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India Supreme Court Recognizes Transgendered People As 'Third Gender'

The Indian Supreme Court has recognized transgendered people as a third gender, The Times of India reports: "In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court on Tuesday created the 'third gender' status for hijras or transgenders. Earlier, they were forced to write male or female against their gender." That means transgendered people in India can have protection from discrimination at work and in school. However, the court limited its ruling to eunuchs, not others who identify as transgender.

Onondaga Nation Takes Land Claim to International Venue

The Onondaga Nation, one of the Haudenosaunee tribes in New York state, is taking its land claim to the Organization of American States, alleging that the loss of 2.5 million acres of their land violated their human rights, the Syracuse Post-Standard reports. The Nation's land claim was dismissed in American courts and now will be filed in the OAS Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

Lower Insurance Premiums Projected Through Health-Insurance Exchanges

Premiums for health insurance sold on the Obamacare's exchanges are going to be lower than expected, the Congressional Budget Office projects, according to the Wall Street Journal. The federal government is expected to spend $165 billion less than projected on subsidizing health-insurance plans, the WSJ further reports.

FDA Hints At Space for Innovation in Regulating Health IT

Information technology is changing health care. Federal regulators are looking to draft rules to protect patient safety in this new landscape.

The Food and Drug Administration is trying to draw up a framework for the FDA, the Federal Communications Commission and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology to regulate information technology related to medical devices, electronic health records, and other health IT, the Washington Post reports.

The recent report on the plan is out for public comment and "signals that the FDA might pursue a loose regulatory framework for some elements of health-care IT, allowing technologists to innovate without being burdened by federal oversight, said Gartner analyst Wes Rishel," the Post further reports.

CT Supreme Court Mulls Role of Exculpatory Clauses in Banking Industry

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 04/15/2014 - 08:43

The Connecticut Supreme Court is considering an issue of first impression: does public policy prohibit exculpatory clauses in deposit agreements between banks and customers? I wrote about the case for the Connecticut Law Tribune:

Nine years ago, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that a ski resort couldn't limit its liability through contractual clauses. Now the court has to decide if the banking industry can be permitted to do what the winter recreational industry cannot.

The justices heard oral arguments last month in a case, the banking industry says, could have profound influence on its future financial health. Bank of America is seeking to overturn a $823,777 verdict returned by a jury that found the financial institution liable for the money a Catholic school employee swindled from the school.

The case begins with Salvatore Licitra, who started out as a part-time bus driver at St. Bernard School of Montville. Over time, his duties expanded to making bank deposits, working on accounts payable and accessing the school's computer system to prepare checks from the school's account. He had access to third-party checks written to the school and blank checks in the school's name.

Licitra's duties expanded, Bank of America said in court papers, even though the school never ran a background check on him and his criminal record "includes several convictions for forgery, larceny, altering prescriptions, issuing bad checks, improper use of credit cards, and burglary."

He continued his criminal activities in 2002 by opening an account with the school's tax identification number. He proceeded to deposit into the account, over the course of four years, more than 1,000 checks, some payable to the school and others drawn on the school's operating fund account.

"Bank employees knew him and came over to shake his hand and joke around with him when he visited the branch," according to the school's court papers. "In the years to follow, the defendant [Bank of America] sent statements for the account to Licitra's home address; issued Licitra an ATM card; and processed hundreds of transactions on the account for Licitra."

Licitra's embezzlement continued until his position at the school was eliminated in 2006. He was arrested in July 2007, after officials at the Diocese of Norwich discovered the scam, and is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence.

In the meantime, St. Bernard filed a civil lawsuit in an attempt to recoup some of its losses.

The school, noting that it was a longtime customer of Bank of America, argued that the bank violated its own policies and let Licitra open a checking account in the school's name even though he was not an authorized signer of documents for the school's accounts. The bank even failed to disclose the existence of the illicit account to the school's accountants for four years in a row, the school complains.

After hearing all of the evidence, the jury found that Bank of America was negligent, breached its contract with the plaintiff, and violated sections of Connecticut banking law and Uniform Commercial Code. Jurors found Bank of America 95 percent liable for Licitra's actions and St. Bernard 5 percent liable.

Bank of America's legal position has been that the lawsuit should have been thrown out because St. Bernard officials took too long to notify the bank about the unauthorized transactions. The bank has deposit account agreements which require customers to review monthly bank statements and to report any questionable transactions within 60 days. Any customer not acting within this time frame, according to the agreements, is barred from bringing "any legal proceeding or action against us to recover any amount alleged to have been improperly paid out of your account."

