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The Researching Paralegal

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The Researching Paralegal

Category Archives: Appellate Law

OSCN Adds Nine More Oklahoma Counties.

13 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Oklahoma Civil Appellate Procedure, Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Oklahoma Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on OSCN Adds Nine More Oklahoma Counties.

Tags

Legal Research, ODCR, Oklahoma Appellate Courts, Oklahoma District Courts, OSCN

OSCN Kicks off the New Year with Nine more District Courts added to its Case Search, OSCN (Oklahoma Supreme Court Network)

http://bit.ly/1n0FZJP

OSCN has been around a while. Oklahoma actually has two websites and, between the two, you can access every county in the state. The second website, ODCR, is useful, but not as sophisticated as OSCN. Both websites allow you to look up cases by county, name, or case number. OSCN allows free access to the hyperlinks that give you access to filed documents. ODCR charges a monthly fee for that access.

The larger counties are found on OSCN. With some exceptions, you can access everything that has been filed in the case in a relatively short time after it was filed. ODCR can be a bit slower to post filed documents.

Happily nine more county district courts have moved to OSCN, which is discussed more fully in this post. OSCN provides more than a method to access a court case’s docket and the documents filed in the case. It is also a great resource for Oklahoma case law, statutes, Attorney General opinions, and more. A very handy tool. -CCE

On January 7, 2016, the Oklahoma Supreme Court added nine additional district courts to its online case search. With this addition, visitors to the OSCN website now have the capability to search public records in 34 district courts and in the Appellate Court. This free service provides the public a convenient way to search for court records by case number, name, date of birth, and other identifiers. Search results are fast, and case information is available almost immediately after being processed by the court clerk’s office. In addition to online case information, site visitors may view court-related documents online; however, documents availability will vary by district court. . . .

Continue reading →

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Preparing Your Oral Argument – This is How You Do It.

27 Sunday Dec 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Oral Argument

≈ Comments Off on Preparing Your Oral Argument – This is How You Do It.

Tags

Appellate Law, Lawyerist Blog, Oral Argument, Sam Glover

 How to Prepare for Oral Argument, by Sam Glover, Lawyerist Blog

https://lawyerist.com/40693/how-to-prepare-for-oral-argument/

Oral argument is one of the most exciting parts of litigation, and only a few lawyers are really good at it. But even if you aren’t a naturally talented presenter, you can still improve. The important thing is to get away from your outline and use a more ‘modular’ approach to oral argument.

Many lawyers — especially those new to law practice — prepare for oral argument the same way, by creating an outline and rehearsing as they would for a speech. They may prepare for questions by talking through the issues with a colleague, but this does not usually result in effective oral argument. What it does result in is a stiff argument, awkward recovery after answering questions, and an ineffective presentation overall.

That’s because oral argument is so much more dynamic than an outline — even if you have a ‘cold’ bench. In order to prepare for dynamic argument, you need a more dynamic approach than an outline and a few run-throughs. . . .

Continue reading →

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Utah Lawyers Not Yet Ready To Accept Limited Paralegal Practitioners.

20 Sunday Dec 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Education, Limited License Legal Technician Program, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Utah Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Utah Lawyers Not Yet Ready To Accept Limited Paralegal Practitioners.

Tags

Jessica Miller, Limited Paralegal Practitioners, The Salt Lake Tribune, Utah Supreme Court

 

 

A New Kind Of Paralegal Is Coming To Help Utahns Navigate The Court System, by Jessica  Miller, The Salt Lake Tribune (published December 14, 2015)

http://www.sltrib.com/home/3307300-155/a-new-kind-of-paralegal-is

There are issues with how Utahns access their justice  system, a Utah Supreme Court justice said.

Many people either can’t afford lawyers, Deno Himonas said Monday, or simply don’t want to hire one to help them navigate the court system as they file for divorce, settle debts or resolve eviction issues. . . .

To that end, the Utah Supreme Court has approved the creation of a new legal profession: limited paralegal practitioners.

*     *     *

Creating a new career field from the ground up won’t be without challenges, however.

