v. Anna Maria A. (N.Y. Fam. Ct. Sept. 12, 2014). An excerpt from the opinion:
New Hampshire has become the latest state to enact a social media access statute, the Use of Social Media and Electronic Mail, NH RSA 275:73–75. The law takes effect on September 30.
In an article in the September 5 – 18 issue of the New Hampshire Business Review, attorney James Harris briefly analyzes how the new social media access law will work. From the article:
The Tax Foundation, one of the nation’s leading independent tax policy research organizations, has released its 2014 report on international tax competitiveness:
The full press release is available here. An excerpt:
Consider the persimmon. No wild fruits are so sweet and delectable as ripe persimmons after the first fall freeze, if you can beat the birds to them. But a green persimmon is not just less tasty; it is inedible. Not even a ‘possum will eat a green persimmon. As with fruit, so with litigation. A bench judge has several tools to ensure that litigation, while perhaps not sweet, is at least palatable: one of these is the power to stay litigation in the interest of judicial and litigants’ economy.
In Ross Holding and Management Co. v. Advance Realty Group LLC,[1] the Delaware Court of Chancery has held again that traditional corporate fiduciary duties of care and loyalty apply to the members and managers of limited liability companies. The Court wrote: