Plaintiff filed a complaint on November 13, 2006. During the following years, there were various events. At one point, the trial court stayed the action while the parties engaged in mediation. One of the plaintiffs passed away. One of the defendants was in bankruptcy for many months. The complaint was amended five times. In May 2012, […]
One-Year Statute Of Limitations Applies In Action Against Attorney For Malicious Prosecution.
California Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6 specifies a one-year statute of limitations in actions against attorneys “arising in performance of professional services, except for actions for actual fraud.” Section 335.1 specifies a general two-year statute of limitations applicable to actions for malicious prosecution. Plaintiff sued his opponent in an earlier suit and her attorney for malicious […]
Sign This Arbitration Provision If You Want To Work Here.
Carpet installers were told to sign a form contract when they were hired and again during their employment. The contract included an arbitration provision among its 37 paragraphs, a six-month statute of limitations and a unilateral attorney fee provision which worked to the detriment to the employees. The forms were in English and the employees did […]
Parol Evidence Admissible & Statute Of Limitations Explained In Real Estate Sales Contract Twist.
Buyer failed to reconvey property to seller after paying off her debts secured by the home in exchange for the return of the purchase price and payment of a service fee as orally promised by buyer. The seller’s broker was supposed to memorialize the terms of the deal into a writing, but the written contract […]
Denial Of Conjugal Visits Claimed To Interfere With Prisoner’s Practice Of His Religion.
A state prisoner asserts that denials by prison officials of his request for conjugal visit with his wife violated the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act and the First Amendment by interfering with his practice of a tenet of his Islamic faith requiring him to marry, consummate his marriage, and father children. The district […]
What He Said To The IRS Didn’t Stay With The IRS.
A man had business dealings in both the United States and Japan. Representatives from the Internal Revenue Service [IRS] and Japan’s National Taxing Authority [NTA] held a meeting in 1996 to discuss the man’s taxes. During that meeting, they disclosed information to each other, but the man knew nothing about the meeting or the disclosures […]
Once Again, Which Statute Of Limitations Applies?
In another case, appellants had an option to purchase real property and claimed the three-year statute of limitations under Civ.Proc. §338 applied. Both the trial and appellate courts found the two-year statute of limitations under Civ.Proc. §339 was the right one because “an option to purchase real property is a contractual right.” Cyr v. McGovran […]
Seller’s or Buyer’s Broker, Which Statute Of Limitations Applies?
California Civil Code section 2079.4 imposes a two-year statute of limitations on suits brought against a seller’s real estate broker. The standard buyer-broker agreement form issued by the California Association of Realtors form imposes a two-year limitations period for any legal action against a buyer’s broker. This case involves claims brought against a dual listing […]