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Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1

New York Supreme Court
MISSING

CompFox AI Summary

The lawsuit, filed by Cablevision Systems against Communications Workers of America District 1 (CWA) and individual defendants, sought to address alleged harassment, trespass, stalking, disorderly conduct, and tortious interference with business relations. These claims arose from the defendants' purported disruption of two private Cablevision events in May 2013, a shareholder meeting and an investors' conference. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. The court granted the motion, ruling that a corporate entity like Cablevision Systems cannot be considered a person for the purpose of bringing statutory claims under the Penal Law sections cited (harassment, stalking, disorderly conduct). Furthermore, the court found the claims for common-law trespass and tortious interference insufficient due to the plaintiff's failure to demonstrate that individual union members authorized or ratified the alleged unlawful actions. Consequently, the plaintiff's complaint was dismissed entirely.

Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1 is a workers' compensation case decided in New York Supreme Court. This case addresses legal issues related to compensation claims, benefits, and court rulings.

It is commonly referenced in legal research involving workers' compensation laws in New York Supreme Court.

Full Decision Text1 Pages

The lawsuit, filed by Cablevision Systems against Communications Workers of America District 1 (CWA) and individual defendants, sought to address alleged harassment, trespass, stalking, disorderly conduct, and tortious interference with business relations. These claims arose from the defendants' purported disruption of two private Cablevision events in May 2013, a shareholder meeting and an investors' conference. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. The court granted the motion, ruling that a corporate entity like Cablevision Systems cannot be considered a "person" for the purpose of bringing statutory claims under the Penal Law sections cited (harassment, stalking, disorderly conduct). Furthermore, the court found the claims for common-law trespass and tortious interference insufficient due to the plaintiff's failure to demonstrate that individual union members authorized or ratified the alleged unlawful actions. Consequently, the plaintiff's complaint was dismissed entirely.

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Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1 workers compensation case in New York Supreme Court. Legal case summary, ruling, and analysis for attorneys and legal research.

Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1 case law summary from New York Supreme Court. Workers compensation legal decision, case analysis, and court ruling details.

Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1 Case Analysis

Cablevision Systems Corp. v. Communications Workers of America District 1 is a legal case related to workers' compensation in New York Supreme Court. This case explains important rulings, legal interpretations, and claim decisions.

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