January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonThe state can't obtain title to a disputed tract of land through adverse possession because the state can't satisfy the tax
requirements in Indiana statute regarding adverse possession, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled today in a case of first
impression.In State of Indiana v. Jeanette Serowiecki, No. 56A04-0710-CV-576, the state appealed the trial court's grant
of summary judgment in favor of Jeanette Serowiecki on the state's complaint to quiet title to an 18.6-acre tract of land
in Newton County. Serowiecki is trustee...
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January 1, 2008
Rebecca BerfangerThe Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence with the assistance of pro bono attorneys in Baker & Daniels' Indianapolis
office filed notice of appeal July 22 for two non-violent contact orders issued in Marion County. The non-violent
distinction means that the respondent can have contact with the petitioner as long as it isn't violent contact. Earlier on
the same day in Indianapolis, Carl Wills allegedly killed his ex-wife, April Wills, her boyfriend, and then killed himself.
Records show that Carl had a history of...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonAttorneys who logged on this morning to the Indiana Judiciary Web site to read and print opinions were met with a challenge:
you could view, but couldn't print.The first Court of Appeals opinions of the New Year were password protected and locked
so that people accessing the online opinions were unable to print them.That was an internal, unintended glitch and the problem's
been resolved, according to Supreme Court Administrator and Appellate Clerk Kevin Smith.The opinions posted earlier this morning
disappeared temporarily...
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffGov. Mitch Daniels appointed a new Bluffton City Court judge Feb. 28, choosing a retired car dealership owner. Robert J. Bate
succeeds Judge Gary Markley, who resigned Jan. 15.Bate was owner and president of Bob Bate Chevrolet Inc. in Ossian from 1979
to 2000. He was elected five times to serve on the Bluffton City Council between 1987 and 2007. Bate's appointment is effective
immediately.
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsThose registered sex offenders who've served their time and are no longer on probation or under court supervision cannot be
required to give blanket consent to authorities for home and computer searches, the U.S. District Court Southern District
of Indiana's chief judge ruled late afternoon on June 24.U.S. District Judge David F. Hamilton in Indianapolis struck down
a major portion of a new law set to take effect July 1, which would have required all convicted sex offenders to agree to...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonThe Indiana Supreme Court granted transfer May 2 to a case in which the defendant was denied post-conviction relief.
In Roderick Lee v. State of Indiana, No. 27A04-0705-PC-257, Lee filed a petition for relief asserting he received ineffective
assistance from his trial and appellate counsel. The Indiana Court of Appeals rejected Lee's arguments that his trial and
appellate counsel - the same attorney - was ineffective because the attorney failed to argue that entering judgments on Lee's
convictions of burglary and attempted robbery violate...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana Supreme Court has once again influenced the state's criminal sentencing scheme in a pair of rulings that are the
latest in a post-Blakely world.Justices issued decisions Thursday in Rosalio Pedraza v. State of Indiana, No. 49S04-0711-CR-516,
and Michael Sweatt v. State of Indiana, No. 49S02-0805-CR-290, which when read together offer trial courts guidance about
using a person's criminal history and enhancing penalties.The court held that double enhancements are allowed using a single
element of criminal history, but consecutive sentences can't be...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsAn Allen County judge has publicly expressed his deep regret for failing to control his emotions late last year when he verbally
berated members of a defendant's family following a sentencing hearing.Allen Superior Judge Kenneth R. Scheibenberger filed
a formal answer Aug. 8 to the charges lodged against him July 15 by the Indiana Commission on Judicial Qualifications. The
judicial disciplinary body has charged him with four counts of misconduct for his behavior in a fellow jurist's courtroom
in November.At that...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsA three-judge Indiana Court of Appeals panel wants to know why parties have not submitted what it calls "a meaningful public
access set of briefs" related to product-liability claims against Indianapolis-based Guidant Corp. The state's second highest
appellate court has a public hearing scheduled for 11 a.m. March 25 in Allianz Insurance Co., et al. v. Guidant
Corp., et al., No. 49A05-0704-CV-216, where judges will consider the balance of public interest for access with the need for
restricting access relating to the Marion...
