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Dec.
31, 2001 |
2001 In Review |
A report on where |
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21 Candidates on March Ballot for Seven Judicial Seats... Ninth Circuit Judge Procter Hug Takes Senior Status Tomorrow...Davis Nominates Nine to Appellate Posts |
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2-Dirt bikers, dune buggy drivers, and other "off-roaders"
assume the risk of injury in their sport and may not recover for
personal injuries they sustain, the Fourth District Court of Appeal
ruled. 3-The
Los Angeles Superior Court announced that Charlie Coleman, a filing
window document examiner, would be honored as its outstanding employee
of 2000. 5-A
political candidate's suit against persons who made illegal contributions
to an opponent's campaign is not a strategic lawsuit against public
participation, this district's Court of Appeal ruled. 8-A
Los Angeles city program to fight slum housing by charging a $1
monthly inspection fee on apartment units doesn't require a public
vote under Proposition 218, the state Supreme Court ruled in a 5-2
decision. The impost is an incident of the business of rental, not
of property ownership, Justice Stanley Mosk wrote...Four new judges,
all elected in 2000, were sworn in as members of the Los Angeles
Superior Court-Patricia Titus, to succeed Judge Kenneth Vassie;
Katherine Mader, to succeed Judge Richard Montes; David Mintz, to
succeed Judge L.C. Nunley; and Christopher Estes, to succeed Judge
William Seelicke. 9-A
father who allowed his children to live in the United States with
his wife and go to school here did not give up his right to seek
custody in his own country after his spouse decided to divorce him
and stay here permanently, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled in construing the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
international Child Abduction. 13-The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected Los Angeles County's claim of good-faith immunity
in a suit charging that inmates were deprived of their constitutional
rights when jailers-who said they needed the time to check for other
holds-detained them after they had been ordered release or completed
their sentences. 18-Rejecting
the common-law "rule of consistency," the state Supreme
Court unanimously ruled that a defendant may be convicted of conspiracy
even if all alleged coconspirators are acquitted....The statutes
governing appointment of the public defender do not permit a judge
to order the public defender to serve as standby counsel for a pro
per defendant, the Fifth District Court of Appeal ruled. 19-An
alien's fear that supporters of a politician in his home country
will beat him because he reported that the politician had committed
a crime is not fear of political persecution under the asylum statute,
the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 22-A
trial court's ruling that the prosecution's efforts to locate a
missing witness were sufficiently diligent to justify a finding
of unavailability is reviewed de novo, not merely for abuse of discretion,
the California Supreme Court unanimously ruled. 24-Federal
law does not allow public housing officials to evict tenants who
did not know that their guests possessed illegal drugs, the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in a 7-4 en banc decision. 26-Burt
Pines, former Los Angeles city attorney and currently judicial appointments
secretary to Gov. Gray Davis, was honored by the MetNews as 2000
Person of the Year....This district's Court of Appeal affirmed a
$33.5 million wrongful-death judgment against O.J. Simpson in the
killing of his former wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron
Goldman. 29-Mark
B. Simons, formerly a Contra Costa Superior Court judge, was confirmed
and sworn in as a member of the First District Court of Appeal,
Div. Five, succeeding retired Justice Zerne Haning. 30-An
ethical rule requiring that agreements to share attorney fees be
in writing and approved in writing by the client does not apply
when the lawyer with whom the attorney-client relationship was formed
hires the second lawyer to work under the first lawyer's supervision,
as distinguished from a "pure referral," this district's
Court of Appeal ruled...A California Supreme Court ruling barring
a district attorney's office from having its prosecution of a case
funded by the alleged victim does not preclude funding of a prosecution
by another public agency, the Third District Court of Appeal ruled
in approving a program in which a public housing agency shares the
costs of prosecuting housing violations. 31-Retired Los Angeles Superior Court Judge George Trammell III was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison for mail fraud. Trammell earlier pled guilty to using the mails in a corrupt scheme to cover up a sexual relationship with a woman who had been a defendant in a case before him. The woman claimed that she had sex with the judge because he said she had to "pay the price" if she wanted lenient treatment for her co-defendants in the case, one of whom was her ex-husband. |
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1-Insurance companies which write standard comprehensive general
liability policies do not have to pay their clients' environmental
cleanup costs ordered by regulatory agencies, the California Supreme
Court ruled in a 5-2 decision...Gov. Gray Davis named Barry P.
Goode, a partner in the San Francisco firm of McCutchen, Doyle,
Brown & Enersen, as his secretary of legal affairs, succeeding
Demetrious Boutris, who was earlier named corporations commissioner.
4-California's
oldest practicing lawyer, Robert McManigal of South Pasadena,
turned 100 years of age. 5-A
$1 million judgment for mobile home park owners who alleged Byzantine
and arbitrary rent control ordinances violated their due process
rights was overturned in a 5-2 decision by the state Supreme Court.
The justices left open the question of whether the Central California
city of Clovis infringed on the rights of the park owners, saying
instead that the trial court failed to use the proper standard
for gauging constitutional injury. 6-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge James Simpson is under investigation
by the Commission on Judicial Performance for alleged attempts
to fix tickets and bizarre conduct, it was learned...The First
District Court of Appeal upheld the state's ban on dissemination
of e-mail messages to prisoners at high-security Pelican Bay State
Prison...Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Thomas Schneider retired.
7-Four
defendants convicted in a drug conspiracy involving former Los
Angeles Rams cornerback Darryl Henley may be entitled to a new
trial if they can prove that a juror made racist remarks, the
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. Henley, serving 41
years in prison for his role in the conspiracy and in a plot to
kill a federal judge, was not a party to the appeal. 8-The
Kings County trial courts unified into a single, countywide superior
court, marking the demise of the state's municipal courts under
Proposition 220. 9-Justice
Richard Neal retired from Div. Seven of this district's Court
of Appeal to become a private judge. 12-The
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied Theodore Kaczynski
a new trial in the "Unabomber" case, saying he was not
coerced into pleading guilty to three fatal mail bombings...The
Ninth Circuit ruled that Napster, Inc. had knowingly allowed users
of its computer-file-swapping service to share copyrighted recordings.
