Contracts have been called the lifeblood of a business, and when unexpected troubles interrupt the flow, the health of the enterprise is affected. Being sued for breach of contract can greatly tax your business, costing you legal fees and exposing you to the risk of paying monetary damages. If you have been sued or believe that you might be sued, there are prudent steps you should take.

Even if you have not yet been served with a complaint, consult with a business attorney about the risk of litigation and how to prepare. At your initial consultation with the attorney, you should bring a copy of the contract, your business liability insurance policy and any other relevant documents. Your attorney can review the situation and your relationship with the prospective plaintiff and can advise you about possible actions to avert the suit.

Once you are sued, you should immediately contact your insurance carrier. You may hold a general liability policy, a commercial property policy or a business owner’s policy that includes both. Provide the carrier with a copy of the complaint and answer any questions the insurance adjustor asks about it. If your policy covers the dispute, the insurance carrier has a duty to defend you, which means that it must provide you with capable legal counsel. If you don’t have a policy that covers the dispute, you must retain your own lawyer.

Your attorney, whether provided by the insurer or retained by you, will take the following steps as appropriate:

  • File a motion to dismiss the complaint, based on any substantive or procedural defects.
  • File an answer to the complaint, listing your defenses and raising any counterclaims you might have against the plaintiff.
  • Conduct discovery, which is a set of procedures for obtaining information from the opposing party, which could include requests for production, interrogatories (written questions) and depositions (oral questions).
  • Help you respond to discovery and represent you and your employees during depositions.
  • File and respond to pretrial motions.
  • Conduct settlement negotiations on your behalf.
  • Prepare evidence and witnesses for trial.
  • Present evidence in your favor and rebut the plaintiff’s evidence during trial.
  • File or respond to any post-trial motions.
  • Represent you in any appeals.

If you retain your own counsel, make sure the firm is experienced in business litigation as well as in negotiation. Skillful handling of breach-of-contract cases includes making efforts to avoid excessive costs and disruption of business operations, as well as to preserve customer and supplier relationships to the extent possible. These goals are best accomplished if the case is settled out of court. However, the attorney must always be prepared to effectively protect your interests at trial.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

As we reported here, Finney Law Firm participated in a successful class action to force the City of Cincinnati to stop collecting alarm registration fees and to refund illegally-collected fees for years past.

Those refund checks were dropped in the mail over the past few weeks and the final batch is to be mailed this week.

In the event that you did not properly receive a refund check due to you, contact the City’s False Alarm Reduction Unit at (513) 352-1272.

If you continue to have problems, do let Chris Finney (513.943.6655) know.

Libel consists of making untrue, harmful statements to third parties through writing, printing, broadcasting, pictures or other media. Because these means of communication create a record of the defamation, they can have a lasting impact on the reputation of a business. But if someone libels your company, you have a legal remedy only if you can prove what injuries the statements have caused.

Business libel has been much in the news recently because of the lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems, Inc., and its affiliated companies, against the Fox News Network. Dominion, which supplies voting machines to election districts throughout the U.S., asserts that Fox broadcast groundless allegations by then-president Donald Trump’s political allies that Dominion was involved in 2020 election-rigging. Dominion seeks damages of $1.6 billion for reputational damage. Fox contends there is no evidence that Fox’s reporting has done harm to Dominion’s revenues or profitability such as would justify damages on the scale sought.

The trial, expected to last five weeks, is scheduled for late April. Whatever the outcome, the lawsuit offers a concrete lesson about the difficulty of proving damages in a libel claim.

The elements of a libel claim are as follows:

  • The defendant made an untrue statement of fact (not merely a statement of opinion).
  • The defendant made the statement to a third party or publicly.
  • The defendant was at least negligent in checking the accuracy of the statement or, if in reference to a public figure, the defendant made the statement with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard for the truth.
  • The plaintiff suffered damages as a result of the defamatory statement, except for rare cases in which the defamation is so egregious that damages are presumed.

Dominion, which is a public figure, argues that emails and deposition testimony of Fox employees and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, show that Fox knew the allegations of election-rigging were false.

However, Dominion also needs to produce evidence of any damages the business suffered and of their connection to the alleged libel. This includes evidence that Dominion lost customers or business relationships or that the viability of the business itself is in danger. Dominion claims it lost $921 million in overall business value, $88 million in actual profits and $600 million in potential future profits. The company also seeks punitive damages.