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffSelect portions of the 2006 and 2007 Indiana Code have been translated into Spanish, the Indiana Supreme Court has announced.
An alphabetical index of terms and a glossary outlining topic areas also were translated. The goal of the translation is to
better serve the Spanish-speaking population and those who represent them. By translating some of the basic codes, interpreters
will be able to use the same terms for charges and it will create a standard document of legal terminology. The translations...
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January 1, 2008
Rebecca BerfangerBar associations and courts in Indiana and nationwide are celebrating Law Day this week. Today marks the official 50th anniversary,
according to the American Bar Association, which has named this year's theme, "Foundation for Communities of Opportunity and
Equity."Today, Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard was scheduled to speak at a luncheon and award presentation in Fort Wayne,
while members of the St. Joseph and Lake County bar associations, among other attorneys around Indiana, will speak to high
school and junior high...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonJudge John Tinder, formerly of the U.S. District Court Southern District of Indiana, now on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals,
released his first authored opinion today with the federal appellate court. Judge Tinder joined the 7th Circuit in January.
Judge Tinder wrote the 22-page opinion in Jeanette Petts v. Rockledge Furniture LLC, a division of Ashley Furniture Industries
Inc., No. 07-1989, in which he and Judges Kenneth Ripple and Diane Sykes affirmed the decision of the U.S. District Court,
Western...
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffA former Marion Superior Court judge and Indianapolis City-County councilor died March 5 of natural causes. Judge
Z. Mae Jimison was the first African-American woman to serve as judge in Marion Superior Court. Judge Jimison, 64, served
on the bench from 1996 to 2002 and spent much of that time creating and supervising Marion County's Drug Court. In 1999, she
applied to become a justice on the Indiana Supreme Court after Justice Myra C. Selby announced she would step down to return
to...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonThe Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a jury award and remanded for a new trial after ruling there was insufficient evidence
to support an affirmative defense of a failure to mitigate damages instruction to the jury because a plaintiff failed to have
surgery. In Elwood and Lila Simmons v. Erie Insurance Exchange, No. 32A04-0710-CV-552, the couple appealed a judgment
awarding them each $10,000 following an automobile accident involving Elwood and another driver, who was at fault. They filed
a complaint seeking underinsured...
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffThe Marion Superior Court Family Resource Center - created by the Family Court Project for families with legal disputes -
opens Monday and will offer easier access to information about legal and social services resources. The center will provide
resources and referrals for various services such as domestic violence, protective orders, substance-abuse treatment options,
and how to find an attorney. Residents filing pro se will be able to view videos that walk them through the self-representation
process, as well as use...
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffThe Indiana Court of Appeals will hear arguments in a case regarding the state's sex offender residency law March 31 at Indiana
University School of Law - Indianapolis.In State of Indiana v. Anthony W. Pollard, Pollard is a convicted sex offender who
has lived for 20 years within 1,000 feet of a property where children could gather. He was charged for violating Indiana Code
35-42-4-11 and told that he could no longer live in his home. Pollard argues the law was...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana Supreme Court granted two transfers this week.Justices will consider an Indiana State University case involving
unemployment benefits for a discharged university professor, and another case delving into the attorney general's power to
demand discovery in consumer complaint investigations.One transfer comes in the combined appeals of Liberty Publishing Inc.
and Nu-Sash of Indianapolis v. Steve Carter, No. 49A02-0606-CV-502, which the state's appellate court ruled on June 25.
