Posts Tagged case
Q&A: what link would i use to find out my rights and laws in a juvenile court for a custody case?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 25, 2011
Question by kraziegurl7: what link would i use to find out my rights and laws in a juvenile court for a custody case?
they court ordered drug tests ive never had a record of drugs and there has never been any records of my child being neglected for her to be taken out of my home. she was supposed to remain in my custody until the results came back and she was placed with my mother before we got the results
Best answer:
Answer by Choogie
You need to go to your states web site and laws. Unfortunately you really need an attorney. Look for the listings that have free legal help, each state should have that available. Good Luck!
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When a court orders a home study ,drug test, and psych evaluation for a custody case, I can’t pay fees?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 22, 2011
Question by linda h: When a court orders a home study ,drug test, and psych evaluation for a custody case, I can’t pay fees?
I am on disability and living at home with parents . court ordered these but I have no money.I Live in PA
Best answer:
Answer by Fall
How do you expect to be able to raise a child under these circumstances? Would the child be better off with the other parent?
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Q&A: fact of this case?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 7, 2011
Question by shawnta e: fact of this case?
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
Rodger LINDH, Appellee,
v.
Janis SURMAN, Appellant.
Argued March 8, 1999.
Decided Nov. 23, 1999.
Reargument Denied Dec. 21, 1999.
Purchaser of engagement ring appealed arbitration decision that awarded ring to his former fiancee. After bench trial, the Court of Common Pleas, Allegheny County, Civil Division, No. AR 0318394, Mazur, J., entered judgment in favor of purchaser. Former fiancee appealed. The Superior Court, No. 0524PGH96, 702 A.2d 560, affirmed, and former fiancee appealed. On grant of allocatur, the Supreme Court, No. 0039 W.D. Appeal Docket 1998, Newman, J., held that purchaser was entitled to return of the ring under no-fault approach to engagement ring disputes, though he broke the engagement.
Affirmed.
Cappy, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Castille and Saylor, JJ., joined.
Castille filed a dissenting opinion, in which Cappy and Saylor, JJ., joined.
West Headnotes
[1] Gifts 34
191k34 Most Cited Cases
The law treats the giving of an engagement ring as a conditional gift.
[2] Gifts 34
191k34 Most Cited Cases
The giving of an engagement gift has an implied condition that the marriage must occur in order to vest title in the donee; mere acceptance of the marriage proposal is not the implied condition for the gift.
[3] Gifts 34
191k34 Most Cited Cases
Donor of engagement ring was entitled to return of the ring from former fiancee, under no-fault approach to resolution of engagement ring disputes, though he broke the engagement.
[4] Gifts 34
191k34 Most Cited Cases
A strict no-fault approach is adopted to determine engagement ring disputes, rather than a fault-based theory or a modified no-fault position, which would look at the reasons for termination of the engagement.
**643*2 Frank E. Reilly, Pittsburgh, for Janis Surman.
Joanne Ross Wilder, Pittsburgh, for Rodger Lindh.
Before FLAHERTY, C.J., and ZAPPALA, CAPPY, CASTILLE, NIGRO, NEWMAN and SAYLOR, JJ.
OPINION
NEWMAN, Justice.
In this appeal, we are asked to decide whether a donee of an engagement ring must return the ring or its equivalent value when the donor breaks the engagement.
*3 The facts of this case depict a tumultuous engagement between Rodger Lindh (Rodger), a divorced, middle-aged man, and Janis Surman (Janis), the object of Rodger’s inconstant affections. In August of 1993, Rodger proposed marriage to Janis. To that purpose, he presented her with a diamond engagement ring that he purchased for ,400. Rodger testified that the price was less than the ring’s market value because he was a “good customer” of the jeweler’s, having previously purchased a ,000 ring for his ex-wife and other expensive jewelry for his children. Janis, who had never been married, accepted his marriage proposal and the ring. Discord developed in the relationship between Rodger and Janis, and in October of 1993 Rodger broke the engagement and asked for the return of the ring. At that time, Janis obliged and gave Rodger the ring. Rodger and Janis attempted to reconcile. They succeeded, and Rodger again proposed **644 marriage, and offered the ring, to Janis. For a second time, Janis accepted. In March of 1994, however, Rodger called off the engagement. He asked for the return of the ring, which Janis refused, and this litigation ensued.
