Posted on January 12, 2013. Tags: Assumption Of The Risk, Centerpiece, Circuit Court Judges, Claimants, Conservative Judges, Conservative Juries, Contributory Negligence, Depositions, Exceptions, Jurisprudence, Law Clerks, Medical Malpractice, Plaintiff, Proponents, Punitive Damages, Right Decision, Rule Of Evidence, State Supreme Court, Summary Judgment, Sworn Testimony, Tiny Bit, Tort Reform, Virginia State
There will be a fierce debate on the centerpiece of tort reform in Virginia: Should the judge have the power to grant summary judgment on depositions. This would give the judge the power to grant judgment in a case if there was no facts to go further based on the sworn testimony of the witnesses […]
Elwood "Sandy" Sanders is a Hanover attorney who is an Appellate Procedure Consultant for Lantagne Legal Printing and has written ten scholarly legal articles. Sandy was also Virginia's first Appellate Defender and also helped bring curling in VA! (None of these titles imply any endorsement of Sanders’ views)
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Posted in News, Opinion
Posted on July 1, 2010. Tags: Attorneys, Care Case, Case Judge, Compass, Economy, Federal Health Care, Health Care Law, Health Law, Landmark, Mandate, Notion, Oral Arguments, Segment, Summary Judgment, Us Government
Today marked an important landmark in Virginia’s case to overturn the individual mandate contained in the recent healthcare bill: the first oral arguments in the case. While most of the arguments are similar to those we have laid out for you in previous emails (link to those arguments here) – there was at least one […]
Tom is a US Navy Veteran, owns an Insurance Agency and is currently an IT Manager for a Virginia Distributor. He has been published in American Thinker, currently writes for the Richmond Examiner as well as Virginia Right! Blog.
Tom lives in Hanover County, Va and is involved in politics at every level and is a Recovering Republican who has finally had enough of the War on Conservatives in progress with the Leadership of the GOP on a National Level.
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Posted in Featured, Opinion
Posted on June 7, 2010. Tags: 220 Years, Commonwealth Of Virginia, Constitutional Government, Federal Health Care, Freedom Act, Health Care Freedom, Health Care Law, Ken Cuccinelli, Necessary And Proper Clause, Office Of The Attorney General, Private Health Insurance, Richmond Virginia, S Commerce, Street Richmond, Summary Judgment, Supremacy Clause, U S Constitution, Virginia Attorney General, Virginia Law, Virginia Office
RICHMOND (June 7, 2010) — Virginia has responded to the federal government’s attempt to dismiss the state’s lawsuit against the new federal health care law, Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli announced today. In its motion to the court to dismiss Virginia’s lawsuit, the federal government argued that Virginia lacks the standing to bring a suit, […]
Tom is a US Navy Veteran, owns an Insurance Agency and is currently an IT Manager for a Virginia Distributor. He has been published in American Thinker, currently writes for the Richmond Examiner as well as Virginia Right! Blog.
Tom lives in Hanover County, Va and is involved in politics at every level and is a Recovering Republican who has finally had enough of the War on Conservatives in progress with the Leadership of the GOP on a National Level.
Read the full story
Posted in Health