The panel ruled, however, that an injunction requiring Napster
to take steps to prevent further such usage was overbroad. 15-The
city of Pasco, Wash violated the First Amendment rights of artists
by banning their work-which was not obscene or pornographic-from
city hall after the city had originally solicited it, the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled....Riverside attorney Michael
Molloy was sentenced to 16 years in prison for looting conservatorships.
Molloy's ex-client, professional conservator Bonnie Cambalik,
was previously sentenced to 26 years in the same case. Molloy
resigned from the State Bar rather than face disbarment. 16-A
convicted defendant whose lawyer improperly struck jurors on the
basis of race is entitled to a new trial, this district's Court
of Appeal ruled...Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Richard Kalustian
dismissed ex-lawyer Thomas Hunt's malicious prosecution suit against
Howard Bennett. Hunt-who resigned from the State Bar with disciplinary
charges pending in 1993-claimed that Bennett, a former client
who organized a group of disgruntled ex-clients alleging that
Hunt took their money but did no work on their cases, had encouraged
prosecutors to file faulty theft charges against Hunt, but Kalustian
ruled that the district attorney had charged Hunt on the basis
of an independent investigation. 20-Retired
Whittier Municipal Court Judge Alfonso Hermo was censured by the
Commission on Judicial Performance and barred from sitting on
assignment. Hermo, who stipulated to the discipline, admitted
that he recalled warrants for the arrest of a fugitive in order
to help his longtime bailiff avoid a suspension for negligently
allowing the defendant to walk out of custody...The Board of Supervisors
agreed to pay Deputy District Attorney Monika Blodgett $430,000
to settle a suit in which she claimed that former District Attorney
Gil Garcetti demoted her from her acting head deputy position
as retaliation for her criticism of office policy. 22-The millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded services provided by public hospitals to patients with smoking-related illnesses are too remote from the alleged injury caused by cigarette makers to warrant recovery, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. |
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1-A 1996 amendment to the State Bar Act which provides for summary
disbarment following conviction of any felony involving moral
turpitude, even if not directly related to the practice of law,
was unanimously upheld by the California Supreme Court. 2-Civil
Code Sec. 1717, providing that all contractual attorney fee clauses
are reciprocal, is preempted by federal labor law to the extent
that it conflicts with a collective bargaining agreement, the
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. The court threw out
an award of nearly $120,000 in fees to attorneys for a non-union
contractor that successfully sued to overturn an arbitration award
in favor of a union which claimed that the contractor was bound
by a master labor agreement entered into by two of its subcontractors.
5-A
prosecutor didn't commit misconduct by arguing that the fact that
a defendant was found under the apparent influence of PCP while
sitting in a van in which a small quantity of the drug was found
was evidence that the accused possessed the drug, the state Supreme
Court ruled in a 5-2 decision. 6-A
public library has no legal obligation to prevent minors using
its computers from accessing pornographic material available on
the Internet, the First District Court of Appeal ruled. 8-The
board of a private property owners group, formed to levy assessments
and administer a business improvement district, is a legislative
body subject to state open meeting laws, this district's Court
of Appeal ruled in a case involving the Hollywood Entertainment
District Property Owners Association. 13-Los
Angeles county prosecutor Karen Nobumoto was elected president
of the State Bar of California, becoming the first public lawyer
and the first minority woman to preside over the organization. 14-A
lawyer may be sanctioned for instructing a witness not to answer
a deposition question solely on the ground that it was not calculated
to lead to admissible evidence, this district's Court of Appeal
ruled. The instruction not to answer is appropriate only where
the question seeks privileged information, Justice Daniel J. Curry
wrote for Div. Four. If an attorney repeatedly asks irrelevant
questions solely to harass or annoy the witness, the justice said,
the proper procedure is to suspend the deposition....Oakland lawyer
Mike Nisperos Jr. was named chief trial counsel for the State
Bar....A Los Angeles Superior Court commissioner, fired after
she didn't show up for work for several months, won reinstatement
of her disability discrimination suit against the court. Div.
Four of this district's Court of Appeal, in an unpublished opinion,
ruled that Antoinette C. Liewen had presented sufficient evidence
to avoid summary judgment on her claims that the court failed
to accommodate her disability under the Fair Employment and Housing
Act and terminated her employment in retaliation for her complaints
about that failure. 20-Gov.
Gray Davis named a pair of college professors as public members
of the State Bar Board of Governors. Janet M. Green, 67, and John
G. Snetsinger, 59, were named by Davis to replace John Morris
and Jo Ellen Allen, appointees of ex-Gov. Pete Wilson whose terms
expired two years ago. The terms to which Green and Snetsinger
were appointed expire in September of next year. 21-Los
Angeles attorney Mona Soo Hoo was appointed by Gov. Gray Davis
to a panel studying racial profiling. 22-The
Department of Corrections may require a condemned inmate's spiritual
adviser to leave his or cell 20 minutes before the inmate's departure
for the death chamber, or about 45 minutes before the execution,
the state Supreme Court ruled. 29-The state Supreme Court struck down a voter-approved initiative removing 29 private houses from the register of historic Sierra Madre buildings, saying that unlike an initiative, a measure placed on the ballot by a public agency is subject to the California Environmental Quality Act. |
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2-A lawyer's failure to advise a client that a guilty plea will
result in mandatory deportation under the 1996 immigration legislation
constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel, but only if there
was a reasonable possibility that a trial would have resulted
in acquittal, a sharply divided California Supreme Court ruled....The
high court ruled, 4-3, that artwork sent to a publisher to use
in book illustrations is subject to sales tax. 3-The
Commission on Judicial Performance reported it had disciplined
31 judges in 2000, including 25 instances of private discipline.
