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Legal Articles from April 2026

199 articles published in April 2026

The articles below were published in April 2026 by Attorney Jason Tenenbaum and the legal team at his Long Island law office. Each article provides detailed analysis of real court decisions, statutory developments, and procedural issues in New York personal injury, no-fault insurance, and employment law.

Attorney Tenenbaum has maintained this legal blog since 2008, creating one of the most comprehensive public archives of New York insurance and personal injury case law analysis available online. Every article draws on his firsthand experience litigating cases in Nassau County District Court, Suffolk County courts, New York City Civil Court, and the Appellate Term. Unlike generic legal content, these articles cite specific case holdings, analyze judicial reasoning, and identify practical takeaways for attorneys and claimants navigating New York's complex legal landscape.

Whether you are an attorney researching a procedural question, an insurance professional evaluating a claim, or an individual trying to understand your legal rights after an accident or workplace dispute, this archive offers substantive legal analysis grounded in real New York courtroom experience. For case-specific legal advice, contact the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum at (516) 750-0595 for a free consultation.

Personal Injury

Hochul's 2026 Tort Reform Push: How the 50% Bar and Joint-and-Several Liability Changes Would Reshape Your New York Car Accident Case

Governor Hochul is pushing two major tort-reform proposals in the 2026-2027 budget: a 50% comparative-negligence bar (CPLR §1411 amendment) and joint-and-several liability reform. From the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum: what's actually being proposed, how it would change which cases plaintiffs take, why the joint-and-several reform matters more for innocent passengers, and what Long Island car accident victims should do before either passes.

Hochul's 2026 Tort Reform Push: How the 50% Bar and Joint-and-Several Liability Changes Would Reshape Your New York Car Accident Case — Read More →
Personal Injury

Rental Car Accident Settlements in New York: Who Pays When Enterprise, Hertz, or Budget Is Involved

Rental car accident settlements in New York are complicated by the Graves Amendment, optional SLI/LDW coverage, and stacked policy layers. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on identifying every available policy, navigating the Graves preemption, and structuring the settlement demand.

Rental Car Accident Settlements in New York: Who Pays When Enterprise, Hertz, or Budget Is Involved — Read More →
Personal Injury

Comparative Fault in New York Car Accident Cases: How Being Partly at Fault Affects Your Settlement

New York's pure comparative negligence rule (CPLR §1411) means you can still recover even when you're partly at fault. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on how insurance adjusters use partial-fault arguments to reduce settlements, the Hochul-era 50% bar proposal, and how to protect your recovery.

Comparative Fault in New York Car Accident Cases: How Being Partly at Fault Affects Your Settlement — Read More →
Personal Injury

Punitive Damages in New York Car Accident Cases

New York courts award punitive damages for car-accident conduct that crosses from negligence into wanton recklessness — drunk driving, road rage, leaving the scene, and deliberate dangerous driving. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on the legal standard, the documentation that proves it, and how punitive damages multiply settlement value beyond compensatory recovery.

Punitive Damages in New York Car Accident Cases — Read More →
Personal Injury

Government Vehicle Car Accident in New York: How to Sue the Government

Hit by a police car, LIRR vehicle, MTA bus, county truck, or any government vehicle in New York? The 90-day Notice of Claim under General Municipal Law §50-e is the most critical and most-commonly-missed deadline in the entire personal-injury system. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on how to preserve the claim.

Government Vehicle Car Accident in New York: How to Sue the Government — Read More →
Personal Injury

Taxi and Cab Accident Settlements in New York: What Injured Passengers and Drivers Need to Know

Taxi accident claims run on a different legal track than ordinary car accidents — TLC-regulated coverage, VTL §388 medallion-owner liability, and higher Insurance Law §370 minimums. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on how to identify every available policy layer and build a maximum-value settlement demand.