Rodger filed a two-count complaint against Janis, seeking recovery of the ring or a judgment for its equivalent value. The case proceeded to arbitration, where a panel of arbitrators awarded judgment for Janis. Rodger appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, where a brief non-jury trial resulted in a judgment in favor of Rodger in the amount of ,200. [FN1] Janis appealed to the Superior Court, which affirmed the trial court in a 2-1 panel decision. Judge Ford Elliott, writing for the majority, held that no-fault principles should control, and that the ring must be returned regardless of who broke the engagement, and irrespective of the reasons. In a Dissenting Opinion, Judge Schiller criticized the Majority Opinion for creating what he termed a “romantic bailment” because of its refusal to examine the actions of the donor in breaking the engagement, thereby creating a per se rule requiring the return of an engagement ring in all circumstances. *4 We granted allocatur to answer this novel question of Pennsylvania law.
FN1. The basis for the ,200 award of the trial court was Rodger’s testimony that this was the fair market value of the ring.
[1] We begin our analysis with the only principle on which all parties agree: that Pennsylvania law treats the giving of an engagement ring as a conditional gift. See Pavlicic v. Vogtsberger, 390 Pa. 502, 136 A.2d 127 (1957). In Pavlicic, the plaintiff supplied his ostensible fiancée with numerous gifts, including money for the purchase of engagement and wedding rings, with the understanding that they were given on the condition that she marry him. When the defendant left him for another man, the plaintiff sued her for recovery of these gifts. Justice Musmanno explained the conditional gift principle:
A gift given by a man to a woman on condition that she embark on the sea of matrimony with him is no different from a gift based on the condition that the donee sail on any other sea. If, after receiving the provisional gift, the donee refuses to leave the harbor,–if the anchor of contractual performance sticks in the sands of irresolution and procrastination–the gift must be restored to the donor.
Id. at 507, 136 A.2d at 130.
Where the parties disagree, however, is: (1) what is the condition of the gift (i.e., acceptance of the engagement or the marriage itself), and (2) whether fault is relevant to determining return of the ring. Janis argues that the condition of the gift is acceptance of the marriage proposal, not the performance of the marriage ceremony. She also contends that Pennsylvania law, which treats engagement gifts as implied-in-law conditional gifts, has never recognized a right of recovery in a donor who severs the engagement. In her view, we should not recognize such a right where the donor breaks off the engagement, because, if the condition of the gift is performance of the marriage ceremony, that would reward a donor who prevents the occurrence of the condition, which the donee was ready, willing, and eagerly waiting to perform.
[2] Janis first argues that the condition of the gift is acceptance *5 of the proposal of marriage, such that acceptance of the proposal vests absolute title in the donee. This theory is contrary to Pennsylvania’s view of the engagement ring situation. In Ruehling v. Hornung, 98 Pa.Super. 535 (1930), the Superior Court provided what is still the most thorough Pennsylvania appellate court analysis of the problem:
It does not appear whether the engagement was broken by plaintiff or whether it was dissolved by mutual consent. It **645 follows that in order to permit a recovery by plaintiff, it would be necessary to hold that the gifts were subject to the implied condition that they would be returned by the donee to the donor whenever the engagement was dissolved. Under such a rule the marriage would be a necessary prerequisite to the passing of an absolute title to a Christmas gift made in such circumstances. We are unwilling to go that far, except as to the engagement ring.
Id. at 540 (emphasis added). This Court later affirmed that “[t]he promise to return an antenuptial gift made in contemplation of marriage if the marriage does not take place is a fictitious promise implied in law.” Semenza v. Alfano, 443 Pa. 201, 204, 279 A.2d 29, 31 (1971) (emphasis added). Our caselaw clearly recognizes the giving of an engagement gift as having an implied condition that the marriage must occur in order to vest title in the donee; mere acceptance of the marriage proposal is not the implied condition for the gift.
Janis’ argument that Pennsylvania law does not permit the donor to recover the ring where the donor terminates the engagement has some basis in the few Pennsylvania authorities that have addressed the matter. The following language from Ruehling implies that Janis’ position is correct:
We think that it [the engagement ring] is always given subject to the implied condition that if the marriage does not take place either because of the death, or a disability recognized by the law on the part of, either party, or by breach of the contract by the donee, or its dissolution by mutual consent, the gift shall be returned.
Ruehling, 98 Pa.Super. at 540. Noticeably absent from the recital by the court of the situations where the ring must be returned is when the donor breaks the engagement. Other *6 Pennsylvania authorities also suggest that the donor cannot recover the ring when the donor breaks the engagement. See 7 Summary of Pennsylvania Jurisprudence 2d § 15:29, p. 111 (“upon breach of the marriage engagement by the donee, the property may be recovered by the donor”); 17 Pennsylvania Law Encyclopedia, “Gifts,” § 9, p. 118 (citing to a 1953 common pleas court decision, “[i]f, on the other hand, the donor wrongfully terminates the engagement, he is not entitled to return of the ring”).
