Committee advances bill raising non-panel limit in medical malpractice claims
Medical malpractice claims of up to $50,000 would go directly to court under a proposal that cleared an Indiana Senate committee Wednesday.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
Medical malpractice claims of up to $50,000 would go directly to court under a proposal that cleared an Indiana Senate committee Wednesday.
Indiana Tax Judge Martha Wentworth dismissed the challenges brought by 11 cooperatives regarding the Indiana Board of Tax Review’s denial of their appeals after their property tax exemptions were revoked. The judge found the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear the cases.
Vanderburgh County officials have begun reviewing bids for the renovation of the third floor at the 126-year-old courthouse in downtown Evansville.
A woman charged in a deadly 2012 house explosion in Indianapolis agreed Tuesday to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit arson and testify against at least two other people in the fiery natural gas blast that damaged dozens of homes.
A Roman Catholic diocese wants a federal judge to throw out a jury's verdict that it discriminated against a former teacher fired for trying to get pregnant through in vitro fertilization.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Nathaniel E. Moffett v. State of Indiana (NFP)
90A02-1407-CR-467
Criminal. Affirms 50-year sentence for Class B felony attempted arson, Class C felony possession of a dangerous device by an inmate, Class A misdemeanor intimidation and for being a habitual offender.
Nathaniel J. Richardson v. State of Indiana (NFP)
34A02-1408-CR-564
Criminal. Remands for further proceedings to determine who decided that Richardson was not entitled to good-time credit for the period of in-home detention between January 2012 and January 2013, and whether that entity had authority to make that determination, recalculating credit time if necessary; determine whether Richardson was released on bond on March 6 or March 15, 2013, recalculating credit time if necessary; remove the 43 actual-days credit time from Richardson’s FD-61 sentence; and determine under which cause Richardson was serving in-home detention between March 2013 and March 2014, recalculating credit time if necessary.
Heather L. McDaniel v. State of Indiana (NFP)
12A05-1405-CR-223
Criminal. Affirms aggregate six-year sentence, with a total of five years executed at the Department of Correction and one year suspended to probation, following guilty plea to two counts of Class D felony causing serious bodily injury while operating a vehicle while intoxicated.
Roy Dale Weber v. State of Indiana (NFP)
73A01-1401-CR-8
Criminal. Affirms revocation of probation.
In the Matter of the Term. of the Parent-Child Relationship of C.W. & A.W. and J.W. v. The Ind. Dept. of Child Services (NFP)
06A01-1406-JT-240
Juvenile. Affirms termination of parental rights.
Ritchie Townsend v. State of Indiana (NFP)
49A02-1407-MI-462
Miscellaneous. Affirms denial of petition to expunge Townsend’s 1988 conviction for Class B felony criminal confinement.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Jeri Good v. Indiana Teachers Retirement Fund
25A03-1408-MI-278
Miscellaneous. Affirms determination that Good was entitled to only six months of retroactive benefits from the Indiana Public Retirement System instead of a full year as Good sought. Indiana law limits an INPRS member to six months of retroactive retirement benefits. Rejects Good’s claims that she is entitled to additional retroactive benefits based on the theories of equitable estoppel, unjust enrichment and breach of fiduciary duty.
Bills that would provide magistrates for three circuit courts in Southern Indiana are scheduled to be considered Jan. 21 by the Indiana House of Representatives Courts and Criminal Code Committee.
Beginning Monday, opinions and orders issue from the Indiana Court of Appeals will look different.
A retired teacher is not entitled to an additional six months of retroactive retirement benefits from the Indiana Public Retirement System, the Indiana Court of Appeals held Tuesday. Indiana law limits an INPRS member to only six months of retroactive retirement benefits.
The Supreme Court is siding with a Muslim prison inmate in Arkansas who sued for the right to grow a short beard for religious reasons.
Big-box retailers could see their Indiana property-tax bills slashed in half because of a recent court decision that favored Meijer over Marion County.
The state and federal courts are closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
The gritty legal battle between hardware store titan John Menard Jr. and Indianapolis power couple Steve and Tomisue Hilbert now includes this accusation: trying to buy off a witness.
A DePaul University College of Law professor, well-known as a scholar in the areas of employment and labor law and voting rights, will be the featured speaker at Valparaiso University Law School’s Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture Thursday.
The Indianapolis Legal Aid Society is making a final push in its 2014 holiday dollar campaign, hoping to entice late donors and surpass the record amount donated during the 2013 effort.
The central Indiana legal community hopes to reach new fundraising heights in the fifth annual American Lung Association’s Fight for Air Climb Law Firm Challenge.
The Supreme Court is getting back in the marriage business. The justices agreed Friday to decide a major civil rights question: whether same-sex couples have a right to marry everywhere in America under the Constitution.
Gov. Mike Pence's proposal for expanding two state prisons is drawing skepticism from some legislative leaders as it comes just months after Indiana's criminal sentencing laws changed in part to reduce the need for more prison space.
One of three people charged in a deadly Indianapolis house explosion has reached a plea agreement, prosecutors said Friday — something an outside defense attorney said could mean a stronger case against the other two.