Capitol Records v. Thomas
Jury in the retrial of a music downloading
case awards $1.92 million in damages against a Minnesota woman -- eight times more than the award at the original trial.
Padilla v. Yoo
California judge says an "enemy combatant" can sue a former U.S. government lawyer for creating the "legal construct" that allowed him to be tortured while in custody.
Olson v. Cohen
California woman allegesSacha Baron
Cohen assaulted her on the stage of a bingo hall where he was filming a scene for his upcoming movie "Bruno."
Craigslist v. McMaster
Website files suit seeking court protection from unconstitutional threats by the South Carolina attorney general to prosecute it for failing to block ads that solicit prostitution.

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• Boston judge refuses to require Massachusetts to include materials that deny the Armenian genocide in the public school curriculum.
"[T]he decision as to what to teach about ... the Armenian genocide must be made by elected officials, educators, and teachers rather than by federal judges."
Griswold v. Driscoll

• Kentucky Court of Appeals upholds a $3.7 million jury award against a school board for ignoring a student's complaints that several teachers had molested her. Plaintiff Lynne Maner "presented sufficient evidence that the Board was deliberately indifferen[t] in its failure to act." Maner v. Fayette County Board of Education

• 6th Circuit revives the racial bias case of an African-American couple who sued a hotel for refusing to host their wedding reception. "There is a genuine issue of material fact in this case as to whether ... the Hotel denied them the right to enter into a contract because of their race." Keck v. Graham Hotel Systems

• San Francisco judge rules that a city did not violate a hiker's rights by failing to protect her from an attack on public land by a rancher's cattle. "[P]laintiffs have not alleged facts supporting a claim that the City was deliberately indifferent to a known or obvious danger" to Jo Dee Schmidt. Schmidt v. Hoover

• Divided New York appellate court says a golfer is not liable for striking another golfer in the eye with an errant drive. The defendant's failure to yell "Fore" before hitting the ball "does not rise to the level of creating a dangerous condition over and above the usual dangers inherent in participating in the sport of golf." Anand v. Kapoor

• Sioux tribal members file a class action seeking their share of as much as $900 million held in trust by the federal government as compensation for the "taking" of the Black Hills of South Dakota. The plaintiffs have split from other Sioux who refuse to take the money, insisting on the return of the land.
Different Horse v. Salazar

• Texas Court of Appeals says a gas station owner is not liable for the negligence of an attendant who accidentally shot a customer while showing him a gun. The attendant's "actions were not merely a misuse of his authority; they were utterly unrelated to his duties."
Glass v. Williams

• San Francisco judge denies Chevron Corp.'s request for $485,159 in court costs from impoverished Nigerian villagers who sued the company for human rights violations. "The economic disparity between plaintiffs, who are Nigerian villagers, and defendants, international oil companies, cannot be more stark."
Bowoto v. Chevron






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Landowner Immunity Upheld in Grizzly Bear Attack Print

The Montana Supreme Court has cleared the state of liability for a fatal attack on a hunter by a grizzly bear, finding that a change in state law did not affect the recreational use immunity of landowners.

Grizzlies are “a condition of the property” for which the state owed no duty of care to Timothy Hilston, the court ruled in affirming summary dismissal of his widow's controversial wrongful-death case.

Mary Hilston ruffled Montana's hunting community by alleging Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks was liable for her husband's death in October 2001. A 400-pound grizzly attacked him as he was gutting an elk he had shot at the Blackfoot-Clearwater Wildlife Management Area.

The state's Recreational Use Immunity Act precludes negligence claims against a landowner arising out of the “condition of the property.” But Mary Hilston argued that the law was only “designed to protect landowners from typical claims of premises liability involving a defective condition in real property” and not from her atypical claim of negligent mismanagement of wildlife.

The Legislature, she noted in an appellate brief, had amended the law in 1987, deleting language that had granted broad immunity for “any act or omission” by any landowner. The revised statute “limited the provisions of the Act to defective property,” with “property” defined as “real estate and its fixtures plus machinery and equipment.”

“The statute does not define animals or animal management as property,” the brief said. “Thus, the provision in the statute regarding the 'condition of the property' can only refer to the real property and its fixtures as defined in the statute.”