[3] This Court, however, has not decided the question of whether the donor is entitled to return of the ring where the donor admittedly ended the engagement. In the context of our conditional gift approach to engagement rings, the issue we must resolve is whether we will follow the fault-based theory, argued by Janis, or the no-fault rule advocated by Rodger. Under a fault-based analysis, return of the ring depends on an assessment of who broke the engagement, which necessarily entails a determination of why that person broke the engagement. A no-fault approach, however, involves no investigation into the motives or reasons for the cessation of the engagement and requires the return of the engagement ring simply upon the nonoccurrence of the marriage.
The rule concerning the return of a ring founded on fault principles has superficial appeal because, in the most outrageous instances of unfair behavior, it appeals to our sense of equity. Where one fiancée has truly “wronged” the other, depending on whether that person was the donor of the ring or the donee, justice appears to dictate that the wronged individual should be allowed to keep, or have the ring returned. However, the process of determining who is “wrong” and who is “right,” when most modern relationships are complex circumstances, makes the fault-based approach less desirable. A thorough fault-based inquiry would not only end with the question of who terminated the engagement, but would also examine that person’s reasons. In some instances the person who terminated the engagement may have been entirely justified in his or her actions. **646 This kind of inquiry would invite the parties to stage the most bitter and unpleasant *7 accusations against those whom they nearly made their spouse, and a court would have no clear guidance with regard to how to ascertain who was “at fault.” The Supreme Court of Kansas recited the difficulties with the fault-based system:
What is fault or the unjustifiable calling off of an engagement? By way of illustration, should courts be asked to determine which of the following grounds for breaking an engagement is fault or justified? (1) The parties have nothing in common; (2) one party cannot stand prospective in-laws; (3) a minor child of one of the parties is hostile to and will not accept the other party; (4) an adult child of one of the parties will not accept the other party; (5) the parties’ pets do not get along; (6) a party was too hasty in proposing or accepting the proposal; (7) the engagement was a rebound situation which is now regretted; (8) one party has untidy habits that irritate the other; or (9) the parties have religious differences. The list could be endless.
Heiman v. Parrish, 262 Kan. 926, 942 P.2d 631, 637 (1997).
A ring-return rule based on fault principles will inevitably invite acrimony and encourage parties to portray their ex-fiancées in the worst possible light, hoping to drag out the most favorable arguments to justify, or to attack, the termination of an engagement. Furthermore, it is unlikely that trial courts would be presented with situations where fault was clear and easily ascertained and, as noted earlier, determining what constitutes fault would result in a rule that would defy universal application.
The approach that has been described as the modern trend is to apply a no-fault rule to engagement ring cases. See Vigil v. Haber, 888 P.2d at 455 (N.M.1994). Courts that have applied no-fault principles to engagement ring cases have borrowed from the policies of their respective legislatures that have moved away from the notion of fault in their divorce statutes. See, e.g., Vigil, supra (relying on the New Mexico legislature’s enactment of the first no-fault divorce statute); Aronow v. Silver, 223 N.J.Super. 344, 538 A.2d 851 (1987) (noting New Jersey’s approval of no-fault divorce). As described by the court in Vigil, this trend represents a move *8 ” towards a policy that removes fault-finding from the personal-relationship dynamics of marriage and divorce.” Vigil, 888 P.2d at 457. Indeed, by 1986, with the passage by the South Dakota legislature of no-fault divorce provisions, all fifty states had adopted some form of no-fault divorce. Doris Jonas Freed & Timothy B. Walker, Family Law in the Fifty States: An Overview, 19 Fam. L.Q. 331, 335 (1986). Pennsylvania, no exception to this trend, recognizes no-fault divorces. [FN2] See 23 Pa.C.S. § 3301 (c), (d). We agree with those jurisdictions that have looked towards the development of no-fault divorce law for a principle to decide engagement ring cases, and the inherent weaknesses in any fault-based system lead us to adopt a no-fault approach to resolution of engagement ring disputes.
FN2. The Superior Court explained the rationale behind the legislature’s enactment, in 1980, of provisions for no-fault divorce:
we emphasize that the purpose of the legislature’s enactment of no-fault provisions in divorce in addition to the traditional fault provisions was to provide for dissolution of marriage in a manner which would keep pace with contemporary social realities and not to advance “the vindication of private rights or the punishment of matrimonial wrongs.”
Jayne v. Jayne, 443 Pa.Super. 664, 674, 663 A.2d 169, 174 (1995) (citations omitted).