In a business libel case, an experienced and skilled defamation attorney knows how to demonstrate damages that are based on hard economic data and a causal connection to the alleged libel. This may involve a detailed investigation and the retention of expert financial analysts.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

Every adult resident of Kentucky should have a living will and designation of health care surrogate. This is a legal document designed to protect you if you become incapacitated and/or cannot communicate with your doctors about important health care decisions. Without this document, some stranger might be making those decisions on your behalf. The document also impacts your estate planning, since it can include important conditions on the type and degree of life-sustaining treatment you wish to receive.

Unlike “end of life” documents such as wills and trusts, which mandate how a person’s assets will be distributed after death, a living will and surrogate designation has effect while you’re alive. It serves two functions:

  • It provides advance directives about your health care in certain situations. For example, in the event that the physicians determine you are incapacitated and terminally ill, you may forego any further medical treatment and require that nutrition and/or hydration be withheld.
  • It allows you to appoint a health care surrogate. This is a person you choose to make health care decisions on your behalf. The surrogate must honor all of your advance directives but can direct the providers about all other health-related matters.

The advance directives and surrogate appointment take effect only if you are incapacitated or otherwise incapable of communication.

The requirements for executing a living will and surrogate designation are provided by state statute. Like a last will and testament, a person executing a living will must be of sound mind at the time. The document must also be notarized and witnessed in accordance with Kentucky law. The signer may revoke the document at any time with or without cause. People may revoke and rewrite their living will and surrogate designation for various reasons. Sometimes their attitude towards potential care and treatment changes over time. In other cases, the chosen surrogate has died, moved away or is no longer the best candidate for serving as the surrogate.

Estate planning is not usually a priority for the young and healthy. However, life is unpredictable. A sudden illness or accident can leave anyone incapable of making decisions and/or communicating with their doctors. Every adult should have a thoughtfully drafted living will and surrogate designation in place in case the unexpected happens. It is also important to periodically review the estate plan to be sure that the person’s current wishes are reflected in the documents.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

 

Dissolving a business or ousting one or more of its owners can be catastrophic. In some ways, a business breakup is akin to a married couple divorcing. People who once shared financial interests and may even have liked each other are splitting up permanently. A “business divorce” may result from owners not getting along, death or incapacity of a key owner, improprieties by one of the owners or changes in outside conditions that make the business less profitable. Whatever the reason, owners planning on initiating a breakup should give the matter careful thought.

Before starting a business divorce, the owners should fully understand their rights and obligations to one another. Many written business agreements include policies and procedures for changing ownership or dissolving the firm. These might include buying out an owner’s share at market value or paying a predetermined level of compensation. Each owner should be prepared to abide by the applicable terms and conditions. If the agreement is incomplete or ambiguous, the owners should make a good faith effort to come to an agreement. They might jointly decide to submit the case to an experienced mediator to facilitate negotiations.

Another pre-dissolution issue is whether there are potential economic or legal limitations on divorce. If a substantial portion of the company’s assets are divided among the owners, the business can pay the departing owner(s) in cash or other liquid assets. However, in some cases a divorce entails the sale of non-liquid assets such as land, buildings, equipment and inventory. This may get further complicated if any assets are encumbered by mortgages or other security interests. Dividing assets can also be problematic if the business will struggle without the assets that are used to pay departing owners.

In addition, the owners must consider how the relevant markets will react to the business divorce. Customers, employees and competitors might view the business as failing or otherwise undependable. The owners may find it difficult to participate in their industry if personal or professional reputations are damaged. Those involved in the business divorce should do their best to minimize any potential disruptions and to avoid harming the reputations of the business or its owners.

Every owner should try to make the business divorce as clean, orderly and swift as possible. Letting emotions run high does not serve anyone’s interests. Excessive infighting costs everyone involved money, time and potential opportunities. By contrast, a speedy divorce allows everyone to move forward. The owners who are leaving can turn their attention to new business ventures and the remaining owners can focus on nurturing the existing business. An experienced business divorce attorney can help you protect your individual rights.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

 

The term “hostile work environment“ is thrown around a lot these days. It is not just a phrase used by employment lawyers and judges. It has become a part of the lexicon of the general public. In the same context, one often hears references to a “toxic work environment,“ or to “bullying“ in the workplace.

A lot of folks are under the assumption – not an unreasonable one – that it is illegal for employers to create a “hostile work environment“ for one or more employees, or to allow such an environment to exist in the workplace, or to not eliminate such an environment once an employee complains about it.

