High court unlikely to grant right to lawyer

Headline Legal News 2011/03/23 10:06   Bookmark and Share

The Supreme Court appears unlikely to rule that delinquent parents must be given a lawyer before judges can jail them for not paying child support.

Several justices said Wednesday they were troubled by the case of a South Carolina father who was repeatedly jailed even though he insisted he could not afford payments of $50 a week. But the court sounded reluctant about extending the right to a taxpayer-provided lawyer that exists in criminal cases to civil proceedings where a person faces jail time.

Justice Elena Kagan was among those who wondered whether there are procedures short of a court-appointed lawyer that would give a "person in this situation a fair shake at this."


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Court of Appeals Defines Standard of Review of an Administrative Agency's Ruling on a Motion to Dismiss

Lawyer Blog Post 2011/03/22 10:04   Bookmark and Share
Yesterday, the Indiana Court of Appeals issued a decision in a case involving an appeal from an order dismissing a claim by the Worker's Compensation Board in Harris v. United Water Services, Inc., Case No. 93A02-1010-EX-1164. The Court found that it had not consistently applied a specific standard of review to these situations in the past and said that it would begin to apply a deferential standard of review. It also emphasized that a defendant has the burden of proving the grounds for dismissal.
Lessons:
  1. A court will not use a de novo standard of review in appeals from an administrative agency's ruling on a motion to dismiss.
  2. A defendant has the burden of proving that a case should be dismissed.
  3. An administrative agency's wholesale adoption of one party's facts makes it more likely that the agency's decision will be reversed on appeal.
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Do you have “enough” insurance? The importance of uninsured/underinsured coverage.

Lawyer Blog Post 2011/03/20 10:05   Bookmark and Share

http://jassimlaw.com/blog/do-you-have-enough-insurance-the-importance-of-uninsuredunderinsured-coverage/3/

Most reasonable and responsible citizens carry at least the minimum required liability insurance, if not more than the minimum. The general rule of thumb has been to carry enough liability insurance to cover the value of your assets. While that is a good place start, the reality is that protecting your assets just may not be enough.

Consider this: You carry a $100,000 liability auto policy, with $100,000 UIM (uninsured/underinsured limits). In case you were not aware, you cannot obtain UIM coverage in excess of the amount of your own liability limits.

Now, assume an auto accident occurs and YOU are injured through little or no fault of your own. Your medical expenses are almost 6 figures, and you will need some long term care. The other driver has $50,000 policy limits and no other assets to collect upon.

Under that scenario, your maximum recovery would be $100,000. You could recover the other driver’s maximum of $50,000, plus an additional $50,000 from your own insurance policy.

Unfortunately, $100,000 is not going to cover your expenses in the long term, or possibly even the short term.

Now, for only a couple hundred dollars more per year, you could have obtained a $500,000 or even $1 million liability and UIM policy. Under the previous hypothetical, if you had higher limits you could have recovered $50,000 from the other driver, plus up to an additional $950,000 from your own policy – for a total of $1 million. Now, assume the other driver had the California State mimimum of $15,000. In that case, you could recover $15,000 from the other driver’s policy, plus up to $985,000 from your own policy if your injuries and damages justified a maximum recovery.

So, when you are thinking about purchasing an auto policy, or if it is time to renew, don’t simply consider what limits you need to “cover your assets”, but also consider that you may be faced with the very real possibility of being injured by someone without adequate coverage, or assets. If that happens, you should be prepared with sufficient liability and UIM coverage of your own.

When it comes to your life, and the life of your loved one’s, you do not want to take the gamble that the stranger about to collide with you has the right policy to cover you.

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Credit Suisse to pay $70m to settle suit

Topics in Legal News 2011/03/11 12:55   Bookmark and Share

Credit Suisse has agreed to pay $70 million to settle a class-action suit by investors claiming it misstated its subprime asset losses.
In an agreement filed in Manhattan, the Swiss bank said it would settle with investors who purchased United States depositary shares of the company’s stock on the New York Exchange between February 15, 2007 and April 14, 2008.

US residents who purchased Credit Suisse stock on the Swiss stock exchange during the period are also included. The settlement must be approved by the court.

Defendants had alleged that during the period in question, Credit Suisse and some of its executives, including chief executive Brady Dougan, issued “materially false and misleading statements regarding the company's business and financial results”.

Specifically, they alleged that Credit Suisse “concealed the company’s failure to write down impaired securities containing mortgage-related debt”.

In the settlement, Credit Suisse said it continued to “deny all charges of wrongdoing or liability”. However, the bank said it concluded that “further continuation of the action would be protracted and expensive”.

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N.O. casino owner sued over secondhand smoke

Legal Business 2011/03/11 10:54   Bookmark and Share

A lawsuit seeking class-action status accuses Harrah's New Orleans Casino of failing to protect its employees from dangerous levels of secondhand smoke.

The mother of a former Harrah's dealer who died of cancer last year filed the federal suit Wednesday against the casino's owner, Nevada-based Caesars Entertainment Corp. The suit claims Maceo Bevrotte Jr.'s cancer was "directly linked" to his prolonged exposure to secondhand smoke at the casino. The suit says Bevrotte worked at Harrah's for about 15 years.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages and asks a judge to certify the case as a class action for at least 1,000 current, former or future nonsmoking casino employees.

Caesar's spokesman Gary Thompson said the company doesn't comment on pending litigation.

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Judge OKs class-action against Tribune ESOP trustee

Court Watch 2011/03/11 02:54   Bookmark and Share

Tribune Co. employees at the time of company’s 2007 leveraged buy-out are eligible to join a class action lawsuit against the ESOP trustee that represented their interests in the takeover by billionaire Sam Zell, a federal judge ruled Friday.

Any Tribune Co. employee or beneficiary who received or were entitled to an allocation to their employee stock ownership plans (ESOP) stock or ESOP cash accounts are now automatically members of the class suing Lisle-based GreatBanc Trust Co. for failing to fulfill its fiduciary responsibility in the deal, said Daniel Feinberg, an attorney representing the employees and other plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer’s ruling is the second set-back in less than a week for GreatBanc, the remaining defendant with significant liability in a 2008 lawsuit brought by Dan Neil and other Los Angeles Times staffers against the architects of the ill-fated going-private transaction.

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