Having adopted this no-fault principle, we still must address the original argument that the donor should not get return of the ring when the donor terminates the engagement. Such a rule would be consonant with a no-fault approach, it is argued, because it need not look at the reasons for termination of the engagement; if there is proof that the donor ended the relationship, **647 then he has frustrated the occurrence of the condition and cannot benefit from that. In other words, we are asked to adopt a no-fault approach that would always deny the donor return of the ring where the donor breaks the engagement.
[4] We decline to adopt this modified no-fault position, [FN3] and hold that the donor is entitled to return of the ring even if *9 the donor broke the engagement. We believe that the benefits from the certainty of our rule outweigh its negatives, and that a strict no-fault approach is less flawed than a fault-based theory or modified no-fault position. [FN4]
FN3. The modified no-fault position is no more satisfactory than a strict no-fault system because it, too, would create an injustice whenever the donor who called off the wedding had compelling reasons to do so.
FN4. Although other “scenarios” related to the consequences of a cancelled wedding can undoubtedly be “envisioned,” they are not presented for decision in this case and therefore warrant no comment.
We affirm the Order of the Superior Court.
Justice CAPPY files a dissenting opinion in which Justices CASTILLE and SAYLOR join.
Justice CASTILLE files a dissenting opinion in which Justices CAPPY and SAYLOR join.
CAPPY, Justice, dissenting.
The majority advocates that a strict no-fault policy be applied to broken engagements. In endorsing this view, the majority argues that it is not only the modern trend but also the approach which will eliminate the inherent weaknesses of a fault based analysis. According to the majority, by adopting a strict no fault approach, we will remove from the courtroom the necessity of delving into the inter-personal dynamics of broken engagements in order to decide which party retains possession of the engagement ring. This view brings to mind the words of Thomas Campbell from The Jilted Nymph: “Better be courted and jilted than never be courted at all.” As I cannot endorse this approach, I respectfully dissent.
An engagement ring is a traditional token of the pledge to marry. It is a symbol of nuptial intent dating back to AD 860. The engagement ring was to be of a valued metal representing a financial sacrifice for the husband to be. Two other customs regarding the engagement ring were established in that same century: forfeiture of the ring by a man who reneged on a marriage pledge; surrender of the ring by the woman who broke off an engagement. See Charles Panati, Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things (copyright 1987). This concept is consistent with conditional gift law, which has always been followed in Pennsylvania. Stanger v. Epler, 382 Pa. 411, 115 A.2d 197 (1955); Ruehling v. Hornung, 98 Pa.Super. 535 (1930); C.J.S. Gifts § 61. *10 When the marriage does not take place the agreement is void and the party who prevented the marriage agreement from being fulfilled must forfeit the engagement ring. Pavlicic v. Vogtsberger, 390 Pa. 502, 136 A.2d 127 (1957).
The majority urges adoption of its position to relieve trial courts from having the onerous task of sifting through the debris of the broken engagement in order to ascertain who is truly at fault and if there lies a valid justification excusing fault. Could not this theory justifying the majority’s decision be advanced in all other arenas that our trial courts must venture? Are broken engagements truly more disturbing than cases where we ask judges and juries to discern possible abuses in nursing homes, day care centers, dependency proceedings involving abused children, and criminal cases involving horrific, irrational injuries to innocent victims? The subject matter our able trial courts address on a daily basis is certainly of equal sordidness as any fact pattern they **648 may need to address in a simple case of who broke the engagement and why.
I can envision a scenario whereby the prospective bride and her family have expended thousands of dollars in preparation for the culminating event of matrimony and she is, through no fault of her own, left standing at the altar holding the caterer’s bill. To add insult to injury, the majority would also strip her of her engagement ring. Why the majority feels compelled to modernize this relatively simple and ancient legal concept is beyond the understanding of this poor man.
Accordingly, as I see no valid reason to forgo the established precedent in Pennsylvania for determining possession of the engagement ring under the simple concept of conditional gift law, I cannot endorse the modern trend advocated by the majority. Respectfully, I dissent.
Justices CASTILLE and SAYLOR join this dissenting opinion.
*11 CASTILLE, Justice, dissenting.