One judge was censured and five were publicly admonished....The
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted to rename the Criminal
Courts Building for Clara Shortridge Foltz, the state's first
woman lawyer. 5-Proposition
213, which bars uninsured motorists from recovering general damages
for personal injury, applies to an action against a public entity,
the state Supreme Court held in a 5-2 decision. 6-The
federal judicial recusal statute does not bar a district judge
from hearing the case of a defendant who was investigated by the
Department of Justice in connection with an unrelated matter during
the time that the judge was U.S. attorney, the Ninth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled...An Indian tribe isn't liable for torts
committed by its employees away from the reservation, based on
immunity provided by federal law, the Third District Court of
Appeal ruled in a suit by a bartender allegedly injured in a melee
at a party for employees of a tribal casino. 7-Charles
M. Walker, a name partner in Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker
and assistant U.S. secretary of the treasury in the Ford administration,
died in Santa Monica at age 85. 10-Los
Angeles attorney Marshall Grossman was named by Gov. Gray Davis
as a member of the Commission on Judicial Performance. 16-A
party that successfully defends itself in an arbitration proceeding
cannot sue for malicious prosecution, the California Supreme Court
ruled in a 4-3 decision...A law firm representing police officers
who prepared incident reports but turned them over to the attorneys
rather than to their superiors cannot invoke the attorney-client
privilege to prevent disclosure of the contents, this district's
Court of Appeal ruled. The officers were under a legal duty to
prepare the reports, making them public records, the court said. 17-The
Americans With Disabilities Act allows an employer to fire a worker
with a drug or alcohol dependency unless the employee is in or
has gone through rehabilitation and hasn't used drugs illegally
for a long time, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 20-Gov.
Gray Davis named retired Deputy District Attorney Harvey Giss,
private practitioners Kenji Machida and Margaret S. Henry and
Superior Court Commissioners Norman P. Tarle and Allen J. Webster
as Superior Court judges. 23-The
state's cap on general damages in medical malpractice cases does
not apply when the plaintiff prevails on a battery theory charging
a doctor with performing an operation that the plaintiff did not
consent to, this district's Court of Appeal ruled...Lower federal
courts cannot interfere with ongoing state court proceedings by
hearing constitutional challenges to subpoenas, the Ninth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 24-A
New York law firm that engaged a member of the State Bar of California
to assist in a matter involving a California client-and requiring
that the attorney give advice on California law and deal with
persons and entities located in California-subjected itself to
this state's jurisdiction even if the lawyer didn't actually come
to California in connection with the representation, this district's
Court of Appeal ruled. 27-Assistant
U.S. Attorney Michael Gennaco was named chief attorney for the
Sheriff's Office of Independent Review by Sheriff Lee Baca and
the Board of Supervisors. The OIR is charged with reviewing officer-involved
shootings, allegations of misconduct, and other internal investigations
by the Sheriff's Department...Retired U.S. Bankruptcy Judge James
R. Dooley died at age 80. 30-T-shirts and other products bearing an artist's drawing of the Three Stooges are not protected by the First Amendment from enforcement of California's law prohibiting the use of deceased celebrities' images without consent of their heirs, the state Supreme Court ruled....Mauricio Silva's death sentence for three 1984 murders was overturned by the Supreme Court, which held that the late Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Douglas McKee erroneously excluded the defense from a hearing at which prosecutors explained their reasons for excluding Hispanic jurors, and that the reasons were inadequate . |
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1-Lawrence
Mason was promoted to chief deputy district attorney of Los Angeles
County and John Allen to assistant district attorney in charge of
line operations. Mason replaced Curt Livesay, who had returned to
the office from private practice to fill the post on an interim
basis, and Allen replaced Mason...The First District Court of Appeal
rejected a lawyer's bid to enforce an agreement guaranteeing him
a share of the fees earned by lawyers for Rena Weeks, who won a
precedent-setting $3.5 million sexual-harassment award against the
law firm of Baker & McKenzie. The panel held that a State Bar
rule requiring fee-splitting agreements to be in writing and approved
in writing by the client applies to divisions of work among lawyers,
as well as to "pure referral" arrangements...Los Angeles
Superior Court Judge Paul Metzler retired.
2-Code
of Civil Procedure Sec. 664.6, allowing a court to enforce a written
settlement agreement upon a simple noticed motion by one of the
parties, applies to an agreed-upon increase in previously ordered
child support payments, the Court of Appeal for this district
ruled. 4-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge Patrick B. Murphy resigned after
a panel of special masters found he had engaged in willful misconduct
by abandoning his duties and lying about being too sick to work.
Murphy last worked regularly in mid-1998 and hadn't taken the
bench at all since June 2000. 7-Jury
nullification is not a legitimate part of California law, the
state Supreme Court unanimously ruled as it affirmed the conviction
of a Santa Clara County defendant for having sex with a 15-year-old
girl. The trial judge was correct in removing a juror who told
his fellow panelists he did not believe statutory rape should
be a crime, the high court said...An acquitted defendant cannot
be ruled "factually innocent" under Penal Code Sec.
851.8 if "[a] reasonable, objective review of the evidence
establishes that many people of ordinary care and prudence would
believe the defendant guilty of the crime charged," this
district's Court of Appeal ruled. 8-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge Richard Kalustian retired. 10-The
Commission on Judicial Performance ordered Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge Patrick Murphy removed from the bench, saying it had
not received formal notice of his resignation and believed it
was "within its authority to impose the discipline Judge
Murphy merits, his removal from office." The commission further
directed that if it was determined the commission lacked such
authority, Murphy be censured and barred from receiving court-assigned
work. 14-Gov.