It surprises a lot of people to find out that a hostile or toxic work environment is not always illegal, or something with which the law concerns itself. In fact, a work environment can be very “hostile“ or “toxic“ without being against the law. Furthermore, whether or not a hostile work environment is illegal does not depend on exactly how hostile the work environment is. It is not that “mildly“ hostile environments are not illegal, but “severely“ hostile environments are.

As far as the law is concerned, the determination of whether or not a hostile or toxic work environment is illegal depends upon the motivation for the hostility or toxicity. If the employer or supervisor creating the unpleasant environment is motivated by factors like an employee’s race, sex, sexual orientation, age, religion, or disability, it may very well be unlawful, and grounds for a lawsuit.

If, however, the hostility comes from another source – such as a personality conflict or personal disagreement – the resulting work environment, no matter how toxic or unfair it may be, it’s not legally significant.

This can seem very unfair, but the law sometimes tells an employee who is being subjected to a hostile or toxic work environment, “Hey, you don’t have to keep working there. You can always go find another job.“

A smart employer, of course, is always going to want to create a good working environment for its employees, for a wide variety of reasons. So regardless of the legalities, addressing issues of hostility or toxicity in the workplace is always a good idea.

If you are an employer or employee confronted with issues relating to a hostile or toxic work environment, it would be wise to get advice from a qualified employment lawyer.

Making a false statement about another person may be grounds for the victim to file a defamation action to recover money damages for harm to his or her reputation. Defamation cases are decided under the law of the state where the harmful statement was made or where the victim resides. But in the internet age, defamation often crosses state lines. When it does, the federal courts may have jurisdiction over the case.

Damages for defamation have usually been gauged by the harm suffered by the victim in the community where he or she lives or works, but “the community” has become very difficult to define. Websites and social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter allow instant publication of content nationwide and even worldwide. Depending on the nature of the content and of the victim’s personal or professional situation, a defamatory statement may cause reputation injury far beyond a single geographic area. As such, instances of defamation often occur between people located in different states.

Many claimants in civil matters want their cases heard in federal court rather than state court. The federal courts were created, in part, to prevent any local prejudice against litigants from other states. In addition, juries selected in the federal system may be less prone to bias than those in state courts. However, not all cases are eligible to be heard in the federal system. The federal courts have jurisdiction over civil cases where the litigants are citizens of different states and where the amount in controversy — meaning the potential damages— exceeds $75,000. This is called jurisdiction based on “diversity of citizenship.”

However, the specific requirements of diversity jurisdiction are quite exacting. The federal courts have traditionally applied what is known as the “effects test” to decide whether the defendant has the required minimum contacts with the state in which the defamation allegedly took place. For example, if an Ohio resident posted false statements on the internet about a Kentucky resident, a federal court would exercise jurisdiction only if the statements were aimed at disparaging the victim’s reputation among other people in Kentucky. Generally, the more national in scope a victim’s reputation, the easier it is to establish a target audience that includes his or her state.

Bringing a defamation case in federal court requires careful presentation and attention to detail. Plaintiffs should expect that defendants will strive to have the case remanded to state court. Consult with a qualified defamation lawyer for guidance about possible federal jurisdiction over your matter.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

 

The purchaser of an apartment building Clermont County and his counsel are learning the lessons of real property taxes — and the ways to handle tax prorations —  the hard way.  Because neither the seller nor his attorney thought through the transaction carefully, the purchaser (a) lost $682,000 in tax proration negotiations and (b) has suffered what appears to be an entirely unnecessary increase in the same amount in his annual real estate taxes, essentially forever.

How can outcomes between savvy and clumsy real estate transactional work vary so dramatically?

Underlying facts

On December 28, 2021, RS Fairways, LLC closed on the purchase of Fairways at Royal Oaks, an apartment complex in Pierce Township on Clermont County for $32,600,000.  The Auditor’s valuation at the time of the sale was $6,622,000.  The difference between the sale price and the Auditor’s valuation was $25,977,700, a whopping 500% increase.

Following the sale, our former Associate, Brian Shrive — who now heads the civil division of the Clermont County Prosecutor’s office — on behalf of the Prosecutor, saw the conveyance fee form filed with the deed reporting the whopping sale price-compared-to-Auditor’s-valuation and filed \a Board of Revision Complaint to increase the valuation — retroactively to January 1, 2021 — to the sales price.

Almost inexorably, the Board of Revision would have so increased the value, so the owner, the Prosecutor and the School Board later entered into a Stipulation as to the new valuation at $32,600,000.

