148 results for 'filedAt:"2024-04-19"'.
J. Crothers rejects a request to assign a case to another judge in a matter involving a divorce proceeding. Additionally, the order awarding attorney fees to the wife is reversed and the matter is remanded for explanation as to whether the district court intended to award attorney fees in its judgment, and if so, instruct the court to explain the legal and factual basis for an award. Reversed.
Court: North Dakota Supreme Court, Judge: Crothers, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2024ND73, Categories: Family Law, Attorney Fees
J. Crothers finds that the district court properly entered judgment in favor of two companies and dismissed an individual's negligence and premises liability claims. However, the lower court improperly entered judgment in favor of one company concluding genuine issues of material fact exist on the question of whether it owed the individual a duty of care. The matter stems from a workplace injury. Affirmed in part.
Court: North Dakota Supreme Court, Judge: Crothers, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2024ND72, Categories: Employment, Premises Liability
J. Reidinger requests the Ministry of Justice’s assistance, under the Hague Convention, in acquiring testimony for an upcoming copyright infringement suit brought by a tech security company against a similar firm. The firm began using the company’s intellectual property outside of the parties’ contractual relationship, and the request is for oral testimony by a relevant party living in The Netherlands.
Court: USDC Western District of North Carolina, Judge: Reidinger, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 1:21cv67, NOS: Copyrights - Property Rights, Categories: Copyright, International Law, Contract
J. Hester finds that the trial court improperly granted partial summary judgment that the dog owner was strictly liable relating to an alleged "unprovoked attack by her dog" on the plaintiff dog owner and his Boston Terriers. There is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the terrier owner's damages resulted from his provocation of the other dog. Reversed in part.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Hester, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2023CA0611, Categories: Civil Procedure, Negligence
J. Wolfe finds that the trial court properly held the father in contempt, modified the custody judgment, and named the Philippines-based mother the domiciliary parent of the children. The record shows that the father has "done everything possible to prevent" the minor child from traveling to the Philippines despite the court's order. Also, the relevant factors were properly considered in finding that relocation of the child was in their best interest. Affirmed.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Wolfe, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2023CU0945, Categories: Contempt, Evidence, Family Law
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J. Henderson upholds a “political operative’s” felony convictions related to his $25,000 contribution to the Trump campaign on behalf of a Russian businessman who had actually paid him $100,000 to attend the fundraiser. The conviction is supported by sufficient evidence and he waived any criminal history objection he had during trial against his within-guidelines, 18-month sentence. Affirmed.
Court: DC Circuit, Judge: Henderson, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 23-3028 , Categories: Evidence, Sentencing, Conspiracy
J. Miller-Lerman finds the workers compensation court improperly dismissed a nurse liaison's petition. The liaison, while working for the hospital, contracted Covid-19 and sought benefits for “occupational disease” arising in the course of employment. However, a genuine issue of fact remains. The court erroneously reasoned that, given the prevalence of Covid-19 at the time, the infection contracted at hospital facilities was a non-compensable "ordinary disease of life." Reversed.
Court: Nebraska Supreme Court, Judge: Miller-Lerman, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: S-23-022, Categories: Health Care, Covid-19, Workers' Compensation
J. Stacy finds the district court properly dismissed this tort suit. The inmate alleges correctional services medical staff negligently determined he was mentally ill, involuntarily administering the antipsychotic "Haldol" by injection. Being the involuntary injection was a battery, it falls under the battery exemption, conferring sovereign immunity. Affirmed.
Court: Nebraska Supreme Court, Judge: Stacy , Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: S-23-627, Categories: Civil Rights, Immunity, Prisoners' Rights
J. Robinson finds Connecticut law requires an employer to deliver its notice to contest workers' compensation benefits within 28 days of the employee's notice to seek benefits and, therefore, the lower court properly upheld the workers' compensation board's decision to preclude the employer from contesting because it mailed its notice - but did not deliver it - 28 days after it received the employee's claim. Affirmed.
Court: Connecticut Supreme Court, Judge: Robinson, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: SC20836, Categories: Civil Procedure, Workers' Compensation
J. Cradle finds the lower court properly dismissed the inmate's petition for a writ of habeas corpus based on ineffective assistance of counsel. His attorney's decision not to call an identification evidence expert witness at trial was sound strategy based on the unreliability of such evidence, which likely would have been ruled inadmissible by the trial court. Additionally, while the attorney should have interviewed the alibi witness's children, who were also present when she allegedly dropped the inmate off at the scene of the crime, their potential testimony would have been cumulative and would not have changed the outcome of the trial because they were not present at the time of the shooting. Affirmed.
