Plaintiff, an attorney, represented a client, also an attorney, in a prior civil suit against the client’s employer for discrimination, harassment, retaliation, wrongful termination, and other related claims. By motion, plaintiff withdrew from the case at the beginning of trial. The client could not find another attorney to represent her, and the trial court dismissed the […]
Total Amounts Of Medical Bills Not Relevant.
Two plaintiffs were passengers in a taxi cab when another vehicle collided with the cab and they were injured. The defendant, the driver of the other car, was convicted of fleeing the scene of an injury accident, and was sent to prison for three years. A jury found the passengers suffered $1.8 and $1.4 million in […]
Order To Tax Costs On Appeal After A Remand Is Immediately Appealable.
On appeal, the Court of Appeal remanded the case to reduce damages and awarded appellant costs on appeal, including attorney fees. Appellant filed a cost bill in the trial court and the trial court only partially granted a motion to tax cost. That motion was immediately appealable as a post-judgment order and time to appeal did […]
Evidence Of Title Insurance Should Have Been Admitted.
The signatures on loan documents were forged. Interest-only payments were made. A larger replacement loan was made, again based upon forged documents. When the property owners realized what had happened, they brought an action for fraud against various persons. Everything settled, except a cross-complaint of one lender against another lender. At trial, a jury decided a […]
Jurors Were Not Asked “Is This Your Verdict?”
In a criminal case, the jury advised the bailiff a verdict had been reached. Once all were assembled in the courtroom, the court asked: “And ladies and gentlemen, I understand you’ve reached a verdict. Who is the foreperson?” A juror responded: “Yes sir.” The court asked the juror to hand the verdict forms to the deputy, […]
Bicycle On A Sidewalk.
Plaintiff college student left college on his bicycle. At first, he traveled on the street with the vehicular traffic, then he crossed to the sidewalk against the flow of traffic on the street. As he approached a supermarket parking lot, defendant drove her car out of the parking lot, over the threshold between the parking […]
Rule Set Forth In Howell v. Hamilton Meats & Provisions, Inc. Applied During Post-Trial Motion.
As plaintiff, a disabled man, passed through the threshold of a door to exit a store, the automatic doors closed on him three or four times before he was able to pass through. When he made it through the doors, he fell to the ground because his leg became twisted. He was taken by ambulance to […]
Jury Verdict In Favor Of Truck Manufacturer Reversed.
A 15-year-old boy threw a 2.5 pound of concrete rock from a freeway overpass, penetrating the windshield of a truck driven by plaintiff, striking plaintiff on the head and causing great bodily injuries. The boy pled guilty and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Plaintiff and his wife, and later only his wife, who proceeded […]
“Me-Too” Evidence Properly Excluded In Employment Discrimination Case.
Plaintiff alleged he was discriminated against by his employer because of his Japanese ancestry and Asian race. A jury found in favor of the employer and found no employment discrimination. Plaintiff brought an unsuccessful motion for new trial, arguing the trial court erred in excluding evidence that a supervisor “openly favored employees of Arab ancestry.” The […]
Substantive Grounds For Motions For JNOV, Nonsuit, And Directed Verdict May Be The Same, But Their Procedural Requirements Are Not.
In an action involving strict liability and negligence, a jury found in favor of the plaintiffs on their failure to warn and negligence claims. After the jury was discharged, but before judgment was entered, the trial court granted defendant’s pending pre-verdict motions for nonsuit and directed verdict, deeming those motions to be a motion for judgment […]
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