Rucker to assume senior judge status after retirement
Retiring Indiana Supreme Court Justice Robert Rucker will assume senior judge status after he leaves his seat on the state’s highest bench next month.
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Retiring Indiana Supreme Court Justice Robert Rucker will assume senior judge status after he leaves his seat on the state’s highest bench next month.
An Indianapolis City-County Council panel Tuesday evening unanimously approved a measure that would allow the city to be reimbursed with future bond proceeds for expenses related to the planned community justice campus.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Wanda Roberts, et al. v. Anthony W. Henson
10A01-1607-PL-1647
Civil plenary. Reverses summary judgment in favor of Anthony Henson on the Robertses’ lawsuit claiming the construction of his home on a lot in their subdivision violated the neighborhood’s restrictive covenants. Affirms Henson’s home did not violate the covenants against barns or other outbuildings being used a residence, but finds questions of material fact regarding whether his home’s height and garage size violate the covenants.
Summary judgment was prematurely granted to a Clarksville homeowner sued by his neighbors for allegedly violating the neighborhood’s restrictive covenants, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday.
Six of the 11 semifinalists who applied to fill Justice Robert Rucker’s seat after he retires next month sat for their half-hour interviews with Chief Justice Loretta Rush and the Judicial Nominating Commission Tuesday.
In a dispute between neighbors, the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed a private property owner had to allow part of his land to be used to give access to a tract of land owned by a business.
A Noblesville-based environmental firm has hired former Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller.
The Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library is asking a judge to rule quickly on the legal dispute over its failed move to Massachusetts Avenue in Indianapolis, fearing the not-for-profit could run out of money before the case is resolved.
County government officials in Indiana are considering closing satellite courthouses in three cities.
Indiana Legislators raised several concerns Monday afternoon during the conference committee for House Bill 1036, which establishes merit selection for choosing Marion Superior judges. Several expressed the need to allow the general public to have a say through elections.
Keith Cooper, a former Elkhart resident wrongfully convicted of a 1996 armed robbery, recalls the moment he walked out of prison in 2006, nine years into a 40-year sentence for a crime he did not commit.
Authorities say a 38-year-old man is jailed after threatening to blow up a courthouse in southern Indiana.
The Indianapolis Bar Association has endorsed the House version of House Bill 1036 which would fill this gap by creating a new Marion County Judicial Selection Committee.
Indianapolis Bar Association members give back to community at free legal advice event.
President-elect James Bell provides a helpful guide to determine whether to go to Bench Bar.
A rule designed to provide internet users with an extra layer of control over their web use history is dead before it ever fully came to life, but data privacy law experts say there’s little reason for consumers to panic.
Bob Hammerle loved “The Boss Baby,” and thinks you will too.
While some law firms have already implemented policies that allow work-from-home arrangements on a part-time or full-time basis, it has not yet become the norm in our profession. However, could this be the wave of the future?