The Eastern District of Michigan Chapter of the Federal Bar Association is accepting on-line pre-registrations for a Feb. 6 seminar, "Trial Advocacy: Financial Issues In Commercial Litigation and Business Bankruptcies."
The 8:30 a.m. event at the Theodore Levin U.S. Courthouse in Detroit features two demonstrations: "Financial Issues In Commercial Litigation & Business Bankruptcies" and "Presenting Evidence And Expert Witnesses In Business And Bankruptcy Proceedings."
More information here.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Business, bankruptcy, litigation and evidence: FBA plans Feb. 6 seminar
Posted by
Ed Wesoloski
at
3:11 PM
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Labels: Bankruptcy, Business Law, Evidence, Litigation
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Law firm's ice sculpture destroyed
Traverse City artist Steven Berkshire spent a lot of time creating nice-looking ice sculpture, which was commissioned by the local law office of Grand Rapids-based Smith, Haughey, Rice & Rogge.
Meant to be enjoyed by the Traverse City community, the artwork was installed last Friday in front of the firm's downtown office. It was supposed to last as long as there was freezing weather, but by Sunday afternoon, thanks to a thoughtless vandal, it was turned into a forlorn pile of chunks.
The Traverse City Record-Eagle quotes firm partner Robert Tubbs as saying, "[W]e tried to do something nice for the holidays ... obviously it was disappointing someone decided to do that."
A cold-hearted someone, at that.
Posted by
Ed Wesoloski
at
2:39 PM
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Labels: General News, Law Firms
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Another side of immunizing med-tech companies from suit
There has been a renewed clamor in Michigan to repeal the state's drug-manufacturer immunity law in the wake of Merck's agreement to a multi-billion dollar settlement of claims that one of its drugs, Vioxx, may have had the troublesome side effect of causing often-fatal heart attacks or strokes.
Michigan's immunity law, conceived and enacted in the hubris resulting from Republican domination of all three branches of the state government in the mid-1990s, gave pharmaceutical manufacturers a free pass on civil liability claims in Michigan courts if the federal Food and Drug Administration approved the complained-of drug.
Legislation to repeal this much-criticized special-interest law - a Detroit Free Press editorial recently labeled it as "easily one of the worst legacies of former Gov. John Engler" - has been stalled in the Michigan Senate for most of this year. And it may stay there longer still.
Today, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Riegel v. Medtronic, (click here for a Dow Jones Newswire report), in which the medical equipment manufacturer proposes a slightly less draconian but nationwide version of legal immunity for med-tech companies.
Medtronic, the world's largest med-tech company, is defending a product liability case filed after the balloon on one of its catheters burst during an angioplasty, which required emergency bypass surgery to save the patient's life. Medtronic is arguing that federal regulation of sophisticated medical equipment pre-empts claims under state law by patients who say such equipment injured them. Both lower courts have agreed with Medtronic's position.
The Dow Jones report suggests that Medtronic's argument got a friendly reception in the Supreme Court as well. But the tenor of oral arguments is not always a reliable predictor of how a case turns out.
Keep your eye on the Medtronic case. It will be powerful medicine, no matter which way the Court goes.
Posted by
Ed Wesoloski
at
5:32 PM
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Labels: Business Law, Courts, Personal Injury, Product Liability