goldmanhusson

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

April 26, 2011

PL 305--Legal Ethics
IN class tonight, I collected the papers from assignment #2, and we spent much of the class discussing them. We then also discussed the disciplinary cases that I had assigned. The assignment for next Tuesday, May 3, is to read chapter 9 of the text, and to read in addition the disciplinary decision of Board v. Warren, 12/29 2010.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

April 19, 2011

PL 305--Legal Ethics
In class today, Tuesday 4/19, I distributed Assignment #2, which is due on Tuesday, 4/26. we then covered the concepts and cases of Chapter 8 of the text.

For this assignment, I would like you to write a paper comparing the analysis and outcome of five cases dealing with whether there is “excusable neglect” when someone misses a deadline, especially if it is the paralegal who messes up.

By “comparing”, I intend that you should discuss the following:

1) whether the facts of the cases are basically the same, or whether they are distinguishable from each other (how do the excuses compare with each other?);

2) how do the systems intended to prevent mistakes compare to each other?;

3) whether the decisions by the various courts are basically in agreement with each other (do the courts apply the same definition of what is “excusable”?)

4) do the appellate courts accord the same deference to the discretion of the trial court?

After doing this comparison, you should also give your own view on whether each of the cases was correctly decided (by the court that is writing the decision, not by any lower court), or not, and why you come to your conclusion.

Here are the specific cases to compare :
• the textbook case of Pincay v. Andrews (p. 359)
• the Maine Supreme Court case of Lane v. Williams, 521 A.2d 706 (Me. 1987)
• the Maine Supreme Court case of Gregory v. City of Calais, 2001 ME 82.
• the Maine Superior Court case of Batchelor v. Martin, 2002 WL 1065578
• the Maine Supreme Court decision of Flaherty v. Allstate Insurance Co,.
2003 ME 72 (Part II of the opinion)
(all of the Maine cases are available through Westlaw)
When there is a dissenting opinion in a case, analyze that as well.


The assignment is due at the beginning of the class on Tuesday April 26.

If you are unable to attend class on that date, you should e-mail the assignment to me by the beginning of class. I will acknowledge receipt of any e-mailed papers--if you don’t get an acknowledgment that means that I didn’t get the paper. See the syllabus for more information, or if you do not have the paper done on time. In terms of timeliness, any attachment that I cannot open will not be considered received; so the safest course is to copy and paste the paper into your e-mail as well as to attach it.

You are not allowed to collaborate with other students. The work should be entirely your own. The only sources you should be consulting are the briefs and the oral argument. See the syllabus regarding plagiarism.

In addition, I would like you to read for next week a number of disciplinary decisions found on the website of the Maine Overseers of the Bar.

Two of the decisions disciplinary are regarding James MacAdam (the lawyer involved in the Batchelor case). They are the Grievance Commission decisions of December 1, 2003, and November 18, 2004.

In addition, read the decisions regarding
Seth Carey (February 12, 2009);
Peter Bos (January 2, 2009); and (March 31, 2011)
and Margaret Shalhoob (December 1, 2009);

They can all be accessed by going to www.mebaroverseers.org/discipline/disciplinary_decisions.shtml
(or else just going to the mebaroverseers.org site and selecting
Decisions. Orders, and Hearing Schedule
Decisions and Orders
The decisions are then arranged chronologically.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

April 12, 2011

PL 305--Legal Ethics
In class tonight, Tuesday 4/12, I distributed one handout, a news article about a Bangor lawyer who took money from his client trust account, and also overcharged a client. I went over Board v. Lord disciplinary decision about a lawyer who took unfair advantage when drawing up a will for a client, and also Ethics Opinion #198, regarding the rule against splitting a fee with a non-lawyer. We then went through the five Maine cases regarding attorney fees, and the textbook cases through the Bass case on p. 316. The assignment for next Tuesday is to read Chapter 8 of the text, and to read as well MRPC 1.1, 1.3, and 1.4, with accompanying Comments and Reporter's Notes.

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

April 5, 2011

PL 305 Legal Ethics
In class tonight, Tuesday 4/5, we went over the concepts of Chapter 7 of the text, as well as the MRPC regarding attorney fees and client trust accounts. Regarding attorney fees, I also went over three additional cases, Okot v. Conicelli, 180 F. Supp. 2d 238 (D.Me,2002); Fox v. Vice, (Supreme Court oral argument 3/22/2011; and Richlin v. Chertoff, __US__ (2008). We discussed the cases at the end of the chapter up to page 309. The assignment for next Tuesday is to review the remainder of the cases at the end of the chapter, and to read as well five cases from Maine regarding attorney fees (all available through Westlaw):
Fleet Bank v. Steeves, 793 F. Supp. 18 (D.Me. 1992);
Brennan v. Barnhart, 2007 WL 586794 (D.Me. 2007);
B.C. Produce v. Don's Wholesale, 550 F. Supp. 2d 124 (D.Me. 2008);
Stern v. Astrue, 2009 WL 2824751 (D.Me. 2009);
H-D Michigan v. Hannon, 2010 WL 915206 (D.Me. 2010).