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February 05, 2002 | Law.com

$44M Worth of Nothing

Usually, a plaintiffs' attorney celebrates winning a $44 million verdict. But there was no joy for Sidney Gilreath last September when a Knoxville, Tenn., jury issued the award to his client in a products liability action against DaimlerChrysler. At the same time, the jury had cleared the only defendant capable of paying any judgment, and Sept. 11 may have been a contributing factor.
4 minute read
January 11, 2001 | Law.com

Sidebar

Pending a 30-day public comment period, the Lawyers Second Amendment Society may be licensed to broadcast from Porterville, Calif. With 24 hours a day to fill on the radio, the group is scrambling to arrange a line-up. Also from The National Law Journal, news about a legal ethics Web site, bad judges and slow ones too.
3 minute read
April 14, 2003 | New York Law Journal

$8.6 million alarm bell for psychiatrists

3 minute read
July 20, 2001 | Law.com

Legal Moves

In this week's Legal Moves, Sony Music Entertainment has promoted Matthew Lansburgh to senior counsel. Perkins Coie hired intellectual property litigator Bret Bocchieri from Cleveland's Arter & Hadden. Chicago's Hinshaw & Culbertson added 14 new partners. Atlanta's King & Spalding promoted 12 associates to partner.
4 minute read
October 02, 2002 | Law.com

Jurors Show Post-Attack Effects

Jury consultants are divided on whether the effects of Sept. 11 translate into a boon for plaintiffs or defendants in the courtroom. Some say juries have become less tolerant of civil suits, while others think juries are more compassionate. The advantage may simply go to the attorney who chooses to seize it, who can wave the flag cleverly enough that jurors don't see that their new vulnerabilities are being exploited.
9 minute read
February 25, 2003 | Daily Report Online

Cleveland Clinic Isn't Liable in Slaying by Ex-Psychiatric Patient

June D. BellSpecial to American Lawyer MediaT he crime that triggered this civil suit was as horrific as they come: A 15-year-old freshman on her way to school was gunned down by a stalker convinced she'd spurned his love. As Penny Chang walked with friends in Shaker Heights, Ohio, Scott C. Strothers, 21, repeatedly fired a 9 mm pistol at her back and head.
6 minute read
April 22, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Debt-Collection Firms Are Denied Defense of Legal Error

4 minute read
April 11, 2012 | Corporate Counsel

Of Patentability, "Laws of Nature," and the Mayo Ruling

The unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision in Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc. will have profound, if hard to predict, consequences for pioneering industries, as well as for the courts and tribunals that decide patent disputes.
5 minute read
January 15, 2009 | National Law Journal

Federal appeals court tosses legal malpractice case involving race horse

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed a legal malpractice suit against a Cincinnati law firm that acknowledged its error for failure to prosecute a civil suit over the sale of a race horse, but argued that its client's suit would have failed on the merits anyway.
2 minute read
Hisrich v. Volvo Cars of North America, Inc.
Publication Date: 2000-09-05
Practice Area: litigation | products liability | torts
Industry:
Court: 6th Cir.
Judge: Merritt, Guy, and Cole, Circuit Judges
Attorneys:
For plaintiff: James A. Lowe
For defendant: Hugh J. Bode et al.
Case number: 99-3426

The full case caption appears at the end of this opinion. OPINIONR. GUY COLE, JR., Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Thomas Hisrich, administrator of the estate of Diana Zhang, file

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