I dissent from the majority’s opinion because I do not believe that a no-fault policy should be applied to broken engagements and the issue of which party retains the engagement ring. The Restatement of Restitution, § 58 comment c, discusses the return of engagement rings and states that:
Gifts made in the hope that a marriage or contract of marriage will result are not recoverable, in the absence of fraud. Gifts made in anticipation of marriage are not ordinarily expressed to be conditional and, although there is an engagement to marry, if the marriage fails to occur without the fault of the donee, normally the gift cannot be recovered. If, however, the donee obtained the gift fraudulently or if the gift was made for a purpose which could be obtained only by the marriage, a donor who is not himself at fault is entitled to restitution if the marriage does not take place, even if the gift was money. If there is an
Best answer:
Answer by wyomugs
Well… I’m waiting!!! Politely!
Have a polite day!
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Does anyone know a GOOD attorney to take a case against possibly several state agencies on percentage?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on August 2, 2011
Question by buttercup: Does anyone know a GOOD attorney to take a case against possibly several state agencies on percentage?
NEED HELP! Five years ago, I would have never needed or considered doing this. We were a very stable middle class family. I had raised two children and decided to go back to school and take some classes in psychology. I became very interested in that and social work and soon quit a 20 year job to return to school. Cutting our income in half was bad but after winning an academic scholarship at the end of two years, I went on for a degree in Social Work. I drove 100 miles per day to school. In the meantime, everything went haywire. I graduated in May of this year and have not gone to work because of family responsibilities. While in school, I dealed with a son in drug addiction but now with a long period of recovery. He became a father out of wedlock to a precious baby girl in 2003. She was abandoned to him at 2 1/2 years old with mother coming back in a few months. Shortly after, a 1 1/2 year custody battle began that became ridiculous. He now has custody of her. Both of them live with my husband and I. His work has been cut by the economy to part time. He has no government help or child support aiding with this child. My husband has just had a week a month cut from his job due to economy. Our savings have dwindled away with attorney fees, medical bills, even with a bond to get me out of jail on a false criminal charge. If not for my education, I would have never considered this lawsuit, but I have watched wrongdoing of Childrens Services, classism, false accusations placed in agency files and passed around to others for months concerning me when they were not only untrue but could have been easily tested for validity. Some of these things I have documentation of, a tape recorded interview with the head of an agency showing many mistakes, etc. Other things, I have very strong circumstantial evidence concerning. Nobody here wants to fight the state. The DA’s office sure doesn’t want to be involved when they work for the state also.
Some of the many issues include:
1) Sexual abuse of my then 2 1/2 year old granddaughter. The story came to me after a long period of talking about this person in a very traumatic story one night after seeing his father who looked very much like him. I asked her to tell dad and granddad the next morning. She said enough without going into details as she did with me. They took her to Childrens Services. It was thought that I MANIPULATED the child to tell this, and I doubt was ever even documented.
2) Mother and father still had custody but both sets of parents were ordered by the court to supervise with parents at all times, including me. At the same time, they held a document saying that I was believed to have character flaws, mental illness, abuse prescription drugs, and take illegal drugs. Do you leave a child with a parent that needs supervision to be done by someone like this?
3) I walked out of a Family Meeting according to them because I was unwilling to compromise or something similar. I did walk out and told them the reason why. I had listened to what would be to everyone’s convenience for half an hour. Not once did I hear anything concerning “what was in the best interest of the child.” They also wanted both parents to sign away custody to grandparents. My son refused to do so without it being heard before a judge. I refused to sign to take custody until both parents were said to be unfit before a judge.
4) My son’s lawyer called and asked to see him and that he bring parents. When we got there, papers were already waiting for everyone to sign. Based on a conversation with Childrens Services, she had decided that there was no use representing him. She wanted him to sign rights to us. She would then become our attorney and fight to be able to get us JOINT custody with the other grandparents. She was fired.
5) For about two years this child did not know where home was. She usually was ordered to spend three days at one place and four at the other.
6) My son had held temporary custody since the abandonment. One night probably a year into this hearing, she was talking to me in bed before going to sleep. All of a sudden she said, “Don’t you know that my daddy don’t have custody anymore. Nana and Papa do” I just let it go and said nothing. The next morning I went to the courthouse to see the documents of the hearing. She was right! For 5 months they had held custody of the child. My son nor any of our family realized this. It was done on a court date where the judge had plainly said that he would not discuss custody that day…only visitation. He sent us in a room to decide on visitation for the next 2 weeks and said when settled, we were dismissed. The grandparents lawyer came out and returned to the podium. He said “your honor, we have one piece of business that we didn’t address.” The judge asked what, and bringing the paper to the judge, he said that it was the visitation agreement that we had made to be signed.
I would LOVE to at least have some more comments here!
Best answer:
Answer by Mismobismo!(Alan Partridge Aha!)
We require more American Answers,as the UK system as i know it so unlike the US,
This must have been hell for you, I’m sorry you have had such misfortune.