Gray Davis unveiled a revised budget , without the 8.5 percent
pay raise sought by the judiciary. The increase and other proposals
had to be shelved because of drops in revenue, the governor told
reporters...The Supreme Court unanimously upheld Phillip Anderson's
death sentence for the 1979 robbery-murders of two women whose
car broke down on I-10 near Indio. The justices said the trial
judge did not abuse his discretion in allowing a psychologically
impaired witness to testify, Justice Marvin Baxter noting that
her testimony was corroborated in several respects. 15-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge James Simpson has applied for disability
retirement, Victoria Henley, director-chief counsel of the Commission
on Judicial Performance, confirmed. 16-A
suit charging District Attorney Steve Cooley with defaming a criminal
defense attorney was ordered dismissed under the anti-SLAPP law
by this district's Court of Appeal. Leonard J. Milstein-who was
convicted of obstruction of justice after he allegedly used jailhouse
informants to concoct a phony defense in a murder case, but won
an appeal on the ground of insufficient evidence-failed to show
"by competent and admissible evidence" that he could
prove a case of slander based on Cooley's alleged comments to
a reporter for a legal newspaper, Presiding Justice Paul A. Turner
wrote in an unpublished opinion for Div. Five...Court of Appeal
Justice Don Work of the Fourth District's Div. One died. 17-The
California Supreme Court, in a 6-1 decision, affirmed the death
sentence for a homeless man who admitted killed a Redding resident
after getting into a dispute with the victim's neighbor over a
drug deal. While Milton Otis Lewis' defense attorney gave a "terse"
and "meager" closing argument, Justice Joyce L. Kennard
wrote, the court cannot speculate on direct appeal as to his reasons
for doing so...An attorney sued for actions undertaken on behalf
of a client may bring an anti-SLAPP motion if the complaint implicates
the lawyer's own First Amendment rights, the Court of Appeal for
this district ruled. 18-A
default judgment based on improper service of process cannot be
renewed, this district's Court of Appeal ruled, even if the judgment
debtor had knowledge of it and failed to attack prior to the renewal
proceedings. 19-A
federal law allowing criminal defendants to recover legal fees
for defending "vexatious" prosecutions only applies
if the prosecution was both malicious and legally unsound, the
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 21-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge Arnold Gold retired. 22-A
former in-house lawyer had the right to share privileged information
with her own lawyers in connection with her wrongful termination
lawsuit, this district's Court of Appeal ruled. The panel also
held that a motion to disqualify counsel may be subject to a special
motion to strike under the anti-SLAPP statute... A public agency
isn't immune from suit for violating the civil rights of an official
who was fired in retaliation for complaining about the downloading
of pornography on the agency's computers by employees, the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 24-A
lawyer who claims a second attorney gave him bad advice about
how to resolve problems with clients can't sue for malpractice
because the other lawyer couldn't defend without disclosing the
clients' confidences, the Court of Appeal for this district ruled.
29-The
pass rate for the February California State Bar Exam fell to the
lowest level in 13 years, as 1,673 of the 4,488 applicants-37.3
percent-passed, the State Bar reported... 30-A
device known as a "stun belt," which delivers a 50,000-volt
electric shock to the person wearing it when activated by remote
control, may be used in court to subdue a convicted defendant
who is acting violently, but not to punish one who is merely being
verbally abusive, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled.
The ruling left open the question of whether the belt may be used
on a defendant who is merely a pretrial detainee...A group of
children whose Little League team photo was used in a Sports Illustrated
story about a former coach convicted of child molestation have
a viable claim for invasion of privacy, the Fourth District Court
of Appeal ruled. 31-The victim of an assault at an apartment complex must prove that a lack of adequate security caused the attack, the California Supreme Court ruled. In a 4-3 decision, the justices held that causation could not be inferred from proof that the landlord's security measures were inadequate...Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Kenneth Chotiner retired. |
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1-Justice Thomas L. Crosby of the Fourth District Court of Appeal,
Div. Three, retired. 4-A
local tax imposed without mandated voter approval can be blocked
even if the statutory three years have passed since the tax was
enacted, because the limitations period starts fresh with each
collection, the state Supreme Court ruled unanimously...Los Angeles
Superior Court Commissioner Ulysses Burns retired. 5-In
a 6-5 en banc decision, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled that an FBI sharpshooter who killed the wife of white separatist
Randy Weaver during the 1992 Ruby Ridge standoff may be prosecuted
by the state of Idaho for manslaughter...This district's Court
of Appeal, in an unpublished opinion, ordered a mistrial in a
case before Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David Schacter. The
court held that the judge abused his discretion by trying a non-jury
case in "drips and drabs" over a period of nearly a
year. 6-Justice
Ramona Godoy Perez of this district's Court of Appeal, Div. Five,
died of an undisclosed illness. 11-Former
Los Angeles attorney James H. Davis was sentenced to 12 years
in prison for bilking clients out of about $2.5 million. 14-A
San Francisco ordinance requiring city contractors to pay domestic
partners of unmarried workers the same health and welfare benefits
as employee spouses was upheld by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals. 15-Workers
whose union agreed to video surveillance as part of an employment
contract did not waive their right to sue their employer for installing
video cameras in restrooms, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled. 19-Stanley
Mosk, California's longest-serving state Supreme Court justice,
died at age 88. 21-Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Gutman granted convicted murderer
Robert Rosenkrantz's petition for writ of habeas corpus, saying
the governor had no legal basis for vetoing his release on parole. 22-President
Bush nominated Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Carolyn B. Kuhl
and Honolulu attorney Richard Clifton to the Ninth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals...A woman who kept $1.3 million in lottery winnings
secret from her estranged husband to avoid having to pay him half
in their divorce settlement must give him the whole thing under
a state statute, this district's Court of Appeal ruled. 25-The
Sixth Amendment right to trial before jurors from the district
in which the crime was allegedly committed-known as the "vicinage"
requirement-does not apply to the states, the California Supreme
Court ruled in upholding a statute allowing defendants accused
of committing certain types of crimes in more than one county
to be tried on all charges in one of those counties. 26-A
suspect who has not been arrested or charged with a crime cannot
be compelled to appear in a lineup because there is no statute
authorizing such an order, this district's Court of Appeal ruled.
