Originally dismissed in Supreme Court, this case was re-instated by the Appellate Division, First Department last week. Mortenson v Shea ;2009 NY Slip Op 03611 ;Decided on May 5, 2009
Appellate Division, First Department is a situation in which a New Jersey law firm was retained to sue a New York law firm for
Legal Malpractice News
Did Plaintiff Settle her Way into a Legal Malpractice Case?
This case took several readings to try and sort out the story. Plaintiff in this legal malpractice case, Citrin v Baratta & Goldstein ;2009 NY Slip Op 03597 ;Decided on May 5, 2009 ;Appellate Division, First Department was a defendant in the underlying action. There, "Following a five-day jury trial in a prior action alleging…
Intermittent and Continuous Representation in Legal Malpractice
In Byron Chem. Co., Inc. v. Groman; 2009 NY Slip Op 03465 ; Decided on April 28, 2009 ; Appellate Division, Second Department plaintiff employer sued its attorneys for an employee benefit provision which was drafted by attorney firm 1, which was then taken over by attorney firm 2. At issue was whether the…
A World Apart in Legal Malpractice
From time to time we forget that Louisiana is a completely different environment. Its laws are different, its emphasis is different, and even its terms are wholly different. Here is an article from Hinshaw & Culbertson on the case of McGuire v. Mosley Rogers Title Co., L.L.C., 997 So.2d 23 (La. App. 2008) in which plaintiffs…
Pro-Se Legal Malpractice Litigation
Attorneys gnash their teeth when litigating against pro-se parties. The thought is that the pro-se gets an advantage; they are not held to tight deadlines, are not the subject of rule-specific dismissal, nor are they required to hew to the line of traditional court procedure.
As an example, this pro-se plaintiff in Kleinser v …
Real Retention, Privity and Legal Malpractice
The informal way some people go about hiring an attorney is well documented in a new case decided by Justice Ling-Cohan in Camone v. Levy, 2009 Slip Op 30843(U). Here plaintiff trustee is of a generation skipping trust, and attorney is shown materials in order for him to tell plaintiff whether a federal estate tax return…
Nominal Damages in a $55 Million Dollar Legal Malpractice Case
Here, in an article from NY Lawyer is the shocking outcome of a huge London legal malpractice case. Linklatters, on trial for $ 55 Million ends up paying $ 5 [actually 5 pounds] as a nominal verdict. Queery: no motion for summary judgment? In NY courts, we see such outcomes in pre-answer motions and in motions for…
Insanity and Legal Malpractice
Is an attorney required to perform more work that set forth in a retainer agreement? If the attorney does not perform more work, will the statute of limitations be tolled by the client’s insanity? These two questions are partially answered in Turner v Irving Finkelstein & Meirowitz, LLP ;2009 NY Slip Op 03158 ;Decided…
When the Damages are Huge, Look for Legal Malpractice to Follow
This story from Law.Com by Zusha Elinson tells of the aftermath of a $ 82 million Sony Patent case, with its reports of witness buying, false testimony and unreliable evidence. From the Legal Malpractice perspective here is the nugget:
"Craig Thorner was the key witness in the Sony legal team’s effort to overturn an $82…
Multi-State Legal Malpractice and the Borrower Statute
California corporation retains New York law firm to process a trademark application, which fails. California plaintiff sues New York defendant for legal malpractice in Federal District Court, SDNY. Case is dismissed on jurisdictional basis. Case is later brought in State Court in New York. Does California or New York statute of limitations apply?
In Kat …