Posts Tagged ‘family law’

Hey mom, got a surprise for you

A federal judge has declined to dismiss a lawsuit by an Illinois woman who “is suing her Wisconsin parents for maintaining an icy driveway that she blames for a fall that broke her ankle two winters ago…. Carriel Louah, 25, visited Darlington, Wis., to surprise her mother on her birthday in January 2005. But the next morning, she was injured when she slipped and fell on her parents’ driveway. …The daughter said that a letter from her mom apologizing months after the fall proves that her parents knew they had a defective gutter for years and did nothing about it.” (“Judge OKs Trial After Daughter’s Surprise Visit Home Ends In Lawsuit”, Channel3000.com, Jul. 13).

$4 million custody fight over dog

In Manhattan, “Alexis Carroll, 26, is suing her former roommate, Michelle Clarity, also 26,” seeking the return of a West Highland terrier that both women had considered their pet when they shared an apartment in Tribeca. She also wants $4 million. (Janon Fisher, “Pals’ $4 M fight over puppy love”, New York Post, Jul. 2)(via KipEsquire).

“National Divorce Rate Reaches New Highs in Bitterness”

Comparatively few spouses blow up buildings, as police suspect a Manhattan doctor may have done, but things can still get pretty extreme:

Prominent New York divorce attorney Raoul Felder was more specific. “I had a client murdered by his wife,” Felder said. “I have seen [cases in which] a kitten [was] put in a washing machine, a puppy in the microwave — the puppy died, the kitten lived.

“I have seen art collections slashed, a guy with a vinyl record collection had it returned by his wife all smashed into bits,” Felder added. “I’ve seen clothes ripped up. One gentleman got his wife tickets to some hot play, and when she returned, her stuff was in the street. I’ve seen children taken at airports.”

(Chris Francescani and Kristen Depowski, ABCNews.com, Jul. 11; Anemona Hartocollis and Cara Buckley, “Divorce, Real Estate and Rubble: When Marriages Go Really Awry”, New York Times, Jul. 12 (note similar quotes from Felder, who’s clearly not afraid to give the same interview twice); Jane Ridley, “Divorce gets dirty”, New York Daily News, Jun. 12(et plus encore for that same kitten and puppy)). And: Rebecca Goldin at STATS.org chides ABC for sensationalism (Jul. 14).

Bonus video link: Patsy Cline, “A Church, A Courtroom, and Then Goodbye” (YouTube) (via Terry Teachout’s fabulous new listing of online video and audio resources).

Update: Devastated by cheating spouse

In the much-watched case we discussed last week (Jun. 21), the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that compensation could indeed be awarded a wife for her inability to work due to ongoing trauma from her ex-husband’s infidelity years earlier. Per the Globe and Mail:

Some legal experts said yesterday that the vague and self-contradictory nature of the ruling may encourage litigation from other estranged spouses who want to mount similar arguments based on their emotionally fragile state.

“What has opened up is a new route for people to argue that they cannot become self-sufficient,” said University of Toronto law professor Brenda Cossman.

(Kirk Makin, “Divorce ruling threatens to open floodgates”, Globe & Mail, Jun. 22).

Devastated by cheating spouse

So devastated, in fact, that even years after her husband Gary walked out on her for another woman, Sherry Leskun was too transfixed by the injustice to tackle the job market: a British Columbia court ruled that she was “bitter to the point of obsession with his misconduct and in consequence has been unable to make a new life.” Reason enough to maintain support payments at a level set to compensate for her lack of earnings? The Supreme Court of Canada is expected to decide soon. (Bruce Cheadle, “Supreme Court set to rule on whether a cheating spouse is debilitating”, CP/Maclean’s, Jun. 20).

Paternity fraud

National Law Journal takes a look at one of the hot issues in family law: whether a man can terminate child support payments if DNA testing reveals that he is not in fact the father of the child he has been supporting. Or should he perhaps be given some legal remedy against the mother other than the right to suspend support? (Tresa Baldas, “Parent Trap? Litigation Explodes Over Paternity Fraud”, Apr. 10).

