E-Filing In New York State Courts: Procedures, Problems, Recent Cases (57-Page Book)

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Released June 20, 2019 - Written by Patrick M. Connors, Esquire
Click the above "Learn More" button to read the Table of Contents, several Sample Pages and Mr. Connors' curriculum vitae.

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E-Filing is a very significant topic for New York litigators. In this book, Mr. Connors, a leading authority on New York Practice, has assembled the important CPLR provisions, the Supreme Court Rules for both the consensual program and the mandatory program and the Administrative Order of May 31, 2019. Mr. Connors prepared these materials for his June 20, 2019 CLE program held in New York City. Please see below for the link to the available recording - on cd, dvd, flashdrive or online audio - of this popular course.

 
Related CLE CourseThis course is available on the New YorkNew Jersey, and Connecticut pages of our sister site, www.NLFonline.com (online CLE study).  Visit www.NLFonline.com and go to the "Litigation" heading  to listen to, and obtain CLE credit for, this course and many other practical and useful litigation and litigation-related courses.  Alternatively, for this course on CD, DVD or flash drive visit www.NLFcle.com:  New York, New Jersey or Connecticut.

Author:
Patrick M. Connors is a Professor of Law at Albany Law School where he teaches New York Practice and Legal Ethics. He was an Adjunct Professor of Law at Syracuse University College of Law where he taught Professional Responsibility from 1991 to 1999. 

He received his B.A. degree from Georgetown University and his J.D. degree from St. John’s Law School, where he was an editor of the Law Review and research assistant to Professor David D. Siegel.

Upon graduation from St. John’s in 1988, Professor Connors served as a personal law clerk to Judge Richard D. Simons of the New York Court of Appeals until 1991. From 1991 until May of 2000 he was an associate and then member of the litigation department at Hancock & Estabrook, LLP, in Syracuse, New York.

Commencing with the January 2013 supplement, Professor Connors became the author for Siegel, New York Practice (5th ed.). In addition, he is the author of the McKinney’s Practice Commentaries for CPLR Article 22, Stay, Motions, Orders and Mandates, Article 23, Subpoenas, Oaths and Affirmations, Article 30, Remedies and Pleading, and Article 31, Disclosure. He also authors the Practice Commentaries for the New York Rules of Professional Conduct (available on Westlaw; in progress) and several articles in the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act. He is also the author of the New York Practice column and the annual Court of Appeals Roundup on New York Civil Practice, which are published in the New York Law Journal. From 1992 through 2003, he was a Reporter for the Committee on New York Pattern Jury Instructions (“PJI”), the panel of New York State Supreme Court Justices that drafts and oversees the frequent revisions of the standard jury charges in civil cases. His publications have been cited in over 130 reported cases. 

He is a member of the New York State Bar Association’s Committee on Professional Ethics. He served on the New York State Attorney Grievance Committee for the Fifth Judicial District from 1997 until 2000. He was the Reporter for the New York State Bar Association's Special Committee on the Code of Judicial Conduct, which published a report recommending substantial amendments to New York’s Code of Judicial Conduct. He was also the Reporter for the New York State Bar Association's Task Force on Non-lawyer Ownership of Law Firms. He is a member of the Office of Court Administration’s Advisory Committee on Civil Practice and served as a member of the New York State Bar Association’s CPLR Committee from 2003 through 2007.

Professor Connors is a frequent lecturer at continuing legal education seminars on recent developments in New York Practice, professional ethics and legal malpractice. He has also served as an expert witness and consultant on issues pertaining to attorney ethics, legal malpractice, and civil procedure.

In the Fall of 2015, Professor Connors was a Visiting Scholar in Residence at Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center.
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