Why Your Financial Advisor Will Not Likely Recommend Cryptocurrency Anytime Soon

If you have been on planet earth over the last several years you know cryptocurrencies have been all the rage, with Bitcoin’s price reaching an all-time high of more than $63,000 in April of 2021 after rocketing up from only $8,000 the year earlier. 

Standing in Minnesota Court Debt Collection Cases

Plaintiffs sometimes opt to bring claims under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) in state court, even though the FDCPA is a federal law prohibiting abusive collection methods nationwide. Because state court FDCPA cases remain the exception, rather than the rule, questions of standing are still generally resolved by...

Frustrated Agreements

Businesses enter commercial contracts based on expectations (or guesses!) about future market conditions. Some expectations are inherently uncertain. Will demand for a product grow? How much? Will new competitors emerge? If uncertain events play out differently than hoped and a contract becomes unprofitable, the business is usually out of luck. ...

The Uniform Law Commission Publishes Final Uniform Restrictive Employment Agreement Act

The Uniform Law Commission (“ULC”) recently published the final Uniform Restrictive Employment Agreement Act (“Act”). Restrictive employment agreements – or restrictive covenants – are agreements that restrict an employee from working after the employment relationship ends.

Minnesota Liens on Personal Property in Self-Storage Act and the Significant 2021 Amendment

The Minnesota Liens on Personal Property in Self-Service Storage Act (the “Self-Storage Act”) located at Sections 514.970 to 514.979, provides self-storage owners with a very powerful and non-judicial (meaning, outside of the courts) foreclosure process to address situations in which self-storage tenants fail to pay rent. 

Squeeze Out Mergers

“Squeeze out” mergers are one of the (many) threats faced by minority owners of corporations.[1] In a typical squeeze out, the majority owner sells the business to another corporation controlled by the majority owner – which the minority owner is not part of. This action can effectively create a forced...

U.S. Department of Labor to Raise Minimum Wage for Federal Contractors

On July 21, 2021 the Department of Labor announced a proposed rule raising the minimum wage for all federal contractors to $15 per hour.  This is a “proposed rule,” and thus requires the Department to engage in the formal rulemaking process (which allows for hearings and public comment), the Department’s...

Mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policies in the workplace

Mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policies in the workplace As COVID-19 vaccines became readily available, employers must examine the legality of mandatory and voluntary vaccination policies. On May 28, 2021, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued guidance for employers regarding mandatory vaccination policies, employer-provided vaccine incentives, confidentiality, and accommodating workers...