Wisconsin's Supreme Court issued Noffke v. Bakke yesterday and it's been discussed in the news, Wall Street Journal's Blog, and by legal professors, Legal Profession Blog and Sports Law Blog. The Blogosphere discussion seems to focus on cheerleading as a contact sport, which I'm sure law scholars can debate ad infinitum.
Simple lawyers like me though wonder, why didn't a jury get to decide whether this fellow cheerleader and school district acted reasonably? I ask that rhetorically because I know the reason is because a prior Wisconsin legislature and governor decided to give IMMUNITY.
Noffke v. Bakke shows two types of immunity statutes in Wisconsin - governmental immunity (school districts, cities, villages, etc.) and recreational immunity (certain sports, activities, etc.). In my opinion, immunity laws are a horrible form of tort reform, which occurs too often in Wisconsin personal injury law.
Wisconsin Personal Injury Lawyer
Rabu, 28 Januari 2009
Kamis, 22 Januari 2009
True Justice from the new Dept of Justice?
In a prior post, I explained how federal agencies can and have been used to strip Americans of legal rights. In Revival of Justice: What Obama's DoJ appointees should do first, Yale Law School's Judith Resnik sets forth some ideas for the new administration to revive true justice.
The highlights from my perspective are:
The highlights from my perspective are:
- Acknowledge that the courts are for all citizens;
- Stop government lawyers from cutting off access to courts for civil litigants;
- Don't use support "tort reform" laws ("reform" is really short for deform);
- Give consumers, employees and tort victims more access to court;
- Stop mandatory arbitration (see e.g. your credit card contract);
- Let consumers with tiny claims aggregate in classes so they can get lawyers; and
- Eliminate immunities for government officials and private contractors.
Wisconsin Personal Injury Attorney
Kamis, 15 Januari 2009
Ingenix Lawsuit Settled
UnitedHealth Care through an outfit called Ingenix allegedly engaged in some insurance company behaviors I've mentioned. So it settled the lawsuit relating to that paying $350,000,000.00 to resolve class action lawsuits and $50,000,000.00 to the NY AG.
I found one interesting aspect of such lawsuits to be the hypocrisy of doctors bringing the cases since they are typically the ones seeking to limit your rights in medical malpractice litigation.
Wisconsin Personal Injury Lawyer
I found one interesting aspect of such lawsuits to be the hypocrisy of doctors bringing the cases since they are typically the ones seeking to limit your rights in medical malpractice litigation.
Wisconsin Personal Injury Lawyer
Minggu, 04 Januari 2009
Olbermann Countdown Gets 3 Cheers
Almost missed posting on this well done piece. Unbeknowst to many Americans, sometimes an administrator at some federal agency can strip them of their rights.
Wisconsin Personal Injury Attorney
Wisconsin Personal Injury Attorney
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