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Articles Posted in Proximate Causation

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Louisiana Court of Appeal Rejects Collectability Defense In Legal Malpractice Case

One defense to a legal malpractice case is that the plaintiff could never have collected any money from the defendant in the underlying case. This defense is rarely asserted, but it can be very effective. In a malpractice case, you must prove what the outcome of the underlying case would…

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Law Firm’s Position Vindicated On Appeal – Malpractice Case Dismissed

The case is Iliescu v. Hale Lane Peek Dennison and Howard, No 76146, Supreme Court of Nevada.This is a complicated case and factual scenario that does often come up in legal malpractice cases. It goes like this: A. Your client loses a ruling in a trial court in the underlying…

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Arizona Court Holds That Proximate Causation Defeats Plaintiff’s Legal Malpractice Claim

In Herren v. Armenta, 1-CA-CV-18-0381, the plaintiff sued her former lawyers alleging that they committed legal malpractice when the represented her in another case (the underlying case). In the underlying case, Tonto Supply, Inc., sued Herren for breach of contract and other torts. Herren alleged that her lawyers were negligent…

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Law Firm Gives Incorrect Advice On Appeal Deadline But Still Defeats Malpractice Claim

Proximate causation is often the issue that defeats a legal malpractice case. In this case, even though a law firm failed to timely appeal an interlocutory ruling, there was no malpractice because the ruling was correct. Thus, even if the appeal had been filed on time, the plaintiff would have…

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Proximate Causation Defeats Conflict of Interest Legal Malpractice Claim 

The plaintiff, Cynthia O’Neal, brought a legal malpractice claim against her former lawyers. O’Neal, an owner of a restaurant chain that fell on hard times, alleged that her former lawyers had a conflict of interest when the represented her company and the opposing party in an assumption of a lease.…

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