Wet T-shirt follies: a calm discussion

Regarding yesterday’s item “Lied about her age to get into wet T-shirt contest”, reader James Ingram wrote to say:

Actually, I think you are off base on the case of the young woman who sued for use of her semi-nude pictures taken when she was only sixteen years old. Protecting minors from the negative consequences of their poor judgment and immaturity is a very traditional function of the law and one that makes good sense. This is why the law sets minimum ages for making life altering decisions such as entering contracts, getting married, having sex or dropping out of school, for purchasing potentially harmful products like alcohol, tobacco and firearms and for engaging in activities like driving and operating heavy machinery that could be dangerous to the minor or others. It is also why we have juvenile courts. Children need to be protected from themselves because they are children, and not fully responsible for their own actions.

Generally we require the adults who interact with minors to verify their age before allowing them to engage in these sorts of activities, and hold them legally responsible even if the minor lies about his or her age. No bartender who served a sixteen year old would be excused because she told him she was “of age”; he is legally responsible to verify her age by seeing proper ID and liable to punishment if he does not do so. The same rule ought to apply to the makers of skin flicks. The film producer took advantage of the poor judgment of an immature (and probably intoxicated) girl and deserves to be held accountable. (I give you that suing the hotel was silly.)

To which I replied:

I can see some point in your comments as regards the possibility of other legal sanctions aimed at the organizers, and perhaps even giving her some sort of right to obtain an injunction against further distribution, but the idea of letting her rake in cash over the incident strikes me as more than a little foolish. The result will be to set her up in an affluent position above her peers who had the good sense not to commit such follies, the sort of young women who are saving fifty dollars a week out of their paychecks as store clerks and waitresses. What sort of lesson does that send? And of course there’s also the grasping nature of the selection of defendants in the case, as you acknowledge.

And Ingram wrote back:

Good point. And you are right that a legal system that has only one answer — award money damages to the plaintiff — creates perverse incentives and rewards bad behavior. Kind of like the AGs’ tobacco litigation in a way. They “punished” the tobacco industry by taking a cut of the take; she punishes her exploiters by making them cut her in on the revenue from her strip show.

Interestingly, in the case of the underage drinking example I used the law would have remedies against both of the parties who behaved badly. The bartender who served the underage girl would face a fine or loss of license, while the girl would face juvenile court proceedings for underage drinking. I think my larger point — that the law should protect children and teenagers from their own folly and sanction the adults who facilitate it — is valid. Your larger point — we shouldn’t reward bad behavior with money even in circumstances where that behavior may be excused by youth and immaturity — is also valid.

“Abstinence education”: bait and switch?

The Bush Administration recently issued regulations that tighten the definition of what must be preached in federally funded “abstinence education” school programs. At Volokh Conspiracy, Dale Carpenter relays some thoughts I had about the process by which “abstinence” has turned out to mean “Biblical sex only”. Others picking up the story include Glenn Reynolds, Mark Kleiman, and Kevin Drum, while Three Years of Hell thinks the assumptions I find objectionable have been implicit in the program since it began (with the assent of Bill Clinton, of all people) in 1996. Planned Parenthood and ThinkProgress have more on the regulation changes.

P.S. Most important, of course, is Prof. Carpenter’s description of me as someone “who runs a terrific website about litigation abuse“.

Filial Overreaching Run Amok

Manhattan trusts and estates lawyer Edward F. Campbell Jr., counsel in the New York office of Chicago’s Vedder, Price, Kaufman & Kammholz, acted as “mediator, attorney and financial advisor” to his elderly parents in the 1996 sale of their home to….him.

Campbell “purchased” the 7 bedroom, 2 acre home in Lloyd Harbor, Long Island from his failing parents for no down payment and $1,000 a month, reserving to the parents a life estate, which isn’t turning out to be much of a consolation to the elder couple. A Suffolk County Supreme Court judge is skeptical.

No word on how Campbell’s eight siblings are taking the news.