28-The power to decide whether a particular type of gun is a banned assault weapon resides with the state attorney general and not with the courts, California Supreme Court ruled. |
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2-The requirement that a criminal defendant be factually innocent
as a prerequisite to suing his or her lawyer for malpractice precludes
an action by a defendant who has pled guilty, the state Supreme
Court unanimously ruled, unless the plea is first set aside...A
Catholic charitable organization whose employee health plan covers
prescriptions cannot refuse to cover contraception, the Third
District Court of Appeal ruled. 5-A
plea bargain provision increasing the defendant's sentence if
he or she fails to appear as ordered for sentencing is enforceable,
the California Supreme Court unanimously ruled...Los Angeles Superior
Court Commissioner Anthony Luna retired. 6-The
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a $3 million judgment
Dustin Hoffman won against Los Angeles Magazine in 1999 over its
use of an altered photo of the actor in his cross-dressing role
of "Tootsie," citing the First Amendment. 9-A
court-appointed mediator may not report to a court that a party
has failed to participate in good faith, the Supreme Court unanimously
ruled, citing a statute making such mediations confidential...A
divided Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel rejected death
row inmate Kevin Cooper's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Cooper was sentenced to die for the 1983 killings of four people
at a home in Chino two days after Cooper escaped from the state
prison there. 11-The
California Supreme Court stayed the release of convicted murderer
Robert Rosenkrantz pending the state's appeal of a Los Angeles
Superior Court order granting his release on parole...Oregon's
vote-by-mail system does not violate the federal law setting specific
election dates for federal offices, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled. 16-The
California Supreme Court unanimously upheld the death sentence
of Steven David Catlin for killing his mother and his fifth wife
by paraquat poisoning. Catlin was also convicted of killing his
fourth wife, but the death penalty didn't apply because the killing
occurred during a period when California didn't have capital punishment...An
employer who fails to protect an employee from harassment by co-workers
based on the employee's perceived effeminate qualities may be
sued for discrimination "because of sex," the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 17-Attorney
General Bill Lockyer said in a formal opinion that state whistleblower
laws do not permit a government lawyer to disclose information
protected by the attorney-client privilege...Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge Ronald Cappai, 60, died after a long bout with a kidney
ailment. 20-Attorney
Leonard J. Milstein, who claims that District Attorney Steve Cooley
and Deputy District Attorney Robert Foltz pursued a meritless
prosecution accusing him of manufacturing a client's defense,
may sue to the extent that the defendants' alleged activities
were outside the scope of the prosecutorial function, the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. Such activities might include
fabricating evidence, filing a false police report, or making
defamatory comments to the media, the court said. 25-A
will that terminated trust income to the testator's surviving
spouse in the event of remarriage violated a state law discouraging
restraints upon remarriage, the Court of Appeal ruled. 26-The
State Bar agreed to pay $900,000 in fees to the Pacific Legal
Foundation for its representation of lawyers who filed a federal
civil rights suit charging that the organization used mandatory
dues money for improper political purposes in 1991. A Sacramento
Superior Court judge ruled for the plaintiffs in 1999, and the
State Bar dropped its appeal earlier this year. 30-The
California Supreme Court, in a 4-2 decision, said the owner of
a used automobile could unilaterally rescind an offer to sell,
in the form of a newspaper advertisement, where the advertiser
mistakenly inserted the wrong price. 31-Presiding Justice Gary Strankman of the First District Court of Appeal, Div. One, retired. |
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2-Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation creating a diversion program
for lawyers who abuse drug or alcohol. SB 479 was double-joined
to legislation previously signed by Davis allowing the State Bar
to levy up to $390 in annual dues in each of the next two years...The
California Supreme Court unanimously affirmed Raymond Anthony
Lewis' death sentence for a robbery-murder that netted him $5. 3-A
California court properly convicted a doctor-whose California
license had been previously revoked-of second degree murder following
the death of a patient on whom the doctor performed an illegal
and unnecessary operation in Mexico, the Fourth District Court
of Appeal ruled. California had jurisdiction because the arrangements
for the surgery were made in this state and the victim was brought
back here afterward and died here, the court said. 7-A
California court has jurisdiction over the operator of a distant
website that publishes trade secrets or copyrighted material belonging
to a California plaintiff, the Sixth District Court of Appeal
ruled. 9-Family
members may not end life support for their barely-conscious loved
one based solely on conversations in which the stricken person
was remembered to have said he would not want to live like a vegetable,
the state Supreme Court ruled in a 6-0 decision. The decision
to end life support must be supported by clear and convincing
evidence that the action is consistent with the stricken person's
previously expressed wishes, Justice Kathryn Werdegar wrote...The
high court unanimously upheld the death sentence imposed on Ronald
Harold Seaton of Riverside for the 1986 beating death of an elderly
neighbor, which jurors found to have occurred in the course of
a robbery and burglary. The death sentence was proportional to
Seaton's "moral culpability" for the death of Willis
Jones, Justice Joyce L. Kennard wrote. 13-Attorney
fees awarded to a prevailing party under the Fair Employment and
Housing Act "belong to the attorneys who labored to earn
them," not to their clients, absent an agreement to the contrary,
the state Supreme Court ruled. In a 5-1 decision, with Justice
Joyce L. Kennard dissenting, the high court reversed a First District
Court of Appeal decision holding that court-awarded fees belong
to the client and that attorneys who prevail under FEHA are limited
to whatever fees are established by contract...Public school officials
do not need reasonable suspicion to stop and question a student,
