Think Your Email's a Nightmare? This Firm's System Got a Court Ruling
A law firm's spam filter got it widespread negative attention after a state appellate court decision revealed it knowingly kept a faulty email…
September 26, 2017 at 01:11 PM
10 minute read
A law firm's spam filter got it widespread negative attention after a state appellate court decision revealed it knowingly kept a faulty email configuration to save $700 to $1,200 a year.
Odom & Barlow's email was the subject of a five-page appellate decision that didn't end well for the firm—or its client, now on the hook to pay nearly $394,000 in attorney fees to the opposing side.
Name partners Bradley S. Odom and Richard D. Barlow were counsel in an eminent domain case in which a judge issued an order assessing attorney fees. They said they did not receive the document and asked the trial court for a new order that would reset the clock on the appeal deadline.
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