Letters Rogatory and Depositions in Korea: Navigating International Evidence Requests
When a U.S. party needs evidence or witness testimony from South Korea, traditional discovery methods like subpoenas don’t apply.
Because South Korea restricts foreign lawyers from taking depositions locally, U.S. litigants must rely on Letters Rogatory and the Hague Evidence Convention.
This article explains how to properly obtain testimony, documents, or statements from Korean witnesses while complying with international law.
How to Serve a Korean Defendant Under the Hague Convention
When a U.S. plaintiff needs to serve a defendant in South Korea, ordinary mail or private process service will not suffice.
Because both the U.S. and Korea are parties to the Hague Service Convention, service must follow its prescribed procedures through Korea’s designated Central Authority.
This article explains the steps, timelines, translation requirements, and strategic considerations to ensure that service abroad is valid and enforceable.
How to Respond When Served With a Subpoena: A Step-by-Step Guide for Businesses and Third Parties
Receiving a subpoena can be disruptive—especially when your company isn’t part of the lawsuit.
This guide explains how to respond quickly and strategically: identifying the type of subpoena, preserving data, negotiating scope, protecting confidentiality, and avoiding costly mistakes.
Good Pine P.C. helps businesses manage subpoenas with efficiency, professionalism, and minimal operational impact.
Litigation Strategy for Business Owners: Knowing When to Settle and When to Fight
Every business faces legal disputes sooner or later.
The challenge is not simply “winning” but knowing when to fight and when to settle.
This article explains how business owners can make clear-eyed decisions by weighing cost, risk, timing, reputation, and long-term objectives — and how strategic litigation management protects the enterprise beyond any single case.
Understanding Discovery and eDiscovery in U.S. Litigation
Discovery is the longest and most expensive phase of U.S. litigation. For Korean companies, it can also be the most unfamiliar. This guide explains how the American discovery system works — from depositions and interrogatories to electronic data collection — and offers practical steps to manage risk, cost, and compliance before disputes arise.
Understanding the U.S. Litigation Lifecycle: From Demand Letter to Final Judgment
When business disputes escalate, understanding how the U.S. litigation process unfolds can save companies time, money, and leverage. This article explains every stage of a commercial lawsuit—from the first demand letter to final judgment—and why a well-drafted demand letter can protect your rights long before you ever enter the courtroom.
State Charitable Registration Requirements: N.Y. Attorney General Charities Bureau vs. N.J. Division of Consumer Affairs
Nonprofits must register before soliciting donations in both New York and New Jersey.
This guide from Good Pine P.C. explains how to register with the N.Y. Attorney General’s Charities Bureau and the N.J. Division of Consumer Affairs, outlines key filing differences, and offers compliance tips for organizations fundraising in both states.
Conflicts of Interest Policies Under N.Y. N-PCL § 715-A and New Jersey Best Practices
New York’s N-PCL § 715-A requires every nonprofit to adopt a written Conflict of Interest Policy, with annual disclosures and documented recusals.
New Jersey law does not mandate such a policy but strongly encourages it under best practices.
This guide from Good Pine P.C. explains each state’s expectations and how to build a compliant policy that protects your organization and its board.
Membership vs. Board Governance: Choosing the Right Structure for Your Nonprofit
Every nonprofit must decide whether it will be membership-governed or board-governed. In membership nonprofits, voting members elect the board and influence key decisions. In board-governed organizations, the board holds all authority. This guide from Good Pine P.C. explains the legal distinctions, pros and cons, and governance considerations under New York and New Jersey law to help you choose the right model.
Officer vs. Director Roles: Clarifying Titles and Authority in Nonprofit Structures
Many nonprofit organizations confuse the roles of officers and directors, even though the law draws a clear line between them. Directors (or trustees) govern — setting mission, policy, and oversight — while officers manage the organization’s daily operations. This guide from Good Pine P.C. explains the legal distinctions, fiduciary duties, and best practices for defining authority within nonprofit structures in New York and New Jersey.
Choosing the Right Type of Nonprofit Corporation: Public Charity, Private Foundation, or Membership Organization?
This article explains the legal distinctions between public charities, private foundations, and membership nonprofits under New York and New Jersey law and the Internal Revenue Code. It covers IRC Section 509 classification, the public support tests under Sections 509(a)(1) and 509(a)(2), excise tax and distribution requirements for private foundations under IRC Sections 4940 and 4942, 501(c)(4) and 501(c)(6) membership structures, and state formation and charitable registration requirements under N-PCL Section 702(a) and N.J.S.A. 15A:6-2(a).
Forming a Nonprofit in New York vs. New Jersey: Key Legal Differences
This article explains the key legal differences between forming a nonprofit in New York and New Jersey. It covers the governing statutes — the N-PCL and N.J.S.A. Title 15A — New York's pre-filing agency approval requirements for educational and health-related organizations, board structure and the three-member minimum under N-PCL Section 702(a) and N.J.S.A. 15A:6-2(a), registered agent requirements, organizational meeting and governance policy obligations, name restrictions, charitable solicitation registration with New York's Charities Bureau under Article 7-A and New Jersey's Division of Consumer Affairs under N.J.S.A. 45:17A-18, state tax-exemption filings via Form CT-247 and Form REG-1E, and foreign nonprofit registration for organizations operating across both states.
Resolving Shareholder and Partnership Disputes (Deadlocks, Buyouts, and Fiduciary-Duty Issues)
Disputes among shareholders or partners can disrupt even the most successful businesses. This article explains how to address deadlocks, buyouts, and fiduciary-duty issues under New York and New Jersey law.
Legal Issues for Korean Parent Companies Expanding to the U.S. (Entity Setup, Visas, and Compliance Pitfalls)
Korean companies entering the U.S. market face complex legal and compliance issues. This article outlines entity formation, visa options, and common pitfalls—helping parent companies expand successfully and lawfully.
Contract Essentials for Small Businesses: Understanding Termination, Indemnity, Confidentiality, and Arbitration Clauses
Every business contract contains clauses that can make or break your protection. This article explains termination, indemnity, confidentiality, and arbitration clauses—helping small business owners understand how to manage risk and protect their interests.
Choosing the Right Entity for Your Business (LLC, Corporation, or Nonprofit?)
Forming an LLC, corporation, or nonprofit in New York or New Jersey involves key differences in cost, tax treatment, and compliance. This article compares each entity type and highlights what business owners should consider when choosing the right structure.
Understanding Employment Law for Employers in New York and New Jersey
Employers in NY and NJ face complex employment laws. This overview explains key rules on wages, discrimination, and termination—and how Good Pine helps businesses stay compliant while standing for fairness in the workplace.
Understanding Wills, Trusts, Powers of Attorney, and Health Care Proxies
This article explains the key elements of estate planning—wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and health care proxies—and how they work together to protect your family and carry out your wishes. It also covers probate, asset tracking, and common mistakes to avoid when planning your estate in New York and New Jersey.
Serving as a Plaintiff in a Class Action Lawsuit
Serving as a plaintiff in a class action means standing up not only for yourself, but for others harmed by the same conduct. This article explains the role of class representatives in antitrust and consumer-fraud cases, what responsibilities they carry, and how Good Pine guides clients through class certification and litigation under Rule 23 and related state rules.
Understanding Whistleblower Rights Under the False Claims Act
Whistleblowers play a vital role in exposing fraud against the government. This article explains whistleblower rights and protections under the False Claims Act, including cases involving kickbacks and misuse of COVID-19 relief funds such as PPP and EIDL.
Good Pine provides confidential consultations and legal guidance to help whistleblowers navigate these complex cases safely and pursue the rewards and protections the law provides.