Apologies for my previous answer,i couldn’t take it all in as i was sleep deprived from physical pain.
The law here would require some objection to any treatment to have been made within three years of any such treatment-spoken to my solicitor-so his take,if happened in the UK
The solicitor here (UK) would have to have very specialised training on family law,mine has a partner who does this,and she is always working.
The healthy, ‘child comes first’ attitude you have ,has been ignored and misunderstood,possibly,and also can be used as some ‘fake’ diagnosis to keep lawyers on the take/make
prolongation of cases traumatises the Child and those who love her.
This is horrible to have happened to anyone,of any social background.
What do you think? Answer below!
Atheists, what do you think of the Terri Schiavo case?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on July 6, 2011
Question by Got rings this millennium?: Atheists, what do you think of the Terri Schiavo case?
This was not a euthanasia case in the traditional sense, as the patient was in a persistent vegetative state unable to communicate, was not terminally ill (but had no chance of recovery), and did not experience great pain.
1) Since her parents wanted to keep her alive, and her husband wanted her to pass away by removing her feeding tube, what do you think should have been the right thing to do in this situation? It’s a shame a Supreme Court order had to be given to settle this.
2) Suppose this happened to someone else under the exact circumstances except that person had no family and no close friends. In this case do you think he should be allowed to live indefinitely? If not, do you think a team of doctors should be the ones to decide on the best course of action?
3) This is aside from the previous two questions, but since the only belief atheists share is disbelief in God, and since almost all religions consider God or belief in deities to be quite essential (except perhaps Buddhism which also believes in unfounded things like the afterlife), does this mean that atheism usually means rejection of religion as well? Would it be accurate to describe atheism as being part of irreligion?
Best answer:
Answer by LHOOQ corné
The autopsy revealed that she was brain dead. She should have been allowed to die with dignity, instead of being shown on national television in her condition.
What do you think? Answer below!
Last suspect sentenced in drug case
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on April 15, 2011
Last suspect sentenced in drug case
The last of five people arrested last year in a Naperville police raid that yielded a cache of Ecstasy, 10 pounds of marijuana and nearly ,000 has been sentenced to jail for his part in that matter.Leonard L. Goldman, 26, of Aurora, was convicted Tuesday in DuPage County Circuit Court of a felony charge of the manufacture or delivery of more than 2,000 but not more than 5,000 grams of …
Read more on The Naperville Sun
Court struggling to find jurors in Michael Jackson case
Finding an unbiased jury for the Michael Jackson manslaughter case – in which 470 potential jurors have been screened – is proving difficult.
Read more on NZCity
what are the ethical dilemmas associated with this particular case?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on April 12, 2011
Question by Ryan V: what are the ethical dilemmas associated with this particular case?
In January 1983, twenty-five-year old Nancy Cruzan lost control of her car as she traveled down a Missouri road. The car overturned, and she was discovered, lying face down in a ditch, without detectable respiratory or cardiac function. Emergency medical technicians were able to restore her breathing and heartbeat, and she was transported to a hospital in an unconscious state. A neurosurgeon there diagnosed her as having sustained probable brain damage, compounded by significant oxygen deprivation. The estimated length of the period without oxygen was twelve to fourteen minutes. (Permanent brain damage generally results after six minutes without oxygen.) Cruzan remained in a coma for approximately three weeks, and then progressed to an unconscious state in which she was able to orally ingest some nutrition. In order to ease feeding and further her recovery, surgeons implanted a feeding and hydration tube with the consent of her then husband. In October 1983, she was admitted to a state hospital. Subsequent rehabilitative efforts proved unsuccessful. It became apparent that she had virtually no chance of regaining her mental faculties, and her parents-who had been appointed as her coguardians-asked the hospital to terminate the medically assisted nutrition and hydration procedures. The hospital refused to honor the request without court approval.
The Cruzans then filed a declaratory judgment action in a Missouri trial court, in which they sought judicial authorization of their request. A guardian ad litem was appointed for Nancy. The trial court, following a hearing, entered an order directing the hospital to follow the parent’s instructions, based upon its findings on (1) the permanent and irreversible damage that she had suffered as a result of prolonged oxygen deprivation; (2) its belief that a person in Cruzan’s condition had a fundamental right under the Missouri and Federal Constitutions to refuse or direct the withdrawal of “death prolonging procedures”; and (3) her expressed thoughts at age twenty-five, in somewhat serious conversation with her housemate, that if sick or injured, she would not wish to continue her life unless she could live at least halfway normally, suggested that she would not wish to continue on with her nutrition and hydration given her present condition.
