Archives

Categories

Registration

Resources

Archive for October, 2010

“Do, Don’t Say !” Seth Godin simply nails it.

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

By Amazing Firms Amazing Practices, Gerry Riskin.

Sorry for offering the punchline in the title… but Yoda would be so proud (of Seth Godin)

Extract from Seth Godin's blogpost: Won't get fooled again 

If you catch yourself making a promise that's been made before, stop. Don't spend a lot of time and effort building credibility with this sort of promising, because it doesn't pay off.

Make different promises, or even better, do, don't say.

Law firm leaders, if you don't know who Seth Godin is, subscribe to his blog and/or read his books. He offers a perspective that you won't get at bar association meetings.

Originally posted at Amazing Firms Amazing Practices. Please visit http://www.gerryriskin.com/.

New CSA Opinion on Discovery

Friday, October 29th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

In addition to Kearney v. Berger, there was another interesting opinion that came down from Maryland's appellate courts yesterday. The Maryland Court of Special Appeals ruled on an interesting discovery issue in a landlord-tenant case that has implications for Maryland personal injury lawyers.

The underlying case is a dispute between Checkers - I'm assuming it is the fast food chain Checkers we are talking about - and its landlord. Checkers claimed it exercised an option to extend its lease. The case involved an estoppel certificate and a bunch of other things that I did not fully understand. Checkers sought documents from Gallagher Evelius & Jones (GEJ), a Baltimore law firm that represented the landlord. GEJ claimed a bunch of exceptions to the attorney-client privilege that were quite interesting. But the trial court never got to the merits of the argument because GEJ did not present its opposition to the motion to compel in the proper “set-up format.”

At first, I did a double take when I saw proper "set-up format." There is a proper set-up format? But without knowing it, I think everyone here does file their motions to compel in what the trial court saw as the proper set up format: setting up the controversy in the pleadings with the request, the response to the request, and the argument so the court is not required to flip back and forth between documents. I never thought it was a requirement and I'm still not sure that it is. But it seems like a good idea to avoid further annoying the trial court - usually rightfully so - that you have already annoyed with a discovery dispute in the first place.

Originally posted at Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. Please visit http://www.marylandinjurylawyerblog.com/.

Justice O’Connor says she regrets Nev. robo calls

Friday, October 29th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

Retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor is apologizing for the 50,000 recorded telephone calls made to Nevada voters in which she supports a ballot measure to change the way state judges are selected.

O'Connor said Wednesday that she did not authorize the use of her recorded statement in the robo calls, which awakened many Nevadans after midnight Monday. The calls were supposed to be made midday.

But O'Connor said that, whatever the time, her voice should not have been used at all.

"I did not authorize the use of my recorded statement as part of automated telephone calls to Nevada residents, and I regret that the statement was used in this way," she said in a statement issued through the Supreme Court.

At the same time, she defended her involvement in the campaign to amend the state constitution to reduce the role of elections in the choice of judges. O'Connor has appeared in a television commercial on behalf of the Question 1 measure that Nevadans will vote on on Tuesday.

Some critics have said O'Connor, the first woman on the Supreme Court, should refrain from political activity because she continues to hear cases as a federal judge. On Tuesday, she was in the majority on a panel of federal appeals court judges that struck down a key part of an Arizona law requiring voters to prove they are citizens before registering to vote.

O'Connor, 80, has traveled the country to criticize costly election campaigns for judges. She has said judicial elections erode confidence in an impartial judiciary and feed the perception that justice is for sale.

Since her retirement in 2006, O'Connor has been active on other issues as well, including calling for enhanced civics education for schoolchildren and advocating for Alzheimer's research. Her husband, John, died last year of complications arising from Alzheimer's disease.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

New claims made against Toyota in defects case

Friday, October 29th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

New court documents filed in a case against Toyota Motor Corp. claim the auto giant bought back cars with sudden acceleration defects and failed to report the problem to federal regulators.

The allegations made in court documents filed Wednesday also say Toyota compelled car owners to sign confidentiality agreements that prevented them from speaking publicly about sudden acceleration in their vehicles.