the high court ruled. 14-Los
Angeles County supervisors agreed to pay $27 million to settle
a lawsuit by former inmates who claim they were wrongfully kept
jailed after their release date or locked up on warrants that
sheriffs' deputies knew to be faulty. The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals had previously ruled that the county was not immune
from suit....Legendary trial lawyer Paul Caruso died at age 81
after a long illness. 15-The
Commission on Judicial Performance removed Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge Patrick Couwenberg from the bench for lying about
his background and qualifications in his application for appointment
to the bench and to the commission during its investigation. 16-A
law enforcement officer who stops an alleged traffic violator
has a duty not to direct the driver to pull over into a spot where
there is an unreasonable risk of injury by third parties, the
state Supreme Court ruled in a 4-2 decision...Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge Kurt Lewin retired. 20-A
minor and his parents are entitled to a defense and indemnification
by the family's homeowner's carrier in connection with a shooting
in which the child accidentally killed a friend, regardless of
an "illegal act" exclusion in the policy, the state
Supreme Court ruled. An unintentional act, even if criminally
punishable as gross negligence, cannot absolve the insurer of
its duties as a matter of law, Justice Joyce L. Kennard wrote
for a 4-2 majority...The high court unanimously upheld the death
sentence imposed on Ward Francis Weaver Jr., who claimed that
voices drove him to kill an airman and rape and beat the man's
girlfriend. The justices concluded that aggravating factors, including
violent crimes Weaver committed before and after the murder, were
properly held to outweigh the mitigating factor of mental illness. 22-The
sale of public land containing a 43-foot high Latin cross to a
private group which is maintaining it as part of a war memorial
doesn't violate the constitutional prohibition against establishment
of religion, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. 23-Armed
Forces involvement in a drug investigation that started on a military
base but soon implicated a civilian didn't violate the Posse Comitatus
Act, a Reconstruction-era federal law designed to keep the military
out of civilian law enforcement, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled. 30-Long
Beach attorney Matthew Cavanaugh narrowly upset San Dimas lawyer
Patricia Lobello-Lamb for the District Seven seat in race for
the State Bar Board of Governors. It was the first time in over
20 years a candidate endorsed by the influential Breakfast Club
had lost a Board of Governors election...A residential landlord's
rule prohibiting tenants from circulating a newsletter or other
unsolicited materials within the complex doesn't violate the state
Constitution, the state Supreme Court ruled. By a 4-3 majority,
the justices held that the state Constitution's "liberty
of speech" clause cannot be applied to premises not open
to the public. 31-A court order requiring the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to buy 248 more buses was upheld by a divided panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which held that a special master and U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter, who upheld the master, had the authority under a consent decree to direct the agency on how to spend its money. |
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4-Several provisions of state law mandating the use of affirmative
action to correct racial imbalances in contracting and employment
were struck down by the Third District Court of Appeal. Ruling
on a suit that was begun by Gov. Pete Wilson and continued by
University of California Regent Ward Connerly after Wilson left
office, the court ruled that provisions of law affecting the community
colleges, the State Lottery, the sale of state bonds, and the
state civil service violate Proposition 209. 7-District
Attorney Steve Cooley's revised three-strikes policy doesn't entitle
defendants convicted before he took office to have their sentences
reconsidered, the Court of Appeal for this district ruled. 8-Chief
Justice Ronald George swore in President Karen Nobumoto and the
new members of the Board of Governors on the third day of the
annual State Bar Convention. The Chief Justice also delivered
a State of the Judiciary address outlining the courts' continuing
effort to improve public access to, and confidence in, the judicial
system. 11-Law
offices in downtown and Century City were virtually deserted,
and every state and federal courtroom in the county was dark by
the afternoon, following the deadly attacks on New York and Washington,
D.C. 13-Gov.
Gray Davis named Betty Wyman, a mental health and behavior science
consultant who works with Los Angeles jail inmates, to the state
Commission on Judicial Performance...U.S. Marshall Tony Perez,
citing security concerns, banned the use of cell phones in all
federal courts in the seven-county Central District of California. 17-The
Commission on Judicial Performance said it had charged Riverside
Superior Court Judge Eugene R. Bishop with having violated the
rights of parents in four separate dependency proceedings to proper
notice. The judge, in a verified answer, said the commission was
attempting to turn claims of legal error into a disciplinary matter
and called the charges a threat to judicial independence. 18-Weider
Nutrition Group, one of the country's leading nutritional products
suppliers did not violate Proposition 65 by distributing supplements
that raise, but do not contain, testosterone, this district's
Court of Appeal ruled. 20-U.S.
District Judge Terry J. Hatter stepped down as chief judge of
the Central District and was succeeded in that post by Judge Consuelo
Marshall. 21-Los
Angeles Superior Court Referee Jeffrey Marckese was named a court
commissioner....Attorneys who successfully defend themselves against
frivolous lawsuits are entitled to Code of Civil Procedure Sec.
128.7 sanctions, the Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled. 30-Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Elva Soper retired. |
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2-City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo announced a management shakeup,
with former Assistant U.S. Attorney George Cardona named head
of the criminal division; Patricia Tubert, formerly counsel to
the airports department, heading the new Municipal Counsel Division.
Maureen Siegel and Pedro Echeverria, former heads of the criminal
and civil divisions, respectively, were given new assignments
under Chief Deputy City Attorney Terree Bowers. 3-Gov.