Both the state and the guardian ad litem appealed. The Supreme Court of Missouri, reversing the lower court, expressed the view that (1) although Cruzan was in a “persistent vegetative state,” she was neither dead within the meaning of Missouri’s statutory definition of death nor terminally ill; (2) Cruzan’s right to refuse treatment-whether such right proceeded from a constitutional right of privacy or a common-law right to refuse treatment-did not outweigh Missouri’s strong policy favoring the preservation of life, as embodied in the Missouri living will statute; (3) her conversation with her housemate was unreliable for the purpose of determining her intent, and thus insufficient to support the parents’ claim to exercise substituted judgment on her behalf; and (4) no person could assume the choice of terminating medical treatment for an incompetent person in the absence of either the formalities required under the living will statute or “clear and convincing, inherently reliable evidence,” which was absent in Cruzan’s case.
The United States Supreme Court upheld that ruling. It found that due process was not violated by the Missouri requirement that an incompetent person’s wishes in regard to the withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment be proved by clear and convincing evidence. In the end, however, further witnesses satisfied Missouri courts that such clear and convincing evidence of her wishes did exist, and medically assisted nutrition and hydration were removed in December of 1990. Cruzan died two weeks later. Missouri now allows health care directives (though not living wills) to instruct that medically assisted nutrition and hydration be removed after a diagnosis of permanent or persistent vegetative state has been made.
What judgment would you make about this case?
Best answer:
Answer by Paula
The U.S. Supreme Court was correct.
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Faild to Appear on dui case, letter to judge-will it help?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on April 8, 2011
Question by Babygirl: Faild to Appear on dui case, letter to judge-will it help?
after my Minor Consumption of alcohol Operating a Motor Vehicle, when i was nineteen, the judge orderd Victims impact panel, alcohol assestment, fees and community service i was to report back with all this done but when i went back i only had a fraction of the fees paid with none of the orders complete so he gave me another court date to come back with the victims impact pannel complete, but i flew to alaska to support my girlfriend with the birth of our child, as a nineteen year old i only had 200 in my pocket in a another state. I missed my court date and its been 2 years later to this date, i Have completed everything the judge orderd up here in alaska finaly have vacation time for me to fly down at the end of the month, but before i apear to see him should i Write him a letter to explain my situation and explain since then i havnt had any run ins with the law or any to make him more mad then he might be. Should i write a letter? will it help? what do you think the judge might do
am i looking at jail time?
Best answer:
Answer by M-420
Letters don’t usually help. Just appear, be polite, dress reasonable. Show you are willing to do what it takes to put this case behind you.
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Attorneys scrap over evidence in murder case
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on March 3, 2011
Attorneys scrap over evidence in murder case
In a murder case over which prosecution and defense attorneys have been butting heads almost from the outset, the Athens County Prosecutor’s Office has argued in a legal memorandum that a defense request for evidence favorable to defendant Matthew E. Wolfe is “flawed” and “misleading,” and should be denied.
Read more on The Athens News
City tip line leads police to pot bust
LOWELL — Information called in to the city’s Crimestoppers tip line led police this week to what would have otherwise been a very difficult target to find — a sophisticated marijuana-growing
Read more on Lowell Sun
Meth case draws four year prison sentence
Posted by admin in Drug & Alcohol Laws on February 23, 2011
Meth case draws four year prison sentence
A Crossville area man who was out on probation when arrested by Crossville Police with components commonly associated with the clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine pleaded guilty in Criminal Court recently and received a four-year sentence.
Read more on Crossville Chronicle
Crime statistics can tell misleading tales, law enforcement personnel say
By Derek Jordan Herald/Review SIERRA VISTA — Recently released crime statistics for Sierra Vista and Cochise County may provide a snapshot of certain kinds of crimes committed in the last year, but law enforcement personnel say that placing too much stock in such numbers can be a mistake. According to data from the Sierra Vista Police Department, crimes such as arson and motor vehicle theft have …
Read more on The Sierra Vista Herald
Meth problem increases in Cass County
Police seized a record number of meth labs in Indiana last year, and local officials said that number is on the rise in Cass County, too.
Read more on Pharos-Tribune
Portage resident gets 25 years in child sexual assault case
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on February 11, 2011
Portage resident gets 25 years in child sexual assault case
He is, according to a Columbia County judge, “damaged goods” and a danger to the public – and was ordered Tuesday to 25 years in prison.