An e-mail message for a Toyota spokesman was not immediately returned.

Hundreds of lawsuits were filed against Toyota after the automaker began recalling millions of vehicles because of acceleration problems in several models and brake glitches with the Prius hybrid.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

Supreme Court OKs Foreign Lethal Injection Drug

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The U.S. Supreme Court has for now cleared the way for states to use foreign sources in obtaining a lethal injection drug used in carrying out the death penalty.

Although the Supreme Court has upheld death by lethal injection, the regimen it has approved includes injection with a dose of sodium thiopental that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to render the prisoner unconscious so he does not feel pain. In recent months, Hospira Inc., the only U.S. manufacturer of the drug, has been unable to meet demand, citing unspecified problems with its raw material suppliers. The shortage has left death penalty states scrambling to find alternatives.

Enter Arizona and the case of Jeffrey Landrigan. Landrigan's lawyers sought to block his execution because state officials would not say where they were getting the drug for the execution, and defense lawyers contended that there was no way to evaluate the safety of the drug without knowing where it came from. Pressed by a federal judge, the state admitted it was using a drug from a foreign country, but wouldn't specify which one.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

Supreme Judicial Court rejects appeal in school killing plot

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The highest court in Massachusetts has rejected an appeal by a former high school student who was convicted of planning a Columbine-style attack at his high school in Marshfield.

Joseph Nee was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and served nine months in prison.

Nee appealed his conviction based on the legal defense of “renunciation,” arguing that he had abandoned the plan by a group of teens in 2004 to blow up Marshfield High School and shoot everyone on a hit list of students, teachers and emergency workers.

In its ruling yesterday, the Supreme Judicial Court said Nee was not entitled to a renunciation defense because he did not acknowledge that he conspired with other students to commit a crime.

The court said Nee failed to reveal and renounce his own crime.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

New Maryland Medical Malpractice Opinion: Walzer Revisited

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

The Maryland Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of a medical malpractice lawsuit against a doctor for procedural reasons in a 4-3 opinion issued this morning.

Filed in Anne Arundel County, this wrongful death malpractice claim alleged that a dermatologist failed to perform a timely biopsy of a mole that later proved to be melanoma and caused a man's death.

It is a long opinion. It spends a good bit of time on the "law of the case" doctrine and the unique application of that doctrine in this case where the Court of Appeals grabbed the case before the Court of Special Appeals hears the arguments. Pretty boring. The highlights of the case are, however, of importance to every medical malpractice lawyer in Maryland:

  • A certificate of merit must include an expert report. Period. But then I think arguably the court left the door a little ajar as to whether the certificate itself can meet the requirements of the report. The court writes that there is no evidence as to how the doctor breached the standard of care, noting that "the certificate does not otherwise meet this requirement...." If it had, would that have made a difference? I'm not sure. The take home lesson for Maryland malpractice lawyers: never be the lawyer who finds out the answer to this question.
  • Malpractice lawyers do not need to specifically allege who it was that breached the standard of care if it is otherwise obvious as it is in the single defendant case. Substance is elevated over form, at least on this sub-issue.
  • The certificate of merit's job is to serve as a barrier for claims that lack merit. A certificate of merit in Maryland does not need to state the qualification of the expert or certify that the expert spends less than 20% of their time on forensic activities.
  • Certificates of merit do not have to be expressed in terms of "reasonable degree of medical probability." Certainly, an expert's testimony at trial needs to include the magic language but it does not have to be in the certificate of merit.
  • Doctors do not waive their rights to challenge a certificate of merit by waiving out of health claims arbitration. The court noted their own silence on whether there could be conditions under which a doctor could waive their rights.
  • It was not an abuse of discretion for the trial judge to refuse to extend the deadline to file a certificate of merit that complied with Walzer.

