Posts from December 2021.
In a recent case, Florida’s Second District Court of Appeal (“Second DCA”) held that a commission-splitting agreement—even a very lopsided one—should not be analyzed under Florida’s restrictive covenant statute because such an agreement is not a “restraint of trade” under Florida law.Read More
Search Blog
Follow Us
Recent Posts
- The Live Local Act Part 2 - Affordable Housing Incentives
- Florida's Live Local Act
- Florida Preliminary Injunctions Must Merely Preserve the Status Quo
- IRS Announces Tax Relief for Victims of Hurricane Ian in Florida
- Florida’s New Law Mandates Employee Background Checks to Protect Tenants in Response to Tragedy
- You Can’t Run From That Arbitration Covenant Running With The Land
- The Courts Really Will Enforce That Operating Agreement As Written
- No, A Perpetually-Unfair Commission-Splitting Agreement Is Not A Restraint Of Trade
- Buying and Selling Golf Courses in Florida
- No Need to Panic—Attorney Fee Provisions in Florida Are Safe
Popular Categories
- Real Estate Law
- Property Tax
- Development/Land Use
- Business of Real Estate
- Estate planning
- Trusts and Estates
- Contracts
- Landlord-Tenant
- Litigation
- Wealth planning
- Business
- Insurance
- Litigation (Appellate)
- Business
- Construction
- Regulatory Compliance
- Government
- Compliance
- Lease
- Restrictive Covenants
- Supreme Court
- Bankruptcy
- Creditor's Rights
- Appeals
- Title
- Attorneys' Fees
- Employment and Labor
- Litigation (Labor & Employment)
- Small Business
- Consumer Protection
- Regulation
- Technology
- Maritime
- GAO
Editors
- Associate
- Partner
- Partner
- Senior Associate
- Partner
- Associate
- Partner
- Associate
- Partner
- Partner
- Partner
- Associate
- Partner
- Partner
- Partner