New Case Tips for Judgment Creditors & Litigation Privilege
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If you have a judgment against a debtor and you want to do some judgment collection in another state, is personal jurisdiction an obstacle? Do you have to show the debtor has minimum contacts with the other state? No, says a new published case. We’ll consider the possible effects of this — they are surprising.
On the perennial topic of deadlines for posttrial motions and appeals, we found yet another exception — if you file a DQ motion, that tolls the posttrial deadlines. Jurisdictional my left foot.
And finally, a new anti-SLAPP case with an expansive application of the litigation privilege.
Cases discussed:
- WV 23 Jumpstart, LLC v. Mynarcik (D3 Nov. 21, 2022) No. C095046. See Tim’s post, Personal Jurisdiction Unnecessary to Issue Judgment on an Out-of-State Judgment, New Published Case Holds.
- Gearing v. Garfield Beach CVS, LLC (D4d3 Nov. 8, 2022 no. G060807) 2022 WL 16827538 (nonpub. opn.). See Tim’s post, Disqualification motion tolls posttrial and appellate deadlines.
- Timothy W. v. Julie W. (Oct. 26, 2022, G059429).
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Other items discussed in the episode:
- Judge Evans gets less than top rating (via David Ettinger, At the Lectern).
- Judge Rawlinson Says Law Schools Should Reassess Their Admissions Process.
- UCLA Law withdraws from US News & World Report rankings.
- Myron Moskowitz calls for more dissents (via Ben Shatz, SoCal Appellate News).
- Videos from this episode will be posted at Tim Kowal’s YouTube channel.
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