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While Non-Lawyer Judges Have a Case to Remain on New York Bench, Critics Point to Drawbacks
Supporters of non-attorney judges--who are often popular and well-connected figures in their communities--say they only need more support and education from the statewide judicial system.From Big Sky to the Big Apple: How Environmental Constitutionalism Could Shape New York Dockets
The challenges of guaranteeing the right to a clean and healthful environment will create many legal pariahs in trial courts and intermediate appellate courts, and in due time, New York's Court of Appeals will be confronted with the fresh face of this movement.Voters Decide More Than a Dozen State Supreme Court Races Throughout NY
In the crowded eight-way race for four downstate seats, a quartet of Democrats who garnered the rare cross-endorsement of the local Conservative Party held off four Republicans.Town Justice Who Is Battling Gambling Addiction Steps Down Amid Allegations of Taking Court Funds
A justice for the Moravia town and village courts since 2001, June Shepardson agreed to step down in a stipulation co-signed by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct in which she also said she would never again run for judicial office.View more book results for the query "cayuga"
Candidates Aim for State Supreme Court in Upstate and Western New York
In the Capitol Region, the nephew of two retiring brothers on the bench will vie to carry the baton, while further downstate, John A. Sarcone III, an attorney who declined the GOP nomination for attorney general last year, has been nominated by Republican convention delegates in the Ninth Judicial District.NY Appeals Court Reduces Negligence Complaint in CVA Case for Lack of Foreseeable Harm
The Third Department decision said a trial court should have dismissed claims of negligence and negligent hiring, retention and supervision relative that had been leveled against Warren County, where the plaintiff was placed in a foster home in the late 1970s.Departure From Accepted Standards: Navigating the Hindsight Rule
The rule prohibiting hindsight in medical malpractice actions is often the subject of misapplication and misuse. In their Medical Malpractice column, Thomas Moore and Matthew Gaier clear things up by distinguishing the type of subsequent evidence that is prohibited as impermissible hindsight from admissible deductions based on circumstantial evidence.Download Now
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