One of the biggest hurdles may be getting Utah lawyers to support the program. The task force report said 60 percent of lawyers recently surveyed by the Utah State Bar either disagreed or ‘strongly disagreed’ with a proposal to explore limited licenses for certain practice areas.

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Utah’s Major Decisions About The Paralegal Profession.

19 Saturday Dec 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Limited License Legal Technician Program, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Utah Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Utah’s Major Decisions About The Paralegal Profession.

Tags

Limited Legal Licensing, National Center for State Courts, Non-Lawyers, Paralegals, Utah Supreme Court

Utah made some major decisions about the paralegal profession in 2015. In August, the Utah Supreme Court, Utah State Bar, and National Center for State Courts took a hard look at the role of non-lawyers:

Non-Lawyer Legal Assistance Roles – Efficacy, Design, and Implementation, Thomas M. Clark, Ph.D., National Center for State Courts (August 2015)

Non-Lawyer Legal Assistance Roles

In November 2015, the Utah Supreme Court’s Task Force also tackled limited legal licensing of non-lawyers:

Utah Supreme Court Task Force to Examine Limited Legal Licensing

http://www.utcourts.gov/committees/limited_legal/Supreme%20Court%20Task%20Force%20to%20Examine%20Limited%20Legal%20Licensing.pdf

You can find both here at the Utah Courts website under Publications/Court Reports:

http://www.utcourts.gov/resources/reports/

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Failure To Follow Court Rules Earned This Fed Up Benchslap.

23 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Bad Legal Writing, Benchslap, Brief Writing, Citations, Court Rules, Courts, Issues On Appeal, Judges, Legal Writing

≈ Comments Off on Failure To Follow Court Rules Earned This Fed Up Benchslap.

Tags

Above the Law (blog), Appellate Law, Benchslap, Brief Writing, Court Rules, Kathryn Rubino

A Lawyer Way Out Of Her League Gets Benchslapped By Frustrated Judge, by Kathryn Rubino, Above The Law Blog

http://tinyurl.com/o9hk847

The case did not seem suspicious. A commercial painter claimed he had not been paid for work hired by a building manager. The lawyer took the painter’s case. Unfortunately, under oath, her client admitted that he had faked his evidence with forged invoices.

No one was surprised when the trial court imposed sanctions. The surprise came when the lawyer appealed the case with a badly written brief. The lawyer only made it worse when she submitted her corrected brief to the Court. The judge’s response is a classic benchslap. -CCE

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South Carolina Supreme Court Creates Board of Paralegal Certification.

15 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Certification, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Regulation, South Carolina Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on South Carolina Supreme Court Creates Board of Paralegal Certification.

Tags

Board of Paralegal Certification, Edward Nelson, examiner.com, NY Public Policy Examiner, Paralegal Certification, Supreme Court of South Carolina

South Carolina Supreme Court creates a State Board of Paralegal Certification, by Edward Nelson, NY Public Policy Examiner, examiner.com (with hat tip to William P. Statsky)

http://www.examiner.com/article/south-carolina-supreme-court-creates-a-state-board-of-paralegal-certification

Today [November 11, 2015], the South Carolina Supreme Court issued an Order which gives legitimacy to Rule 429 of the South Carolina Appellate Court Rules (SCACR) and creates the Board of Paralegal Certification where paralegals can voluntarily apply to become certified with the State of South Carolina. According to the Supreme Court, ‘The purpose of certification of South Carolina’s paralegals is to assist in the delivery of legal services to the public by identifying individuals who are qualified by education, training, and experience and who have demonstrated knowledge, skill, and proficiency to perform substantive legal work under the direction and supervision of a lawyer licensed in South Carolina.’

This is a tremendous Order from the South Carolina Supreme Court issued on November 12, 2015. The Board of Paralegal Certification shall be formed of five (5) attorneys in good standing with the South Carolina Bar and four (4) paralegals certified under the program which constitutes a nine (9) member board. . . .

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The U.S. Supreme Court, Qualified Immunity, Deadly Force, and a Car Chase.

