A circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion by certifying a class that included parties who were charged for medical records during a time when Wisconsin Court of Appeals case law allowed such charges, the court of appeals has held.
A circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion by certifying a class that included parties who were charged for medical records during a time when Wisconsin Court of Appeals case law allowed such charges, the court of appeals has held.
A visit to the 122-year-old Midtown Manhattan hotel’s liquidation sale bore witness to Bibles, Laurel and Hardy VHS tapes, and the end of a specific kind of New York.
A promise not to prosecute a couple for child abuse became binding once the couple detrimentally relied upon the promise by consenting to the termination of their parental rights, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals has ruled.
A property management company that had knowledge of the property owner’s precarious financial state had a duty to disclose that condition to prospective residents, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals has ruled.