Tax proration language

As we have written about here (just one month before this buyer closed; he should have read our blog!), standard tax proration language in use in the Cincinnati area calls for a tax proration to be based upon the most recent available tax duplicate.  Since the Auditor and School Board will not know about the sale until after the deed is recorded, current taxes can’t possibly be based upon the sale price.  Here, the Auditor obviously had a grossly outdated and inaccurate valuation.

In other words, standard and customary contract language in use in greater Cincinnati simply does not adequately protect the purchaser in a situation where it is paying much higher than the Auditor’s present valuation.

The Contract in question provided:

If the 2021 tax bill is not available as of the Closing Date, then the proration described in clause (b) above shall be based on the 2020 tax bill for the property.

Why do we prorate taxes in Ohio?  Taxes in Ohio are paid “six months in arrears at the end of the period.”  What does that mean?

It means that the first half 2021 tax bill is issued in January of 2022 and the second half 2021 tax bill is issued in July of 2022.  Therefore as of the date of closing (here, the end of December 2021), the seller owned the property for all of 2021, but hadn’t paid the taxes for 2021.  Therefore, at closing (under local contract form and custom) the seller prorates to the buyer the taxes for the period it had owned the property, but at existing tax and valuation rates.

The dual problems are: (i) if there is a change in the tax rate for 2021 (such as with the passage of a school or other levy), the proration will be wrong as to the 2021 rate and (b) if there is a change in the tax valuation in the normal triennial cycle, the valuation (and thus the taxes) will change, and, here’s the kicker, (c) well after the closing, a school board or the County Prosecutor have the right to ask the Board of Revision to retroactively, back to the beginning of the prior tax year, change the valuation to a reported sales price.

And, as Casey Jones of our office blogged here, a recent arm’s length sale is uncontestably the valuation for tax purposes.

Thus, under the law, a purchaser is liable for taxes calculated at the tax amount for the taxes for the periods from the date prior to the sale (based upon the next tax bill to be issued) and into the future.  And this new tax rate calculates in “unknowns” at the time of the closing, which are a change in rate and a change in valuation.  Both of these can be both assessed, and as to the valuation, can be contested and litigated, well after the sale, but the retroactive liability for those taxes falls on the new property owner.

“Forever” increase in taxes

The tax proration flub — a $682,000 mistake — was bad enough, but worse is that the reported sale will result in a new baseline valuation for future taxes of $32,600,000 for a property that previously was valued and taxed at just $6.2 million.  Every three years the County will start with the $32 million number and make (likely) increases from there, so this owner will have $700,000 in higher taxes (than likely he anticipated) forever.

Could the massive increase have been prevented?

Two fairly sophisticated legal techniques could have been employed by this purchaser to avoid these massive “surprise” tax bills.  One would have spared them the cost of the under-proration, and the second could have resulted in a permanent savings — tens of millions to the purchaser’s bottom line.  They employed neither.

First, when a purchaser pays an amount significantly above Auditor’s valuation for property (this is a simple task of comparing the sale price to Auditor’s valuation [a quick on-line check]) before the contract is negotiated and signed, a purchaser will want the tax proration language to include a re-proration after the final taxes for the year prorated are known.  [By the way, when we get into an environment of declining values, the inverse rules as to tax proration can apply — the purchaser will have an advantage in the proration process — an over-proration —  if the contract language is not modified.]

Second, a technique is available in Ohio (but not Kentucky) to have the seller first transfer the property into an LLC that he owns exclusively (by deed, but with an “exempt conveyance fee form,” so that no sales price is reported) and then, at the closing between seller and purchaser, the seller transfers his interest in the LLC to the purchaser — and thus there is no recorded deed.  These transfers are referred to as “drop and swaps” or “entity transfers.”  In this situation — with some possible exceptions, the Auditor and school board are not put on notice of the sale or the sale price, and thus the increase in value could slip by unnoticed.

Here, the purchaser employed neither technique resulting in a bad proration and “forever” tax liability.

Ensuing litigation

Despite terrible tax proration language that we see as “fatal” to the purchaser’s claims (see above, they agreed to base the proration on the 2020 tax bill, period), the purchaser has sued the seller for a re-proration based upon the post-closing tax “surprise.”  Good luck with that.  See the Complaint here.

Conclusion

Smart advance legal planning by a purchaser or seller can dramatically change the outcome as to taxes in a real estate transaction.  Contact Isaac T. Heintz (513.943.6654) or Eli Krafte-Jacobs (513-797-2853) for assistance on your real estate transactions to avoid these disastrous outcomes.