10 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Civil Rights, Excessive Force, Governmental Tort Claim Act, Qualified Immunity, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on The U.S. Supreme Court, Qualified Immunity, Deadly Force, and a Car Chase.

Tags

Excessive Use of Force, Law Enforcement, Law Librarians Blog, Mark Giangrande, Qualified Immunity

Supreme Court Action: Qualified Immunity When Deadly Force is Used By Officers During A Car Chase, by Mark Giangrande, Law Librarians Blog

http://tinyurl.com/q8m43ce

It will be interesting to see how this ruling may be applied to recent news events. –CCE

The Supreme Court issued one opinion today [November 9, 2015].  The case, Mullenix v. Luna (14-1143), decided whether a Texas state trooper (Mullenix) was entitled to qualified immunity when he fired shots at a suspect’s car during a high speed chase, killing the suspect. . . .

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C-Span’s 12-Part Series on Landmark Supreme Court Cases.

15 Thursday Oct 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on C-Span’s 12-Part Series on Landmark Supreme Court Cases.

Tags

C-Span, Landmark Cases, U.S. Supreme Court

C-Span Launches New Series On Landmark Supreme Court Cases, by James B. Levy, Legal Skills Prof  Blog

http://tinyurl.com/pln73xq

I apologize for not finding this sooner. Sounds fantastic! -CCE

C-Span has launched a new, 12 part series that airs on Monday evenings at 9:00 p.m. (the series began on October 5 but I only found about it now) that profiles landmark Supreme Court decisions through 1973.

*     *     *

Using C-SPAN’s signature live format of studio guests interacting with viewers and interspersed with visits to historic sites for context, the series will explore the stories of historic rulings which changed American society, the plaintiffs who sparked these cases and the justices and lawyers who were key to the Supreme Court’s review. A video-rich website will offer the series on demand along with classroom materials. Here is a two-minute video trailer previewing the series https://youtu.be/6kuc5tyborM. . . .

Continue reading →

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Seventh Circuit Denies Neiman Marcus’ Rehearing of Data Breach Class Action.

29 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Computer Forensics, Computer Virus, Cybersecurity, Identity Theft, Malware

≈ Comments Off on Seventh Circuit Denies Neiman Marcus’ Rehearing of Data Breach Class Action.

Tags

Data Breach, Hackers, Hunton and Williams, Identity Theft, Privacy, Privacy & Information Security Law Blog, Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals

Seventh Circuit Denies En Banc Review For Data Breach Class Action, Privacy & Information Security Law Blog posted by Hunton and Williams

https://www.huntonprivacyblog.com/2015/09/29/seventh-circuit-denies-en-banc-review-for-data-breach-class-action/

Plaintiffs, Neiman Marcus cardholders, brought a class action against the store for damages caused by a 2013 data breach. Hackers accessed customers’ credit and debit cards, as well as other personal information. The Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, ruled that the individual Plaintiffs and the class action against Neiman Marcus lacked standing under Article III of the Constitution.

Plaintiffs appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. The link takes you to the Seventh Circuit’s opinion explaining how Plaintiffs prevailed and why it reversed and remanded the case. Neiman Marcus filed for rehearing. The Seventh Circuit followed its usual habit, and denied it.

The Seventh Circuit’s analysis of its reasons ruling that Plaintiffs had met the three requirements for Article III standing is well worth the read. An added bonus is the link to the 2014 edition of The Practitioner’s Handbook for Appeals to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, -CCE

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Fifth Circuit Reverses District Court On Termination of Temporary Employees.

24 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Employment Law, Litigation, Summary judgment, Workers' Compensation, Wrongful Termination

≈ Comments Off on Fifth Circuit Reverses District Court On Termination of Temporary Employees.