The appeals court affirmed Marion Superior Court judgments that the attorney general has the...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsIndiana has lost a longtime Marion County judge who's been on the probate bench for three decades and was considered one of
the state's top probate jurists.Marion Superior Judge Charles Deiter, 71, who presided over the court's probate division,
lost a battle to cancer this morning, according to his colleague and longtime friend Judge Tanya Walton Pratt."He was a wonderful
judge, someone who was well-loved by everyone in the community and on the bench," said Judge Pratt, who said the two...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonAn Indiana attorney often in trouble with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission was convicted Friday of crimes
against a woman in a wheelchair. Northern Indiana attorney Michael Haughee was convicted of sexual battery and criminal confinement,
both Class D felonies, and interference with the reporting of a crime, a Class A misdemeanor. Haughee was arrested in October
2006 following an incident at the woman's home. Haughee claimed he went to the woman's house to register her to vote. At the...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonA $42 million class action lawsuit involving Indiana state employees is scheduled to go to trial Aug. 19 in Marion Superior
Court. The lawsuit was brought by state employees who worked more hours than other state employees in comparable jobs. In
Paula Brattain, et al. v. Richmond State Hospital, et al., No. 49D11-0108-CP-1309, the class seeks compensation from the state
for an estimated 15,000 state employees who were required to work a 40-hour week while some employees in similar positions
at...
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January 1, 2008
Michael HoskinsIn the first of its kinds for any federal appellate court, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled in favor of an Indiana
woman who claimed she was wrongly fired for taking time off work to have in vitro fertilization.The 7th Circuit issued its
decision on the Illinois case Wednesday in Cheryl Hall v. Nalco Co., No. 06-3684, a case that could have implications
for women workers across the country. The appellate panel reversed a ruling from U.S. District Judge David...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonAn Indiana Court of Appeals panel disagrees about whether or not a parent who uses day care when he or she isn't working is
entitled to a child-support tax credit.In Craig Cross v. Victoria Cross, No. 49A05-0802-CV-94, authoring Judge Elaine
Brown and Judge Paul Mathias ruled the trial court erred in ordering father Craig Cross to pay $30 more a week to pay for
Victoria Cross' work-related day care for their adult child with autism. At issue is whether or not the...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonThe Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a trial court decision to allow a couple to inspect a company's financial statements,
finding the trial court relied only on an affidavit - and not testimony - to allow the inspection. In Bacompt Systems, Inc.
v. Angelina Peck and David C. Peck, No. 29A02-0708-CV-646, the Pecks made separate written requests to view Bacompt's
financial documents. The Pecks, who lived in Pennsylvania, owned approximately 25 percent of the company's stock. Prior to
David C. Peck's termination...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonThe Indiana Supreme Court granted four transfers yesterday in cases involving expungement of an arrest record, Indiana's prostitution
statutes, a landlord/tenant dispute, and whether control or title is critical in determining whether the vendor in a land-sale
contract owes a duty to third parties. In State of Indiana v. Chad Arnold, No. 49A02-0610-CR-961, the Indiana Court of
Appeals reversed a trial court order denying the state's motion pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 60(B), which requested relief
from the order that Indiana State...
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January 1, 2008
Jennifer NelsonFaced with the possibility of cutting even more from the Carroll County's courts budget this year, that county's judges stood
firm against Carroll County Council requests to again slash the court's budget. The judges sent a letter to the council stating
if the Indiana Supreme Court would relieve the courts of some duties, then the court's budget could be further reduced. The
letter was sent to point out the absurdity of the requested cuts, said Carroll Superior Judge Jeffrey Smith. Cutting...
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I highly recommend Deanna and her team of professionals that serve the legal community. Great information and many thanks for sharing.
they are pushing these cases against lawyers too far. thought-crime.
vagueness cannot challenged, so let's write all laws vaguely and throw the constitution out the window.Even if the court is operating under a particular law, if they don't it they will change it to their liking. What a joke!!!
Two convictions becomes one conviction with exactly the same sentence, only it is not clear wheter or not that sentence will be 18 months, 120 months or 138 months. Actually if the guns were in a home, whether or not they were his, he is protected under the 2nd amendment. Jurors need to learn the law and the constitution before judging others. The cour5ts need to do this as well.
With all due respect, Rick, I think you probably would be making a mistake by going to law school. The job market for attorneys is so saturated, you may well find yourself unemployed and with a lot of debt. You mention law would be a good supplement to your skills. True. But employers unfortunately don't value that. You will find that a law degree may well pigeonhole you into an attorney slot and limit career options. If you have a good job now I would hold onto that. As an attorney, you may well end up making less with the aforementioned debt.