Taxi and Cab Accident Settlements in New York: What Injured Passengers and Drivers Need to Know — Read More →
Personal Injury

Negligent Entrustment Accident Settlements in New York: What Victims Need to Know

Negligent entrustment expands liability beyond the at-fault driver to the vehicle owner who handed over the keys. From the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum — how the doctrine works alongside VTL §388, why it drives higher settlement value, and what evidence builds the case against Long Island employers and family owners.

Negligent Entrustment Accident Settlements in New York: What Victims Need to Know — Read More →

Health Insurance Liens on New York Car Accident Settlements: ERISA, Commercial Plans, and Medicare

When health insurance pays for your car accident treatment in New York, the insurer may have a lien on your settlement. Whether that lien is enforceable depends on whether the plan is governed by ERISA, New York state law, or Medicare. Understanding these rules is essential to protecting your net recovery.

Health Insurance Liens on New York Car Accident Settlements: ERISA, Commercial Plans, and Medicare — Read More →

Eyewitness Statements in New York Car Accident Cases: How to Get Them and Use Them

Independent eyewitness statements can make or break a disputed liability car accident case in New York. Learn how to collect witness contact information at the scene, what witnesses can testify to, how to find witnesses after the fact, and how New York law treats witness testimony — including the missing witness charge and the police report hearsay exception.

Eyewitness Statements in New York Car Accident Cases: How to Get Them and Use Them — Read More →
Personal Injury

Truck Accident Lawsuit in New York: Settlement Value, Liability & What to Do

New York truck accident settlements run from $150,000 to several million depending on injury severity, trucking-company conduct, and FMCSR violations. Long Island attorney Jason Tenenbaum on the multi-defendant liability map, the federal-regulation overlay, and the evidence that drives the highest settlement value.

Truck Accident Lawsuit in New York: Settlement Value, Liability & What to Do — Read More →

About Our Legal Blog

The Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum publishes legal analysis on a regular basis covering developments in New York personal injury litigation, no-fault insurance disputes, employment discrimination, and related practice areas. Attorney Tenenbaum started writing about New York case law in 2008, and the blog has grown into a library of over 2,353 articles analyzing court decisions from the Appellate Term, Appellate Division, and Court of Appeals.

Topics frequently covered include the prima facie case standard in no-fault actions, the 30-day preclusion rule under Insurance Regulation 192, IME and EUO no-show defenses, summary judgment practice under CPLR 3212, default judgment standards, verification and claims submission procedures, and the serious injury threshold under Insurance Law Section 5102(d). Employment law articles address wrongful termination, workplace discrimination under the New York State Human Rights Law, wage and hour violations, and employer retaliation claims.

Each article is written for a professional audience but remains accessible to non-lawyers seeking to understand how New York courts handle specific legal issues. The firm serves clients across Long Island, including Nassau County, Suffolk County, and the five boroughs of New York City. If you have a legal question about any topic covered in these articles, call (516) 750-0595 for a free, confidential consultation.

Navigating New York's Court System

New York's civil court system is one of the most complex in the nation, with multiple overlapping jurisdictions that affect how personal injury, no-fault insurance, and employment cases are litigated. The New York City Civil Court handles claims up to $25,000 in the five boroughs, while the District Courts in Nassau and Suffolk Counties handle similar matters on Long Island. For claims exceeding $25,000, the Supreme Court serves as the primary trial court with unlimited monetary jurisdiction. Despite its name, the Supreme Court is not the highest court in New York — that distinction belongs to the Court of Appeals, which sits in Albany and decides approximately 200 cases per year.

Appeals from Civil Court and District Court decisions go to the Appellate Term, which is divided into departments corresponding to the Appellate Division. The Appellate Term for the Second Department — which covers Nassau County, Suffolk County, Kings County (Brooklyn), Queens County, and Richmond County (Staten Island) — hears hundreds of no-fault insurance appeals each year and has developed a substantial body of case law on topics including timely denial, verification procedures, proof of mailing, fee schedule disputes, and medical necessity standards. The Appellate Division, Second Department, hears appeals from Supreme Court and from the Appellate Term, and its decisions are binding on all lower courts within its jurisdiction.