Tags

EEOC, Employment Law, Manpower, San Antonio Employment Law Blog, Summary judgment, Thomas J. Crane

Fifth Circuit Reverses Western District for Making Credibility Determinations, by Thomas J. Crane, San Antonio Employment Law Blog

http://tinyurl.com/nk7tmln

In Burton v. Freescale Semiconductor Inc. and Manpower of Texas, LP, No. 14-50944 (5th Cir. 8/10/2015), the Fifth Circuit overruled the district court’s summary judgment. The court addressed a frequent issue, who is responsible for the termination of temporary employees? But, in so doing, the higher court also addressed a more frequent issue, how to apply the summary judgment standard. . . .

Continue reading →

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Supreme Court Writing Analysis – Whose Briefs Win and Why.

22 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Appellate Writing, Brief Writing, Editing, Grammar, Legal Analysis, Legal Argument, Legal Writing, Persuasive Writing, Readability, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Supreme Court Writing Analysis – Whose Briefs Win and Why.

Tags

Appellate Briefs, Legal Analysis, Legal Writing, Persuasive Legal Writing, Plain English, U.S. Supreme Court

Who Wins in the Supreme Court? An Examination of Attorney and Law Firm Influence, by Alan Feldman, University of Southern California, Political Science, SSRN.com (Date posted: August 18, 2015 ; Last revised: August 21, 2015)

http://tinyurl.com/q48ywgq

This paper is a detailed analysis of what type of legal writing and briefs from 1946 through 2013 have been the most influential  with the United States Supreme Court and the lawyers who write them. Interestingly, lawyers who write short sentences in the active voice and who use fewer words than the majority of brief writers are the most successful. It is a fascinating read, and strongly recommended. -CCE

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Perfect Benchslap For Redaction Running Amuck.

08 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Benchslap, Court Orders, Federal Judges, Judges, Legal Writing, U.S. District Courts

≈ Comments Off on Perfect Benchslap For Redaction Running Amuck.

Tags

Above the Law, Benchslap, Joe Patrice, Judge Charles Breyer, Legal Writing, Redaction

Judge Trolls Lawyers Without Saying Anything At All, by Joe Patrice, Above The Law

http://abovethelaw.com/2015/08/judge-trolls-lawyers-without-saying-anything-at-all/

Joe beat me to it. Many thanks to Jessica L. Craft at Holden & Carr for the heads’ up. -CCE

Judge Charles Breyer proves that a redaction can be worth a thousand words. . . .

Continue reading →

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Judge’s Benchslap Orders Parties To Rewrite Their Acronym-Loaded Briefs.

20 Monday Jul 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Acronyms, Bad Legal Writing, Brief Writing, District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, Legal Writing, Readability, Style Manuals

≈ Comments Off on Judge’s Benchslap Orders Parties To Rewrite Their Acronym-Loaded Briefs.

Tags

Acronyms, Benchslap, Legal Writing, Ross Guberman

Alphabet Attack, by Ross Guberman, Legal Writing Tips for Attorneys and Judges

http://legalwritingpro.com/blog/alphabet-attack/

I wonder how many judges have wanted to do this? -CCE

It wouldn’t be spring in America without some federal judges publicly criticizing attorneys in a genre now known as ‘benchslap.’

The offended court this time: the D.C. Circuit. The court’s target: acronyms in briefs filed in a complex telecom dispute. The benchslap: ‘It is ordered . . . that the parties submit new briefs that eliminate uncommon acronyms used in their previously filed final briefs.’ The court even cited its own practice handbook for good measure: ‘[i]n briefs the use of acronyms other that those that are widely known should be avoided.’ . . .

Continue reading →

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Are iPad Text Messages Protected Under Your State’s Wiretapping Laws?

30 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Admissibility, Appellate Law, Case of First Impression, Evidence, Government, Intellectual Property, iPad, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on Are iPad Text Messages Protected Under Your State’s Wiretapping Laws?

