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Archive for the ‘Maryland Courts’ Category

Maryland Long Arm Statute Opinion

Friday, July 16th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

U.S. District Court Judge Roger W. Titus writes an interesting opinion on the applicability of the Maryland long arm statute to a defendant who runs a music camp in New York but has a website that obviously reaches Maryland residents.

The battle in the case was over the rights to the phrase "Bach to Rock." (It is a name worth fighting over, I think. Very catchy.)

You can find the opinion here.

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

Kagan Confirmation Hearing

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

I can't stop working to listen to the Elena Kagan confirmation hearing. But there has been so much talk of the questions Elena Kagan will get, it is hard not to check in.

NPR is live blogging through Tom Goldstein's SCOTUSblog. I love the NPR disclaimer on this: "While SCOTUSblog has relationships with the law firms of Akin Gump and Howe & Russell, it covers the work of the Supreme Court as an impartial, journalistic entity." I think I'll start putting this kind of disclaimer on the Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. To make the Chinese Wall particularly high, I'll change my shoes and my socks to transition from personal injury lawyer to impartial journalist. You won't see the change but you will have to just trust me.

Getting that off my chest, Goldstein's live blog is worth reading. Also worth reading, for a very different reason, is David Lat and Elie Mystal's live blog of the confirmation hearings on Above the Law. I'm not sure who is doing most of the writing but this is quality stuff. I can't imagine Above the Law is a high paying gig. If I'm any judge of talent, both of these writers will leave Above the Law for greener pastures in the next year. (Then again, I would have bet the farm against Brett Favre last season.)

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

Maryland Lawsuits: We Are Having a Sale

Friday, June 25th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

The fee to file a lawsuit in Maryland will rise $30 to $155 on July 1st. Sue now at the low, low price of $125.

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

New Court of Appeals of Maryland Opinions

Monday, March 8th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

I summarized two new Court of Appeals of Maryland opinions elsewhere last week: Benway v. Maryland Port Authority and Darby v. Marley Cooling . Benway deals with a procedural issue with respect to when a party can file a summary judgment motion. Darby deals with an interesting Maryland workers' compensation issue (that I did not fully understand because I have never handled a workers' comp claim).

I think this is the first time on this blog I ever used "Court of Appeals of Maryland" instead of "Maryland Court of Appeals." The former is technically correct but it just sounds strange to me. I'm heading back to Maryland Court of Appeals.

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

Maryland Local Government Tort Claims Act

Friday, January 29th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

Yesterday, The Maryland Court of Appeals decided Prince George's County v. Longtin. The Plaintiff in this case was arrested for murdering his wife. When the real bad guy was found, Plaintiff brought a claim against Prince George’s County, alleging false imprisonment and, more significantly I think, that police officers engaged in a pattern or practice of “unconstitutional and unlawful detention and interrogation” and “excessive force and brutality." One fact that had to stand out to the jury to lend credibility to his claim: the police ignored DNA evidence that ruled out the Plaintiff, keeping him in jail another six months. The jury bought in, awarding over $6 million in damages, which included over a $1 million in punitive damages collectively against the police officers. Why don’t you remember reading about any of this? The murder was over 10 years ago. The wheels of justice sometimes cruise casually.

The jury appeal of this case is easy to see. It is transcendently awful enough to have your wife murdered. But being wrongfully accused when the evidence should have sent police in another direction and then being physically and mentally brutalized by police? It makes anyone’s top 5 nightmares list. These police officers crossed lines that would make Jimmy McNulty blush.

Still, there are limits to the ‘it could just as easily have been me” feeling you might be having reading this post. Plaintiff admitted to having a verbal and physical altercation with his wife just hours before her body was found. After the altercation, he got a knife and ran after her. Later, she turns up missing and murdered. So while I fault the police for a lot based on these reported facts, jumping to conclusions about Plaintiff guilt is not one of them. I mean, what are the chances?

That’s more on the facts than I planned but it is just an incredible story. Anyway, Prince George’s County argued – apparently without shame – from the beginning that that the Local Government Tort Claims act barred his claim because he did not provide adequate notice. Plaintiff responded with the complex legal theory of “how on earth can you expect me to give you notice when you have wrongfully imprisoned me for more than 180 days?”

The Maryland Court of Special Appeals agreed, finding that an “ordinary prudent person” in Plaintiff’s situation could not have given notice in 180 days. I’m dumbing down a complex opinion, but I think that is an adequate summary.

What would have saved everyone a lot of time in this case and furthered justice in countless others would be if the Maryland legislature would simply abolish the Local Government Tort Claims and the Maryland Tort Claims Act. What exactly is the wisdom in treating government different from you and I when it comes to the statute of limitations? If we all agree it is fair that a local government can be sued in actions sounding in tort in the same manner and extent that anyone can be sued, why change the limitations period? I think the idea of governmental immunity is illogical and outdated but at least I understand the rationale. Altering the statute of limitations is a crude and illogical way to treat citizens in substantially similar situations in dissimilar ways.

Interesting historical footnote that may be of interest only to me: Prince George’s County was the first county in Maryland to waive sovereign immunity in 1970.

You can read the full opinion here.

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