Welcome to your Tuesday morning round-up of stories in today’s edition of The Legal Intelligencer, which also includes this week’s edition of Pennsylvania Law Weekly. All of the links below will take you directly to today’s stories, or you can head straight over to The Legal’s homepage. (Some stories may require registration or a paid subscription.)
Today’s top story comes from PLW, as reporters Ben Present and Zack Needles write about questions looming over the Lackawanna County Family Court guardian ad litem program. A review of family court records by the reporters reveals that the court contracted one person to act as guardian ad litem an average of 88 cases per year between 2009 and 2011. This came after there were no such appointments in 2007 or 2008. There will be more on this story in subsequent issues of The Legal and PLW, so stay tuned.
Below the fold on Page 1, Ben Present writes that a trial court may not refuse to award contractual interest to a prevailing party if the agreement provides for a specific amount. The state Supreme Court reversed a split panel of the Superior Court in TruServ Corp. v. Morgan’s Tool and Supply Co.
On Page 3, reporter Amaris Elliott-Engel writes in an allocatur story that the state Supreme Court is going to consider if health care providers or their records-producing proxies must disclose their actual and reasonable costs of producing charts and records.
There’s much more inside this week’s PLW, including Samuel C. Stretton’s Ethics Forum, in which he discusses a county president judge interfering with a district judge’s constitutional rights; Brandon Swartz’s Personal Injury column on diagnostic testing and bone scans; a $2.6 million medical malpractice verdict heading back to trial court after a second appeal; and Shelly Pagac and Jennifer Russell’s commentary on Employment Law and English-only rules in the workplace.
The lead story in today’s Legal is a look at profit margins and how they relate to a firm’s fiscal health. As reporter Gina Passarella writes, the profitability of firms has become an increasingly important issue. Of the 10 Pennsylvania-based firms that have reported financials so far this year, profit margins range from 22 percent to 44 percent.
Also above the fold on Page 1, Zack Needles writes that a federal judge has preliminarily approved the $17.75 million settlement of the “kids-for-cash” lawsuit. Robert K. Mericle, the builder of two juvenile detention centers who allegedly paid millions in “finder’s fees” to former Luzerne County Judges Michael T. Conahan and Mark A. Ciavarella Jr., agreed to the settlement in December in a civil suit brought by a class of juvenile plaintiffs.
Below the fold on Page 1, Amaris Elliott-Engel writes that a Lehigh County judge has upheld a $23.1 million award in a medical malpractice case in which a woman had both of her legs and a finger amputated because of an infection that went septic and gangrenous.
In more Regional News on Page 3, Hank Grezlak has a From the Chief column in which he asks when men are going to put an end to the boys’ club and stop the misogyny that has become all too common.
As always, our People in the News section is on Page 2, and the top stories from our sibling publications across the country make up the Page 4 National News section.
On Page 5 today is Peter F. Vaira’s look at the Eastern District, as he writes about the use and misuse of depositions in a conversation with Dennis R. Suplee, an expert in depositions from Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis.
In a Business of Law column on Page 7, Frank Michael D’Amore writes the second in a series about the top areas where law firms differ, including their willingness to embrace change.
If you have questions or comments about any of today's stories, or our coverage as a whole, we invite you to e-mail any of the reporters directly. We hope you'll enjoy today's Legal.
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