Tags

iPad, Pennsylvania Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, Privacy, Text Messages, The Democratic Underground.com, Wiretapping

iPad Texts Not Private Under Wiretap Act | The Legal Intelligencer*, The Democratic Underground.com

(The Legal Intelligencer requires subscription but is free for 5/mo articles.)

http://www.democraticunderground.com/10026893652

iPads are popular in the legal and business world. It would be a good idea to check your state’s wiretapping law and determine whether your client’s and your own text iPad messages have a reasonable expectation to privacy. -CCE

An iPad does not fall within the telephone exemption under the Pennsylvania Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, and users of the device do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy when it comes to sending text messages, the state Superior Court has ruled in a case of first impression. . . .

Continue reading →

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An Expert’s Guide To Formatting An Appellate Brief.

20 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Appellate Writing, Brief Writing, Citations, Citations to the Record, Court Rules, Courts, Legal Writing, Local Rules, Table of Authorities

≈ Comments Off on An Expert’s Guide To Formatting An Appellate Brief.

Tags

Above the Law, Appellate Briefs, Appellate Record, Brief Formatting, Court Rules, Deborah Savadra, Legal Office Guru, Legal Writing

How to Format an Appellate Brief, by Deborah Savadra, Lawyerist Blog

(Deborah Savadra is editor and chief blogger at Legal Office Guru, which offers The WordPerfect Lover’s Guide to Word as well as Microsoft Office video tutorials. You can follow her on Twitter at @legalofficeguru.)

https://lawyerist.com/70334/format-appellate-brief-microsoft-word/

Appellate briefs are not a project for beginners. And, regardless of what you read in this tutorial, you must follow your appellate court rules to the letter.

When your court’s rules tell you that it wants citations done a certain way, it mean exactly that. If the court’s rules say a brief must not go over a certain number of pages, do not even think about “fudging” the rules by changing the font, page size, or line spacing.

You see, all courts, not just appellate ones, write local rules for a reason. Whatever “trick” you may try to skirt around those rules, that court has already seen it and knows it when it sees it again. Courts take their local rules seriously, and so should you.

There are many posts and articles posted on my blog about the strategy and nuances of writing appellate briefs, as well as many excellent books on the subject. This tutorial will help you with the nuts and bolts of writing the bare bones, which is always useful regardless of your writing proficiency.

I also highly recommend Ms. Deborah Savadra’s blog, Legal Office Guru. She does an excellent job. -CCE

35ygj4

The appellate brief is undoubtedly one of the most complex pleadings, formatting-wise. Formatting requirements vary from court to court, going so far as to dictate the size and font of your type, your margins and your line spacing. (If you’ve ever had to do a U.S. Supreme Court brief, I feel your pain.) Even before you consider the text of your argument, you have to wrap your head around which pages have which style of page numbers, whether you must furnish a table of authorities, and how you have to deal with any appendices or references to the record. . . .

Continue reading →

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New And Amended Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions – Juvenile.

13 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Jury Instructions, Legal Writing, Oklahoma Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on New And Amended Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions – Juvenile.

Tags

Jury instructions, Juvenile Law, Oklahoma Supreme Court, Verdict Forms

Order Adopting New and Amended Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions and Verdict Forms – Juvenile.

http://www.oscn.net/applications/oscn/DeliverDocument.asp?CiteID=475710

On June 8, 2015, The Oklahoma Supreme Court published its new and amended Uniform Jury Instructions and Verdict Forms – Juvenile. The District Courts of the State of Oklahoma are to implement these instructions effective thirty days from the date of the Order. -CCE

 

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Big Changes For Civil Cases In The Southern District Of New York.

09 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Courts, E-Docketing, E-Filing, Federal District Court Rules, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York

≈ Comments Off on Big Changes For Civil Cases In The Southern District Of New York.

Tags

Above the Law, E-Filing, Gaston Kroub, Southern District of New York

Beyond Biglaw: The End of Paper Filing in the S.D.N.Y., by Gaston Kroub, Above The Law Blog

http://abovethelaw.com/2015/06/beyond-biglaw-the-end-of-paper-filing-in-the-s-d-n-y/

Yesterday marked the beginning of a new era for those who file civil cases in the Southern District of New York (S.D.N.Y.). Considering its status as one of the nation’s oldest, most prestigious Districts Courts, with a corresponding docket full of high-profile civil (and criminal) cases, the change from ‘paper filing’ to electronic filing is an important one. The announcement that the District would be going to electronic filing was in itself a bit surprising, considering that the clerk’s office and judges had resisted the temptation for many years. But change is constant, and starting yesterday [June 9, 2015], filing civil cases in the S.D.N.Y. will be done electronically in the vast majority of cases. . . .