Gray Davis named U.S. Magistrate Judge Ann Jones, Los Angeles
Superior Court Commissioner John Doyle, Assistant Los Angeles
City Attorneys Leslie E. Brown and William N. Sterling, Assistant
U.S. Attorney Dorothy L. Shubin, Deputy District Attorneys Martin
L. Herscovitz and Cynthia Rayvis, and attorneys Marjorie S. Steinberg
and Richard H. Kirschner to the Los Angeles Superior Court...Judith
McConnell, elevated from the San Diego Superior Court, was confirmed
and sworn in as a justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal,
Div. One. 4-Proposition
21, the juvenile-justice initiative approved by voters last year,
does not violate the constitutional single-subject requirement,
this district's Court of Appeal ruled. 12-A
lawsuit by the American Humane Association seeking to block the
Los Angeles Times from using internal association documents for
a news story was a strategic lawsuit against public participation,
this district's Court of Appeal ruled. 16-Employees
in the two largest Los Angeles Superior Court mailrooms were given
training on how to handle suspicious mail as the court attempts
to deal with the increased threat of anthrax being sent through
the mail. 17-An
attorney representing an indigent client at the expense of family
or friends cannot be forced to dip into that fee to pay the client's
expert and investigative fees, even if the fee seems unusually
large, the Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled in a case involving
attorney Leslie Abramson. 18-Carlos
Moreno was confirmed to succeed the late Justice Stanley Mosk.
Gov. Gray Davis administered the oath of office to Moreno, his
first appointee to the high court. 19-S.
Robert Ambrose, a retired deputy county counsel and as-needed
referee for the court, and Sanjay Kumar, a deputy state attorney
general, were named commissioners of the Los Angeles Superior
Court. 20-The
State Bar Board of Governors voted to reduce late payment penalties
for 2002 State Bar dues. Instead of a 50 percent penalty on all
amounts unpaid as of March 15, the penalty will be 15 percent
on amounts unpaid as of that date and another 15 percent on amounts
not received by May 15. 22-Dennis
Perluss, Richard Mosk, and Laurence D. Rubin were confirmed and
sworn in as justices of this district's Court of Appeal. Perluss,
who succeeded the late Ramona Godoy Perez in Div. Five, and Rubin,
who became the first member of newly created Div. Eight, were
elevated from the Los Angeles Superior Court. Mosk was an attorney
and arbitrator, whose work included service on the U.S.-Iran Claims
Tribunal, before being named an appellate justice. He is the son
of the late California Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk. 24-The
state Supreme Court elevated State Bar Court Review Judge Ronald
W. Stovitz to be the discipline body's presiding judge, and named
San Bernardino Superior Court Staff Counsel Stanford E. Reichert
and San Francisco lawyer Patrice E. McElroy to be hearing judges.
Reichert, who was named to a three-year term, succeeded Michael
Marcus in the Los Angeles office, while McElroy, who also received
a three-year term, replaced Judge Eugene Brott in San Francisco. 26-California
law does not permit a parent's non-marital partner to adopt a
child without the parent relinquishing parental rights, the Fourth
District Court of Appeal ruled. 30-A statute making it a crime to falsely accuse a police officer of misconduct, while complaints of misconduct against other public officers are privileged, violates the First Amendment, this district's Court of Appeal ruled. |
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1-Retired Riverside Superior Court Judge William H. Sullivan was
charged with misconduct by the Commission on Judicial Performance
for questionable financial dealings with two trusts that continued
after his appointment to the bench...The California Supreme Court
unanimously affirmed the death sentence for Martin James Kipp,
convicted of the September 1983 murder of Tiffany Frizzell. Frizzell
was found, strangled and apparently raped, in her room at the
Long Beach Ramada Inn where she was staying while waiting for
her college dormitory to open for the fall term. The court rejected
the argument that high court justices have an inherent conflict
of interest in death penalty cases because they must be retained
by a pro-death-penalty electorate. Kipp failed to show that the
alleged conflict applies in his case or that of any specific defendant,
Justice Joyce L. Kennard wrote. 2-California's
three-strikes law violates the Eighth Amendment, the Ninth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled, in the "unusual circumstances"
of a defendant sentenced to 50 years to life in prison on two
counts of recidivist petty theft. 7-District
Attorney Steve Cooley disclosed that his criminal probe into the
Rampart police corruption case would conclude by the end of the
year with no new charges being filed against police officers.
Cooley said he would close 50 matters and release reports detailing
why they did not become full-scale criminal prosecutions. But
he added that his department's Justice System Integrity Division
remained "open for business for any allegations of criminal
misconduct by any law enforcement officer from whatever source,
Rampart or otherwise...The deadline for incumbent judges to file
declarations of intention to run for new terms expired, with four
Los Angeles Superior Court judges not filing-Michael Kanner, Richard
Spann, David Finkel, and Michael Pirosh. Kanner said he would
leave at the end of his term, in January 2003; Finkel slated retirement
for Jan. 27 and Pirosh for Jan. 31. Spann did not comment on his
plans. Two judges, C. Robert Simpson and Floyd Baxter, drew challenges,
from Glendale lawyer Kenneth E. Wright and Newhall attorney Ross
Stucker, respectively. 14-
A state program that uses interest on funds held short-term in
lawyers' trust accounts to fund legal assistance for the poor
doesn't violate the Fifth Amendment ban on taking property without
"just compensation," the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled. 15-Gov.
Gray Davis appointed Joseph Rouzan Jr., 69, Inglewood's city administrator
and a longtime LAPD officer and later police chief in nearby cities,
to the State Bar Board of Governors as one of six "public,"
or non-attorney, members. 22-Court
of Appeal Justice Candace Cooper was sworn in by Gov. Gray Davis
following her confirmation as presiding justice of this district's
newly created Div. Eight. Also confirmed and sworn in were Paul
Boland, as an associate justice of Div. Eight, and Richard Aronson
as a justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Div. Three.
26-City
Attorney Rocky Delgadillo continued to revamp his office's leadership
with the announcement that O'Melveny & Myers partner Cheryl
White Mason would leave her firm to become chief of the Civil
Liability Management Division, supervising about 100 lawyers.