Court: Connecticut Court Of Appeals, Judge: Cradle, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: AC45569, Categories: Habeas, Ineffective Assistance, Robbery
J. Flanagan grants a community college’s motion to dismiss allegations of fraud and Fifth Amendment violations brought by a barber academy. The academy’s owner claims the college pressured him to give up his barbering license after it was suspended because the college could not get a barber school license without owning a barber school, and the owner did own one. Then, someone from the college allegedly sent the college’s board a fraudulent application, falsely claiming that the college owned the barber school on the owner’s property. However, the claims against individuals these for actions, all apparently committed before 2014, are time-barred. Claims against the college and board are dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Court: USDC Eastern District of North Carolina, Judge: Flanagan, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 4:23cv80, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Constitution, Fraud, Jurisdiction
J. Fox finds that the lower court properly ruled in favor of a town in a quiet title dispute where a man claims the city took possession of a property lot he lived next to and in which he stored various items. He was not able to show that his use of the lot was "sufficiently hostile" enough to establish a claim for adverse possession, due in large part to the fact that he was given permission to use the lot in the first place.
Court: Wyoming Supreme Court, Judge: Fox, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 22-1438, Categories: Property
J. McHugh finds that a group of conservationists lack standing to challenge a series of agency decisions related to an easement for a property in Rio Grande National Forest that has been selected to become a ski resort village. The groups take issue with a series of biological opinions and other documents that were approved by the agency to green-light development of the project and a land exchange that would help make the property more accessible in the wintertime, but their claims lack merit. They have not been able to show any evidence of major errors in the documents, and even if they were able to show error, there is nothing on the record that suggests the error would have been harmful enough to justify tossing the entire development project. Affirmed.
Court: 10th Circuit, Judge: McHugh, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 22-1438, Categories: Property, Agency
J. Christensen finds that defendant was properly convicted of possession of a firearm as a felon and aggravated eluding after leading a police officer on a car chase following a routine traffic stop because evidence supported the jury's conclusion that defendant had constructive possession of the firearm.
Court: Iowa Court Of Appeals, Judge: Christensen, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 23-0055, Categories: Firearms
J. Christensen finds that defendant was properly convicted of indecent exposure after masturbating in front of two women since the unit of prosecution for indecent exposure is one count per viewer, not one count per exposure. Affirmed.
Court: Iowa Supreme Court, Judge: Christensen, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 23-0560, Categories: Sex Offender
J. Bright finds the lower court properly denied defendant's motion to prevent dissemination of his status as a sex offender. Although he was found not guilty of sexual assault by reason of mental defect, his confinement in a psychiatric hospital is considered "jail or prison time" under the relevant statute, which renders him ineligible for relief. Affirmed.
Court: Connecticut Court Of Appeals, Judge: Bright, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: AC46150, Categories: Sentencing, Sex Offender
J. Stevens reverses, in part, the trial court’s order of parental termination rights related to three children who were found living with their drug-using mother in a U-Haul van, then placed in the custody of the father, who is now incarcerated for child endangerment after the kids tested positive for methamphetamine abuse. The state’s family service plan was not filed into the trial court’s record or the appellate record and, therefore, there is insufficient evidence to support the mother's failure to comply with the plan. Furthermore, there is no evidence to support the state’s assertions the mother did not complete a drug abuse program or that she continued using drugs after completing such a program. Reversed in part.
Court: Texas Courts of Appeals, Judge: Stevens, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 06-23-97, Categories: Evidence, Family Law, Negligence
J. Stevens upholds defendant's drug conviction and 40-year sentence. He argues that, since he was only staying at the apartment temporarily and was not the sole occupant of the apartment, the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he knowingly possessed methamphetamine. However, "the logical force of the evidence strongly links” defendant to the illegal drug. Affirmed.
Court: Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Judge: Stevens, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 06-23-223, Categories: Drug Offender, Evidence, Search
J. Abele finds that although defendant claimed both the victim and her husband lied about the victim's age before they engaged in sexual conduct, her attorney's failure to argue the state could not establish the mens rea for her charge of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor did not constitute ineffective assistance. Defendant admitted in her plea hearing she knew the victim was under the age of 18 and that she willfully created recordings of their sexual acts. Affirmed.
Court: Ohio Court Of Appeals, Judge: Abele, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2024-Ohio-1502, Categories: Ineffective Assistance, Plea, Child Pornography
J. Baldwin finds the lower court properly denied the great-grandparents' motion for custody and granted family services' motion for permanent custody of the children. Although the great-grandparents were willing to care for the children, the parents' failure to make any progress in their case plans greatly diminished the probability the children would ever be returned to their custody and allowed for the termination of their parental rights. Affirmed.
Court: Ohio Court Of Appeals, Judge: Baldwin, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2024-Ohio-1505, Categories: Civil Procedure, Evidence, Family Law
J. Wolfe finds that the trial court properly dismissed the resident's injury claims against the parish after he fell into an open garbage receptacle at a pick-up station while trying to dump trash. The open receptacle did not present an unreasonable risk of harm, and there was no breach of duty by the parish. Affirmed.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Wolfe, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2023CA1099, Categories: Negligence