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Limited License Legal Technicians – Can They Really Practice Law?

23 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Family Law, Limited License Legal Technician Program, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Regulation, Unauthorized Practice of Law, Washington Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Limited License Legal Technicians – Can They Really Practice Law?

Tags

2Civility, Family Law, Legal Ethics, Limited License Legal Technicians

Future or Folly: Limited License Legal Technicians, by 2Civility, Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism (with hat tip to William P. Statsky)

http://tinyurl.com/lk9jap6

It’s graduation time. This year, there is a brand new class of graduates in the State of Washington: Limited License Legal Technicians (LLLTs). These graduates are from a unique legal educational program—not a traditional law school. Yet they will eventually have a law license to perform limited legal services in family law. . . .

Continue reading →

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Texas Supreme Court Agrees That Compounding Pharmacy Is “Health Care Provider.”

16 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Damages, Health Law, Litigation, Negligence, Texas Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Texas Supreme Court Agrees That Compounding Pharmacy Is “Health Care Provider.”

Tags

Compounding Pharmacy, Health Care Provider, Health Law, Implied Warranty, Texas Medical Liability Act

 

Texas Supreme Court Holds That Compounding Pharmacies Are Health Care Providers Under Texas Medical Liability Act, by Elinor H. Murarova, Duane Morris Health Law Blog

http://tinyurl.com/k75hx7m

On April 24, 2015, the Texas Supreme Court dismissed claims against a compounding pharmacy and its individual pharmacists which alleged negligence in compounding a lipoic acid medication, finding that the defendants were health care providers entitled to the protections in the Texas Medical Liability Act (‘TMLA’).

In the case Randol Mill Pharmacy et al. v. Miller et al., Case No. 13-1014 (Tex. Sup. Ct.), the plaintiff’s physician prescribed and administered weekly intravenous injections of 200 mg/ml lipoic acid, an antioxidant supplement. The plaintiff alleged that she underwent nine weeks of treatment without incident, but in the tenth treatment she suffered a severe adverse reaction and as a result was hospitalized for several weeks, received multiple blood transfusions, and went permanently blind in both eyes. Randol Mill Pharmacy compounded the lipoic acid that allegedly caused the adverse reaction.

In her complaint against the compounding pharmacy and its individual pharmacists, the plaintiff alleged that these defendants gave inadequate and inappropriate warnings and instructions for using the compounded lipoid acid; that the compounded lipoid acid was defective, ineffective and unreasonably dangerous; and that the compounding pharmacy and pharmacists generally breached implied warranties with respect to the design, manufacture, inspection, marketing, and/or distribution of the compounded lipoid acid. . . .

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Latest Supreme Court Opinion on Pregnancy Discrimination Claims.

28 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Employment Law, Pregnancy Discrimination, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Latest Supreme Court Opinion on Pregnancy Discrimination Claims.

Tags

Civil Rights, Employment Law, Jason Shinn, Michigan Employment Law Advisor Blog, Pregnancy Discrimination Act, Title VII

A New Day for Pregnant Employee Workplace Accommodations – Understanding the New Framework, by Jason Shinn, Michigan Employment Law Advisor Blog

http://www.michiganemploymentlawadvisor.com/category/pregnancy-discrimination-act/

Yesterday [March 26, 2015] the U.S. Supreme Court issued the much anticipated opinion in a pregnancy discrimination claim, Young v . United Parcel Service.

For context, the claim in Young v UPS arose under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA). The PDA was added to Title VII (the gold-standard in terms of civil rights law prohibiting workplace discrimination) to overcome a prior Supreme Court ruling that allowed employers to treat pregnant female workers less favorably based on being pregnant.