29-A
California statute allowing a peace officer to sue for defamation
if a citizen files a false complaint with the officer's employer
is unconstitutional, the Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled...The
city of Los Angeles and the American Civil Liberties Union of
Southern California settled a lawsuit filed by the ACLU on behalf
of seven journalists allegedly assaulted with rubber bullets and
batons by the LAPD during protests at the Democratic National
Convention in August 2000. The city agreed that in the future,
it would designate safe areas for members of the press to observe
public demonstrations so officers do not injure them when responding
to protests that get out of hand. 30-Gov Gray Davis appointed five new Los Angeles Superior Court Judges-Luis Lavin, who was director of enforcement for the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission; Joe Hilberman, a civil litigator; Michael Stern, a trademark infringement specialist; Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Lench; and Anne Egerton, West Coast general counsel for NBC. |
|
3-The state Supreme Court affirmed the murder conviction and death
sentence of Robert Clarence Taylor, who claimed he was under the
influence of cocaine when he shot and killed an Anaheim resident
and left her husband paralyzed in 1988. 6-The
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the death sentence
of Bruce Morris for killing a man who offered to drive him from
Sacramento to Lake Tahoe. The court held that an error on the
verdict form, indicating that if the defendant wasn't sentenced
to death he would receive life "with parole," violated
due process and that Morris was entitled to a new sentencing trial.
7-The
deadline for returning nomination documents for Superior Court
contests expired, with Judge Reginald Dunn the only incumbent
to file a declaration of intention to run but not complete the
process. A five-day extension of time to file for that seat only
was declared....Judith Ashmann, elevated from the Los Angeles
Superior Court, was confirmed and sworn in as a justice of this
district's Court of Appeal, succeeding Candace Cooper in Div.
Two. Cooper is now presiding justice of Div. Eight. 10-Gerald
Chaleff, former president of the Los Angeles County Bar Association
and of the city's Police Commission, said he would leave private
practice to head up a new risk management effort for City Attorney
Rocky Delgadillo. 11-The
Board of Supervisors voted to rename the Central Courthouse after
the late California Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk ...Retired
Long Beach Municipal Court Judge G. William Dunn died at age 71,
several months after suffering a stroke. 17-An
agricultural marketing order that compels producers to pay for
generic advertising violates the "liberty of speech"
clause of the California Constitution, the Fifth District Court
of Appeal ruled. A divided panel, hearing the case on remand after
the state Supreme Court held that California's charter may afford
broader protection for commercial speech than the federal Constitution,
said the state could not establish a sufficient justification
for requiring a plum grower to contribute 11 cents for every box
sent to market, when the grower said it would rather spend the
money on its own advertising. 19-A
Contra Costa Superior Court judge who was publicly reproved in
1992 for insulting lawyers, staff members and jurors in open court
was charged with a pattern of similar violations over the past
two years by the Commission on Judicial Performance. Judge Bruce
Van Voorhis engaged in willful misconduct and brought his court
into disrepute by, among other things, suggesting that an Ecuadorian-born
deputy public defender "lose that accent" and telling
a rookie prosecutor after a trial that he had intentionally excluded
admissible evidence in order to see how she would handle it, the
commission said...Toxic torts lawyer and Thousand Oaks Mayor Edward
L. Masry and his world-famous investigator Erin Brockovich can
sue attorney Kissandra Cohen who, while employed by Masry's firm,
allegedly claimed they were having a sexual relationship, this
district's Court of Appeal ruled. Justice Earl Johnson Jr., in
an unpublished opinion for Div. Seven, said the anti-SLAPP statute
doesn't protect an employee's "gossiping to a fellow worker
about the boss's sexual conduct with another worker." 21-Retired
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James G. Kolts, who headed the
Board of Supervisors' independent probe of the Sheriff's Department
in 1992-finding that the department had failed to adequately address
excessive use of force and poor relations with ethnic communities-died
of a heart attack while playing golf with one of his grandsons.
He was 77...Gov. Gray Davis nominated six candidates for posts
on the First District Court of Appeal and one for a seat on the
Third District Court of Appeal. The First District nominees, all
of whom face confirmation hearings in San Francisco Jan. 25, are
Justice James Marchiano of Div. One and Justice Laurence D. Kay
of Div. Four to become presiding justices of those divisions,
Alameda Superior Court Judge Sandra L. Margulies to succeed Marchiano,
Contra Costa Superior Court Judge Marie P. Rivera to succeed Kay,
San Francisco Superior Court Judge Stuart Pollak for associate
justice in Div. Three and San Mateo Superior Court Judge Linda
M. Gemello to fill a new seat in Div. Five. The Third District
nominee, Sacramento Superior Court Judge Ronald Robie, faces a
Jan. 15 confirmation hearing. 24-A
police department need not produce a police officer's entire personnel
file for in camera review in response to a discovery motion, but
must be prepared to describe what documents were omitted and why,
the state Supreme Court unanimously ruled...Orange Superior Court
Judge Richard D. Fybel was nominated by Gov. Gray Davis Monday
to the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Div. Three, to fill a
newly created seat. His confirmation hearing was set for Feb.
8. 26-A
Kern County man who has spent 16 years on death row for killing
his girlfriend and her son, allegedly so they would not inform
the police of his drug dealing, won a new trial. A divided Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled that Robert F. Garceau
was deprived of a fair trial when the judge erroneously told jurors
that they could consider evidence of other crimes "for any
purpose."...Gov. Gray Davis named Los Angeles Superior Court
Commissioner Gilbert Lopez as a judge of that court...Fresno Superior
Court Judge James I. Aaron, 59, was charged with misconduct by
the Commission on Judicial Performance in connection with his
dealings with an investment promoter sentenced to federal prison. 27-Gov. Gray Davis nominated Santa Clara Superior Court Judge Conrad L. Rushing as an associate justice of the Sixth District Court of Appeal, filling a new post. His confirmation hearing was set for Jan. 25. |
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