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February 10, 2005 |

Assessing Illegal Aliens' Ability to Recover Lost Earnings

It is not uncommon for aliens who enter this country illegally in search of employment to become injured on the job or injured due to medical malpractice or some other tortious conduct.
9 minute read
December 14, 2011 |

Another View of Discontinuances

5 minute read
December 28, 2005 |

'Carvalho': Deposing Attorneys as Experts in Own Cases

Andrew Lavoott Bluestone, a solo practitioner in New York City, writes that many aspects and doctrines of attorney malpractice arise from medical malpractice practice. "Continuous representation" is one well-known example; the rules for deposing a defendant attorney in his own case is another.
9 minute read
January 03, 2006 |

Deposing Attorneys as Experts in Their Own Cases

Deposing an attorney is never easy, but it can be especially challenging when that attorney is also a defendant in the case. Andrew Lavoott Bluestone, a solo practitioner concentrating in legal malpractice litigation, describes the statutory basis for deposing an attorney-defendant as an expert, the parameters of such questioning and the use to which the deposition may be put.
9 minute read
April 29, 2003 |

Muniz v. Our Lady of Mercy Medical Center

9 minute read
August 08, 2005 |

Dismissed Due to Attorney's Conduct, Award Is Reinstated

It took more than two years, but malpractice attorney Thomas A. Moore has won a $13.8 million verdict in a case where his combative style nearly cost him -- and his client -- every last cent. Two years ago, New York judge Stanley A. Green dismissed the entire $16.3 million verdict, citing Moore's "reprehensible" conduct at trial. Last year, a state appellate court reinstated the award. The case then returned to Green, who reduced the award. In a ruling last week, the appellate court reinstated it again.
3 minute read
December 14, 2007 |

Panel Orders New Trial Over Judge's Actions

4 minute read
December 14, 2007 |

$14 million med-mal verdict tossed due to judge's actions

A New York state appeals court has thrown out a $14 million medical malpractice verdict, holding that a Brooklyn Supreme Court judge's inappropriate conduct, including presenting the brain-damaged 4-year-old plaintiff with a box of candy in front of the jury, denied the defense a fair trial."By virtue of the cumulative effect of the improper conduct of the trial court .
3 minute read

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