There are two anti-discrimination provisions under the PDA: the first prohibits pregnancy bias as a form of discrimination based on sex; the second prohibits employers from treating female employees who become pregnant different than other employees who perform the same sort of work. . . .

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Are Shorter Appellate Briefs Better? Appellate Judges Seem To Think So.

15 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Appellate Writing, Brief Writing, Editing, Legal Analysis, Legal Argument, Legal Writing, Plain Language, Proofreading, Readability

≈ Comments Off on Are Shorter Appellate Briefs Better? Appellate Judges Seem To Think So.

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Appellate Brief Writing, Appellate Judges, James B. Levy, Legal Skills Prof Blog, Legal Writing, Louis J. Sirico Jr., The Wall Street Journal Law Blog

Federal Appellate Judges Want To Shorten The Length of Briefs, Lawyers Object, by Professor James B. Levy, Legal Skills Prof Blog

http://tinyurl.com/m3s85z2

If an appeal is extremely complex, would a reduction in the size of a brief compromise the ability of a party to win an appeal to a federal appellate court? Apparently, appellate judges do not think so.

Before making up your mind, please read Professor Sirico’s posts, also included by Professor Levy in his original post. It may not be a question of length, but experience. What do you think? -CCE

The Wall Street Journal Law Blog has posted this story about the reaction by many appellate attorneys to a proposal that would reduce the word count on federal appellate briefs under the federal rules of appellate practice from 14,000 to 12,500. (Interestingly, my co-blogger Professor Sirico reported last month on a new study (and here) that supports the lawyers’ objections to the proposed rule change insofar as the study found that longer briefs filed by appellants ‘strongly’ correlates with success on appeal. However, the authors of the study cautioned against inferring that it is word count, rather than the complexity of the underlying issues which may require more thorough explanations, that explains the correlation). . . .

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Why We Should Care About The Loss of Precedent.

14 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Precedent

≈ Comments Off on Why We Should Care About The Loss of Precedent.

Tags

Appellate Advocacy Blog, Appellate Law, Common Law, David R. Cleveland, Lord Coke, Precedent, Unpublished Opinions

The Harms of Issuing Non-Precedential Opinions, by David R. Cleveland, Appellate Advocacy Blog

http://tinyurl.com/nkmjg7b

In a post last Monday on Prawfsblawg, entitled, On Not Creating Precedent in Plumley v. Austin, Richard M. Re asks, ‘what’s so wrong with deliberately declining to create precedent?’ By his answer, an implied ‘nothing’ because ‘[d]oing so conserves scarce resources and reduces the risk of mistaken or sloppy precedent,’ he seems to be asking, ‘what’s the harm?’ . . . .

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No Sandbagging!

13 Friday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Appellate Record, Issues On Appeal, Preservation of Error

≈ Comments Off on No Sandbagging!

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Appellate Law, Louisiana Civil Appeals Blog, Objections, Preservation of Error, Raymond P. Ward, Sandbagging

Thou Shalt Not Sandbag, by Raymond P. Ward, Louisiana Civil Appeals Blog

http://raymondpward.typepad.com/la-appellate/2015/03/thou-shalt-not-sandbag.html

In the last post, we looked at the jurisdictional foundation of the law on preserving error. Today we will look at one of two purposes of this law: prevention of sandbagging.

What is sandbagging? Black’s Law Dictionary defines it as ‘[t]he act or practice of a trial lawyer’s remaining cagily silent when a possible error occurs at trial, with the hope of preserving an issue for appeal if the court does not correct the problem.’ Black’s Law Dictionary 1542 (Bryan A. Garner, ed., 10th ed., Thomson Reuters 2014). Justice Scalia once described sandbagging as ‘suggesting or permitting, for strategic reasons, that the trial court pursue a certain course, and later — if the outcome is unfavorable — claiming that the course followed was reversible error. Freytag v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 501 U.S. 868, 895 (1991) (Scalia, J., concurring).