Defendant's lawyer filed a motion to dismiss 18 months after the plaintiffs' filed their malpractice lawsuit. Why wait 18 months? The defendant's lawyer's motion was precipitated by the court's finding in Walzer v. Osborne just a month before. Every plaintiffs' medical malpractice lawyer in Maryland thought Walzer imposed new requirements to file a medical malpractice lawsuit in Maryland. Obviously, defense lawyers did too, waiting to make these procedural arguments until just after Walzer. Even Maryland's high court seems to agree, noting the "not coincidental" timing between the doctor's motion and Walzer. But Walzer was not the first time, nor will it be the last, that an appellate court calls its ruling existing law and practicing lawyers believe it to be new law. The Supreme Court does it all the time too. It is the nature of the beast. It is just like having an answer to a math problem in the back of the book and then creating the answer. The only thing that makes this a little different is the court seems to acknowledge that Walzer took Maryland malpractice lawyers by surprise when it noted the timing of the doctor's motion.

Originally posted at Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. Please visit http://www.marylandinjurylawyerblog.com/.

Laurence Tucker Named KC Best Insurance Lawyer

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

Kansas City, Missouri – Laurence R. Tucker, managing attorney of Armstrong Teasdale’s Kansas City and Overland Park offices, has been named as the “Kansas City, MO Best Lawyers Insurance Lawyer of the Year” for 2011. 

A civil trial lawyer, Tucker concentrates his practice on business torts including insurance litigation, product liability, contractual disputes and professional liability. In addition to trial and appellate work, Tucker has appeared before and been a member of arbitration panels. He has also has acted as a mediator in commercial and business cases.

Tucker received his J.D. from Duke University School of Law and his B.A. from Central Methodist College.

After more than a quarter of a century in publication, Best Lawyers designates “Lawyers of the Year” in high-profile legal specialties in large legal communities. Only a single lawyer in each specialty in each community is honored as the “Lawyer of the Year.”

Best Lawyers compiles its lists of outstanding attorneys by conducting exhaustive peer-review surveys in which thousands of leading lawyers confidentially evaluate their professional peers. The current, 17th edition of The Best Lawyers in America (2011) is based on more than 3.1 million detailed evaluations of lawyers by other lawyers.

The lawyers being honored as “Lawyers of the Year” received particularly high ratings in our surveys by earning a high level of respect among their peers for their abilities, professionalism, and integrity.

About Armstrong Teasdale LLP: Armstrong Teasdale LLP, with nearly 250 lawyers in offices across the U.S. and China, has a demonstrable track record of delivering sophisticated legal advice and exceptional service to a dynamic client base. Whether an issue is local or global, practice area specific or industry related, Armstrong Teasdale provides each client with an invaluable combination of legal resources and practical advice in nearly every area of law. For more information, please visit www.armstrongteasdale.com.



Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

Supreme Court strikes down NO cameras

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The Louisiana Supreme Court has upheld a judge's order invalidating traffic tickets issued through New Orleans' red-light and speed-enforcement camera system

The court's 6-0 vote on Wednesday could create a budget problem for the city, which collected $9.4 million from the tickets through August and expected another $5 million through the end of the year.

On Oct. 1, a state judge tossed out the tickets, saying the camera system violated a city charter provision giving the police department sole authority to enforce traffic regulations. The program had been administered by the Public Works Department.

The Times-Picayune reports an ordinance has been introduced before the city council to transfer the program's authority to police.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.

Federal Court Overturns Arizona ID Law

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

On Tuesday, a federal appeals court has ruled against ruled against Proposition 200, a law that requires people to show proof of U.S. citizenship before registering to vote. The decision did, however, uphold the portion of the law that requires voters to show identification before entering the ballot box, CNN reports.

According to CNN, Governor Jan Brewer and Secretary of State Ken Bennett of Arizona rebuked the court's decision in a joint statement stating the decision "is an outrage and a slap in the face to all Arizonans who care about the integrity of their elections."

Arizona has undergone multiple legal battles concerning its immigration laws including SB 1070, which was passed in April and allows law enforcement officials in Arizona to request proof of legal immigration, residency, or citizenship of anyone they suspect might be an illegal immigrant.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.