Stay informed with our featured blog posts.
Strauss Troy is pleased to announce that 10 lawyers have been included in the 2024 edition of Super Lawyers. Super Lawyers recognizes the top attorneys nationwide, across a variety of practice areas and firm sizes, using a patented process of independent research and peer input.
Kentucky’s Planned Communities statute (KRS §§ 381.785 – 381.801) (the “Act”) took effect on June 29, 2023. This is an important update for real estate developers in the greater Cincinnati area because, prior to the Act and unlike states like Ohio, Kentucky did not have any statutes that addressed planned communities.
After four years of contentious discovery and motion practice, followed by a three-week arbitration hearing, the legal team at Strauss Troy, led by Philomena Ashdown, Brian O’Connell, and James Houston, along with the support of associate attorney Alexa Wainscott, successfully obtained a defense verdict on all claims in a breach of fiduciary duty action involving the purchase of several hotels.
Congress passed the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020 and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, within which was another act: the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”).
Strauss Troy Co., LPA has been recognized in the 2024 edition of Best Law Firms®, ranked by Best Lawyers®, nationally in 1 practice areas and regionally in 17 practice areas.
This is the third and final installment of a series of articles on the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”), set to be effective January 1, 2024, and set to affect the majority of small businesses and LLCs throughout the United States.
This is the second installment of a series of articles on the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”), set to be effective January 1, 2024, and set to affect the majority of small businesses and LLCs throughout the US.
A few years back, Congress passed the Anti Money Laundering Act of 2020 and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, within which was another act: the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”).
Over the past several weeks, Ohio property owners have received written notices of their new property values for tax year 2023 from their county auditor’s office.
Strauss Troy is pleased to announce that 12 lawyers have been included in the 2024 edition of The Best Lawyers in America®.
Strauss Troy is pleased to welcome Charlotte Niyonkuru as our new Collections Specialist/Paralegal.
Ohio recognizes legal doctrines that can give you ownership or a right to use or access another’s property without an explicit agreement between you and the other property owner. The doctrines that can provide ownership of another’s property are: adverse possession, acquiescence, and estoppel. Another doctrine, prescription (also called a prescriptive easement), allows you to use or access another’s property without obtaining actual ownership. In considering the differences between these doctrines, it is important to determine whether you seek ownership of use/access to a certain property.