Appellate courts hate sandbagging. As proof of this proposition, here are some quotable quotes:

  • ‘The Sixth Circuit’s decision to require the filing of objections is supported by sound considerations of judicial economy…. The Sixth Circuit’s rule, by precluding appellate review of any issue not contained in objections, prevents a litigant from ‘sandbagging’ the district judge by failing to object and then appealing.’ Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 147–48 (1985).
  • ‘The rationale behind this Court’s opinion in Lewis was distaste for the ‘sandbagging’ practice in which defendants circumvent district judges and raise objections for the first time on appeal.’ Perales v. Casillas, 950 F.2d 1066, 1071 (5th Cir. 1992).
  • ‘If the record indicates that counsel for the complaining party deliberately avoided making the proper objection or request, plain error will almost never be found. This court will not tolerate ‘sandbagging’ defense counsel lying in wait to spring post-trial error.’ U.S. v. Sisto, 534 F.2d 616, 624 n. 9 (5th Cir. 1976).

Ththere no-sandbagging rule is a consequence of the appellate court’s jurisdiction, which is limited to reviewing the trial court’s actions. It is also a matter of fairness to the district court. In the appellate courts’ view, it is unfair to the district court to complain of that court’s error on appeal without having given that court a fair opportunity to avoid or correct its own error.

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10th Circuit Tips and Resources For New Attorneys and Infrequent Attorney Filers.

12 Thursday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Writing, Brief Writing, U.S. Courts of Appeal

≈ Comments Off on 10th Circuit Tips and Resources For New Attorneys and Infrequent Attorney Filers.

Tags

10th Circuit Court of Appeals, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Local Court Rules, Practitioner's Guide, Tenth Circuit Rules

Filing Your Appeal – For New and Infrequent Attorney Filers, The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

https://www.ca10.uscourts.gov/clerk/filing-your-appeal/atty

Introduction

If this is your first time in this court, welcome. If it has been a while since you filed a brief with us, welcome back. Practicing in a federal appeals court is different from practicing in a trial court, state or federal, and there are even notable differences from state appellate work. With this in mind, there are a number of resources available to assist you.

As an initial matter, if you intend to practice in this court, you can count on referring frequently to the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, and especially our local Tenth Circuit Rules. Our Practitioner’s Guide is also a good source of information.

If you can’t find the answer to a question in the rules or if you have a special concern about an appeal, do not hesitate to call the clerk’s office at 303-844-3157. We have real people answering the phone and a well-trained staff who can assist you.

The following sections provide general information you may find useful. However, this information is no substitute for a careful review of the federal and our local rules. . . .

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Patent Law’s Most Influential Supreme Court Decisions From 2005 through 2015.

12 Thursday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Case of First Impression, Intellectual Property, Patent Law, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Patent Law’s Most Influential Supreme Court Decisions From 2005 through 2015.

Tags

Cases of First Impression, Dennis Crouch, PatentlyO Blog, Precedent, U.S. Supreme Court

Most Cited Supreme Court Patent Decisions (2005-2015), by Dennis Crouch, PATENTLYO Blog

http://tinyurl.com/mpd5ue

The list below considers all of the U.S. Supreme Court patent cases decided during the past decade (Since January 2005) and ranks them according to the number of citations.  Citation offers some insight into the influence of decisions, but is obviously limited for a number of reasons. Cases may be cited because of their importance in changing the doctrine (KSR, eBay) or simply as the court’s most recent statement of the law on an important issue (Microsoft v. i4i and KSR) or for a narrow procedural issue that applies in many cases (Unitherm). Bay’s high citation rate is also boosted because its principles have been applied broadly to injunctive relief across many areas of law. Some cases with low citation counts may also have major impacts. They may, for instance impact a small number of very important cases (Caraco) or perhaps they cause folks to change behavior so that the issue stops arising.

With this list we also have the timeline problem where older cases are more likely to be highly cited since there has been more opportunity for those cites. I Alice Corp to rise in the ranks Nautilus and Teva, on the other hand, may well flounder (based upon the Federal Circuit’s treatment of those cases thus far). . . .

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