It’s common for a business to have more than one owner, each with a substantial financial stake in the company. But partnerships don’t always last, either because businesses fail, owners disagree or one or more of them retires or moves on to their next venture. This could require splitting up the value of the company or buying out the departing owner.

In a closely held business, there is no market value for shares of stock. Instead, it is necessary to determine the value of the business and its assets as a whole in order to determine the amount payable to each departing broker. There are several methods of valuation from which you may choose.

If the company closes down or doesn’t generate significant income, the adjusted net asset method is a useful option. This involves adding up the value of the business’s assets and subtracting its liabilities as reflected in the balance sheet, then modifying that figure to reflect reality by, for instance, correcting inaccurately reported assets and liabilities.

If the business is making a profit and will continue to operate after an owner is bought out, the capitalization of cash flow method may produce a better valuation. It begins with determining the business’s recurring income and expenses over a given period and dividing the resulting net figure by the cap rate — a percentage based on the rate of return that the owners can expect to generate in the future. This results in an amount substantially larger than the adjusted cash flow.

If the company doesn’t have a steady cash flow, but you have a reasonable way of projecting its future cash flow, the discounted cash flow method might be a better valuation option. It adjusts the projected cash flow to take account of the time value of that money. Time value reflects the fact that you can use money you have now, so money you have not yet received decreases in value the longer it takes to receive it.

Another way of valuing an ongoing business is to hire a qualified business appraiser to determine its fair market value. The appraiser will typically compare the sales prices of similar companies in the same market. You and your partners might not agree on the appropriate valuation method for your company. In all cases, it is helpful to an attorney familiar with the problems of business divorce to negotiate a method that is fair to you. You and your partners can also submit the issue to mediation, a means of settling disputes outside of court with the help of a neutral third party.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.

 

Twitter, a social media platform founded in 2006, has become a phenomenally popular outlet through which individuals around the world send and receive news and opinion on a wide variety of subjects. Each day, Twitter users send hundreds of millions of tweets, often criticizing politicians, celebrities, businesses and ordinary individuals. Not surprisingly, not all of those tweets are accurate. When a false statement about a person or company causes them injury, they have suffered libel — or more precisely, “Twibel.”

Libel is a false written or printed statement of purported fact that damages the reputation of another person. If the statement is about a public figure, the publisher may be liable for damages only if it knew the statement was false or was recklessly indifferent to the statement’s truth or falsity. If the victim is not a private figure, the publisher is liable if it was merely negligent in checking the statement’s accuracy.

Twibel” is a new term coined to describe libel that occurs in tweets and other online postings. Although the internet is not the traditional kind of communications medium in which libel law developed, the global reach of platforms like Twitter and Facebook makes them potent sources of reputational damage. The same basic principles of libel law that apply to newspapers, radio and television also apply to the internet.

If you’ve been defamed in a tweet or other online posting, it may be possible to bring a lawsuit to seek compensation for the damage to your reputation and the related problems caused. However, it’s not always possible to identify the person who posted the tweet or to prove that person had the requisite state of mind. Even if you win damages, that won’t prevent the ongoing negative impact of the Twibel on you. In addition, Twitter or other internet hosting platforms can’t be held liable except to the extent they exercise direct control over the content posted.

However, you do have an option that might stem the damage by removing the false information from Twitter. A “take-down order” is a demand to Twitter or another internet platform, by or in behalf of the person claiming to be defamed, to remove the posting.

A take-down notice is likely to be more effective if it is drafted and sent by a libel attorney, who can explain to Twitter or the other platform, why the statement is libelous and the legal consequences they face if they don’t comply. If, like Twitter, a platform exercises some degree of control over its content, it could be liable for damages caused by statements it doesn’t remove after it learns they are potentially defamatory.

About Finney Law Firm, LLC

Founded in 2014, FLF has grown to 15 attorneys located in offices in Eastgate and downtown Cincinnati with five major practice areas: Corporate Law, Real Estate Law, Employment Law, Commercial Litigation and Public Interest and Constitutional Litigation.  FLF has the unique claim to three 9-0 victories at the United States Supreme Court for its public interest practice along with breakthrough class action work.

FLF also has an affiliated title insurance company, Ivy Pointe Title, LLC, that closes and insures nearly a thousand commercial and residential real estate transactions annually.

For more information about Finney Law Firm, visit finneylawfirm.com.

Media Contact: Mickey McClanahan; mickey@finneylawfirm.isoc.net; 513.797.2850.