Understanding where your case falls within this system is critical. A no-fault insurance dispute involving a $3,000 medical bill will follow a very different procedural path than a $500,000 personal injury claim arising from the same automobile accident. The former is typically resolved through mandatory arbitration before the American Arbitration Association under Insurance Department Regulation 68, while the latter proceeds through Supreme Court with full discovery, independent medical examinations under CPLR 3121, depositions, and potentially a jury trial. Attorney Tenenbaum has practiced extensively in all of these venues and understands the strategic considerations unique to each.

Key Statutes and Regulations

Several statutes and regulations appear frequently in the articles archived on this page. Insurance Law Article 51 establishes New York's no-fault insurance framework, requiring every motor vehicle policy to include personal injury protection benefits covering medical expenses, lost earnings (up to $2,000 per month), and other basic economic loss up to $50,000 per person. 11 NYCRR 65-3.8 (Insurance Regulation 192) imposes a 30-day deadline on insurers to pay or deny no-fault claims after receiving proof of claim and all demanded verification, and the failure to timely deny results in preclusion of most coverage defenses.

In personal injury litigation, Insurance Law Section 5102(d) defines the categories of "serious injury" that a plaintiff must establish before recovering non-economic damages in a motor vehicle accident case. The nine categories — death, dismemberment, significant disfigurement, fracture, loss of a fetus, permanent loss of use, permanent consequential limitation, significant limitation of use, and the 90/180-day category — each have specific evidentiary requirements that have been refined through decades of appellate decisions. The Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum has litigated serious injury threshold motions in hundreds of cases and regularly writes about new developments in this area.

Employment claims in New York implicate both state and federal statutes. The New York State Human Rights Law (Executive Law Section 296) prohibits employment discrimination based on age, race, creed, color, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, military status, sex, disability, predisposing genetic characteristics, familial status, marital status, and domestic violence victim status. The New York City Human Rights Law provides even broader protections and applies a more liberal standard. At the federal level, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act provide additional protections but are subject to administrative exhaustion requirements through the EEOC.

Workers' compensation cases in New York are governed by the Workers' Compensation Law and administered by the Workers' Compensation Board. Injured workers are entitled to medical treatment, lost wage benefits (typically two-thirds of the average weekly wage, subject to a statutory maximum), and permanency awards for lasting disabilities. Third-party claims — such as personal injury lawsuits against property owners or general contractors under Labor Law Sections 200, 240, and 241 — often run parallel to workers' compensation proceedings and involve complex lien and subrogation issues that require experienced legal counsel to navigate properly.

The articles in this archive analyze real decisions from courts across New York State, with a particular focus on the Appellate Term and Appellate Division decisions that establish binding precedent for trial courts on Long Island and in New York City. Whether you are an attorney preparing a motion, an insurance professional evaluating a claim, or an individual trying to understand your rights, these articles provide the detailed legal analysis that generic legal websites simply cannot offer. For personalized advice about your specific situation, contact the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum at (516) 750-0595.

Service Area

The Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C. serves clients from its office at 326 Walt Whitman Road, Suite C, Huntington Station, New York 11746. The firm represents individuals and businesses throughout Long Island — including the towns of Babylon, Islip, Brookhaven, Smithtown, Riverhead, Southampton, East Hampton, Huntington, and Oyster Bay in Suffolk County, and the cities and villages of Hempstead, Garden City, Mineola, Great Neck, Manhasset, Freeport, Long Beach, Rockville Centre, Valley Stream, Westbury, Hicksville, Massapequa, and Levittown in Nassau County. The firm also handles cases in all five boroughs of New York City: Queens, Brooklyn (Kings County), Manhattan (New York County), the Bronx, and Staten Island (Richmond County). Court appearances are regularly made at Nassau County Supreme Court in Mineola, Suffolk County Supreme Court in Riverhead, the Nassau County District Court, the Suffolk County District Court, and the New York City Civil Court throughout the five boroughs.

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