But Justice Jim Rice, writing for the Supreme Court, disregarded Hilston's narrow interpretation of the statute.

“Grizzly bears are wild animals existing upon the property, and, as such, are a 'condition of the property' for purposes of Montana’s Recreational Use Immunity Act,” his opinion concluded. “Thus, the State of Montana owed no duty to protect Mr. Hilston from the grizzly bear attack that led to his unfortunate death.”

Hilston claimed wildlife officials were negligent in planting livestock carcasses in the refuge to draw bears away from the surrounding area. This policy, known as “chumming,” increased the risk of a bear attack on humans, she alleged.

The Supreme Court's decision dashes Hilston's last hope of compensation for her husband's death. She originally sued in federal court in September 2004, but a judge dismissed that case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under the Federal Tort Claims Act.

Other Hilston Bear Attack Sources

By Matthew Heller
6/2/07

 
rc_insidestories
  • No Prayer Now for Preacher's Suit Over "Religulous"

    Less than three weeks after being sued for defrauding two former parishioners of $600,000, a Florida preacher dropped his $50 million lawsuit alleging the Bill Maher documentary “Religulous” falsely portrayed him as a charlatan, On Point has learned.
    Read more...
  • Man Burned at Burning Man Assumed Risk

    Get too close to the Burning Man fire and you assume the “obvious and inherent” risk of being burned, a California appeals court has ruled in dismissing a personal injury lawsuit against the operators of the iconic countercultural arts festival.
    Read more...
  • Lawyer's 'Prove Me Wrong' Offer No Joke to Student

    A Texas law student may have taken a $1 million “prove me wrong” challenge seriously, but the criminal defense lawyer who made the challenge on a TV news show appears to have done so with enough tongue in cheek to avoid liability for not paying up.
    Read more...
  • Jury Chills Rights in Strip Search Case

    A jury has reached a chilling decision in the civil rights case of a Southampton, N.Y., woman, clearing four police officers in the exclusive resort community of liability for performing a strip search on her after a minor marijuana bust.
    Read more...
  • Toxic Bra Suits Won't be Combined in Ohio

    A rash of lawsuits against Victoria's Secret alleging defectively manufactured underwear is continuing with eight new cases filed in the past two months. But in a setback for plaintiffs, a judicial panel has refused to consolidate all the litigation in Ohio.
    Read more...
  • Wedding Fiasco Suit Really Takes Cake

    Sandra Newsom's wedding disaster lawsuit may -– literally –- take the cake. The New York woman has sued a cruise ship operator for ruining her wedding reception by serving a coconut-containing cake to which she had an allergic reaction.
    Read more...
  • Woody Allen Got $5M After Judge Shredded Defense

    A week before American Apparel agreed to pay Woody Allen $5 million for misappropriating his image, a judge had shredded the clothing company's First Amendment defense based on its CEO's “mental processes,” On Point has learned.
    Read more...
RC_OnFile

Sugawara v. Pepsico
Subject: False Cereal Advertising
Document: Order Granting Dismissal

Ozzy Osbourne v. Tony Iommi
Subject: Rock Band Trademark
Document: Complaint

Mohamed v. Jeppesen Dataplan
Subject: State Secrets
Document: Petition for En Banc Review

Savio v. Peterson
Subject: Wrongful Death
Document: Complaint

Kerr v. New Orleans Police Department
Subject: Male Skirt-Wearing
Document: Complaint

more

RC_OnTrial

Capitol Records v. Thomas
Court: USDC, Minn.
Subject: Digital music downloading
Verdict: $1.92 million

ASPCA v. Ringling Bros.
Court: USDC, D. Col.
Subject: Illegal "taking" of elephants by circus

more


RC_OnTheDocket

Howard K. Stern v. Rita Cosby
Date: 7/7/09
Court: USDC, S. N.Y.
Hearing: Motions for summary judgment in defamation case.

Goldberg v. Paris Hilton Entertainment
Date: 7/9/09
Court: USDC, S. Fla.
Hearing: Jury trial in breach-of-contract case.

more


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