Read more on Portage Daily Register
Chelsea Flatiron Coalition spars with city over BRC shelter
Even as the Bowery Residents’ Committee continues construction and outreach for a spring opening of their new 12-story homeless shelter at 127 West 25th Street, a group of concerned property and business owners prepares to argue before a state Supreme Court Justice that this construction violates city codes and zoning resolutions.
Read more on Gay City News
Sides must present post-trial briefs in custody case
Posted by admin in Drug & Alcohol Laws on December 10, 2010
Sides must present post-trial briefs in custody case
Two men from different countries, both fathers in their own right, sat in the same Ocala courtroom Wednesday to fight for the one thing they both want: custody of the 11-year-old boy each considers a son.
Read more on The Ocala Star-Banner
People: Dancer punched by Demi Lovato wants apology, cash
Also: Alicia Keys, Kim Kardashian, other celebs end million ‘I’m Dead’ AIDS fund drive; Kim Kardashian dumps model for basketball player; FCC fields complaints over Bristol Palin.
Read more on Contra Costa Times
New Laws Effective January 1, 2010
The following legislation will take effect beginning Jan. 1, 2010.
Read more on The Prairie Advocate
Rep. Wood sentenced to 60 days in drunken driving case
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 19, 2010
Rep. Wood sentenced to 60 days in drunken driving case
State Rep. Jeff Wood was sentenced to 60 days in jail and two years of probation Wednesday morning after he pleaded no contest to his fourth-offense of driving under the influence of a controlled substance, according to online court records.
Read more on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Lindsay Lohan – Lindsay Lohan Wants Probation Shortened
Lindsay Lohan is trying to shorten the terms of her probation.The troubled star’s legal team want the length of the court-ordered terms – which are presently…
Read more on ContactMusic
As Bratz Case Heads for Retrial, RICO Claims Survive Motion to Dismiss
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 18, 2010
As Bratz Case Heads for Retrial, RICO Claims Survive Motion to Dismiss
The latest ruling in the ferocious battle between Mattel and MGA Entertainment over who owns rights to the once-popular Bratz doll line won’t do much to streamline the issues as the case heads to a January trial date after a remand from the 9th Circuit.
Read more on Law.com via Yahoo! Finance
Letters to the Editor: Oct. 13, 2010
Here are letters to the editor from recent editions of the Daily News.
Read more on Naples Daily News
Navajo high court to hear priest abuse case
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 11, 2010
Alcohol

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Navajo high court to hear priest abuse case
The Navajo Nation Supreme Court, for the first time, will take up the question of alleged child abuse by a Catholic priest in oral arguments to be aired Oct. 25 at Yale Law School in New Haven, Conn.
Read more on Navajo Times
Court agrees to treatment for Iraq war veteran Brock Savelkoul before legal proceedings
WATFORD CITY — Brock Savelkoul didn’t look like a free man whenhe got into the pickup with his sister out in the McKenzie Countyjail parking lot Wednesday afternoon. This was no rejoicing“yeehaw!” moment.
Read more on The Bismarck Tribune
Second lawyer quits Lohan case
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 20, 2010
Second lawyer quits Lohan case
Lindsay Lohan has been left without legal representation again.
Read more on Jam! Showbiz
New venue sought for Adenhart case
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 20, 2010
New venue sought for Adenhart case
Defense attorneys for a former Riverside man doubt he can get a fair trial in Orange County, home of the Angels, in the 2009 drunken driving crash that killed pitcher Nick Adenhart and two other people. The attorney for Andrew Gallo, 23, wants a Santa Ana judge Friday to order the murder trial be moved out of Orange County, possibly to Los Angeles County.
Read more on The Press-Enterprise
Question regarding the release of medical information, in the case of a psychotic drug user?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 10, 2010
Dr. Jones runs a rehab facilitly and is treating a psychotic drug user. The patient suddenly abandons the facility leaving a note that he plans to kill his ex-wife today. The patient has left behind his antipsychotic medicine that he must take every two hours. Dr. Jones
A. may not release this information because it’s confidential.
B. may release the information
C. may release the information only if the patient authorized such release in advance.
D. may release the information after obtaining a court order first.
These answers do not make sense to me. If the patient does harm his ex-wife, the ex-wife could sue Dr. Bob for failure to warn. So is warning the ex-wife considered “releasing the information”?
if some1 has a pending case but does not appear to court becuse they are in rehab, what happens?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 10, 2010
Ok my brother is currently on probation,& is out on bail becuase he just picked up a new under the influence charge which is a violation of his probation. His court day is in August, he is planning to check him self into rehab in hopes that the judge wont sentence him to prison. Will this word and what happends if he doesnt go to court becuase he is in rehab?




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