Overview

Attorney Robert Travisano is a trusted advocate for clients facing complex business disputes. Based in Epstein Becker Green's Newark and New York offices and a member of the firm’s National Litigation Steering Committee, Robert combines deep industry knowledge with innovative strategies to protect his clients’ interests.

Robert has extensive experience representing health care clients in a variety of matters involving complex contractual disputes and business torts. He litigates matters involving shareholder and partnership disputes, defends institutional clients in commercial lease actions, and prosecutes and defends breach of contract actions.

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Robert has also represented foreign and domestic insurers in the litigation and negotiation of complex coverage disputes in connection with fidelity, general liability, director and officer, and property and casualty policies. Additionally, he has defended matters involving consumer fraud and business torts.

Robert’s recent practice highlights include representing a group of related health care companies in a claim against a regional hospital system for breach of a master services agreement whereby the hospital was to compensate our client based on the performance of certain managed service lines. The representation included winning a federal court injunction that was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, stopping the raiding of our client’s employees. Robert also recently represented a regional health plan in a fraud case brought against a data analytics vendor, alleging improper submission of claims to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Recently, Robert was second chair in a bench trial concerning a deed restriction dispute, a jury trial defending a carrier against allegations of insurance bad faith, and an arbitration over an earn-out note following a corporate acquisition. He is currently representing a Silicon Valley hardware component manufacturer in an international theft of trade secrets claim. 

Robert's reported cases include:

  • MVP Health Plan, Inc. v. Maloney, et al., Index No. 2021-1300 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Schenectady Cty Aug. 16, 2022) (court granted declaratory judgment in favor of a health plan that the defendant was no longer a participating provider and, therefore, was not entitled to documentation typically afforded to a participating provider, and further, the provider was not, nor had ever been, an employee of the plan)
  • Good v. Gaspari, et al., 17-cv-8947 (S.D.N.Y. 2020) (secured summary judgment on behalf of a supplements seller and manufacturer in a case brought by a U.F.C. fighter alleging mislabeling and adulteration)
  • Ricketti v. Barry, et al., 13-6804 (D.N.J. 2015) (On remand, district court dismissed complaint asserting breach of contract and tortious interference claims brought against a wound care center administrator and its director by the head of a podiatric medical group)
  • Philp v. Ross University School of Medicine, 14-CV-556 (D.N.J. 2014) (Federal court dismissed with prejudice a complaint alleging civil rights violations, breach of contract, and tort claims brought against a medical school and its administrators and faculty by an expelled student, who challenged the school’s grievance committee procedures and assailed his treatment while a student)
  • Nielsen Co. (US), LLC v. Hudson River Group, Inc., 2014 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3168 (N.Y. 2d Dept. May 7, 2014) (in reversing summary judgment against our client, the court held that the parties' course of conduct over a six-year period raised issues of fact as to plaintiff's implied waiver of its contractual audit right)
  • Burkes v. New York State Dental Association, 2013 WL 3784143 (S.D.N.Y. July 18, 2013) (dismissing complaint with prejudice, court sustained a private professional organization's internal disciplinary process applied in the suspension of dentist as a result of his guilty plea to a prescription drug charge and rejected claims for breach of fiduciary duty, selective enforcement, negligence, denial of due process and tortious interference)
  • Iatarola v. Efrosman, 2008 WL 3412267 (N.J. App. Div. Aug. 14, 2008) (bank owed no duty to shareholders of corporate account holder)
  • Endico v. Fonte, 485 F.Supp.2d 411 (S.D.N.Y. 2007) (member interests in a limited liability company that owned an apartment building did not qualify as securities)
  • Serio v. Black, Davis & Shue Agency, Inc., 2005 WL 3642217 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 30, 2005) (court granted preliminary injunction freezing defendant's assets based on a showing that millions of dollars in improperly withheld insurance premiums had been transferred offshore and then disbursed to defendant's principals back in the United States)

Robert has authored or coauthored a number of articles on a variety of legal issues. While attending law school, Robert served as the Executive Notes and Comments Editor of the St. John's Journal of Legal Commentary and coauthored a Note entitled "What Is Past Is Prologue: Why Congress Should Reject Current Financial Reform Bills and Breathe New Life into Glass-Steagall" (13 St. John's J. Legal Comment. 373 (Winter 1998)). After graduating from law school, Robert served as a law clerk to the Honorable Joseph A. Falcone, Assignment Judge, New Jersey Superior Court.

In 2014, Robert was appointed by the New Jersey Supreme Court to serve a four-year term as a member of the District VA Fee Arbitration Committee.

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Focus Areas

Experience

Recognition

  • Listed in New Jersey Rising Stars, Business Litigation and General Litigation (2013). 

No aspect of this advertisement has been approved by the Supreme Court of New Jersey. Learn more about the award selection criteria and ranking methodology.

Credentials

Education

  • St. John’s University School of Law (J.D.)
  • Villanova University (B.A.)

Bar Admissions

Court Admissions

Professional & Community Involvement

  • New Jersey State Bar Association
  • New York State Bar Association

Media

Events

Insights

Insights

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