During the trial, New London Superior Court Judge James Devine declared that those exculpatory clauses—requiring St. Bernard to notify Bank of America about problems within 60 days in order to be able to sue the bank—were contrary to Connecticut public policy. He cited the 1995 case of Hanks v. Powder Ridge Restaurant Corp., in which the Supreme Court held that it was against the public interest to allow a ski resort to limit its liability through an exculpatory contract clause.

And so, in an apparent issue of first impression, Devine interpreted Connecticut General Statute Section 42a-4-103 to find that the Bank of America deposit agreements were unenforceable. The law states: "Parties to the agreement cannot disclaim a bank's responsibility for its lack of good faith or failure to exercise ordinary care or limit the measure of damages for the lack of failure. However, the parties may determine by agreement the standards by which the bank's responsibility is to be measured if those standards are not manifestly unreasonable."

Devine reasoned that the "exculpatory language in the agreement affects the public interest adversely, and, therefore, it is unenforceable because it violates public policy."

The result of the judge's ruling, Bank of America said, was that the trial jury was not permitted to see the deposit account agreements that were in effect at the time.

In appealing the trial court ruling, Bank of America says that the point of the deposit account agreement is not to absolve the bank of liability if it fails to operate in good faith and with ordinary care. Instead, the bank argues, the agreement is just setting out a procedure that customers—including the school—must follow in order to make a legal claim.

Other jurisdictions allow banks to have similar-length notice periods, Bank of America further argued.

The Connecticut Bankers Association has filed an amicus brief in the case. That brief argues that public policy does support exculpatory clauses in the contractual relationship between banks and their depositors. The organization said the bank's exculpatory clause isn't really comparable to that of the ski resort, which is designed to limit liability for physical injuries sustained by customers who are invited onto the resort's property.

"While the invitee to the ski area may have no ability to control the risk they take in using the ski area, the depositor has control over its deposits insofar as it can review activity in its account on a monthly basis," Jeffrey Mirman and David Wiese, of Hinckley, Allen & Snyder in Hartford, wrote in the bankers' amicus brief.

Contractual provisions limiting the amount of time account holders have to notify banks of account irregularities are vital to detecting fraudulent activity early on. If the trial court decision is not overturned, the association said Connecticut will become an outlier in fraud prevention in the United States. Fraud losses will skyrocket, the association warns.

St. Bernard counters that the reason for barring exculpatory clauses exists outside of the context of winter recreation. Exculpatory clauses have no place in the banking industry, the school countered, because account agreements are "contracts of adhesion," meaning banks have "a decisive advantage of bargaining strength" over their patrons.

To allow exculpatory clauses, such as the one used by Bank of America, "would allow banks to run roughshod over our legislature and their customers alike," St. Bernard's lawyers said.

Further, the school's lawyers argue, even if St. Bernard had a responsibility to review its bank statements for suspect transactions, that requirement applied only to the bank officials operating a fund account, not a fraudulent account that school officials had no idea even existed.

Gerald Garlick, of Krasow, Garlick & Hadley in Hartford, is representing Bank of America. He declined comment. Cassie Jameson and Michael Colonese, of Brown Jacobson in Norwich, are representing the school. They, too, declined comment.

But Ryan Barry, of Barry and Barall in Manchester, and former cochairman of the General Assembly's Banks Committee, said that Devine is a well-regarded judge and his reasoning could be persuasive to the Supreme Court. Even though Connecticut would be in the minority of states in barring banks from putting contractual limits on how much time depositors have to flag fraudulent account transactions, Connecticut does not have to follow the majority rule, said Barry, who has no role in the case.

"The courts in our state sometimes lead the way in many areas of the law," Barry said.

More Judges Added to Address Custody Backlog in Philadelphia Courts

Three judges are going to  be added temporarily to the Philadelphia family court in order to address a severe backlog in custody cases, The Legal Intelligencer's P.J. D'Annunzio reports. Frank Cervone, executive director of the Support Center for Child Advocates in Philadelphia, told The Legal that the current state of affairs in custody cases is "upsetting" and said the court should add more judges. "The impact of these cases on children and families is profound, Cervone said, and the court should take an 'all hands on deck' approach to tackling custody reform," The Legal further reported.

Takeda Pharmaceuticals Faces Another Actos Plaintiff Seeking Billion-Plus Verdict

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 04/14/2014 - 18:09

I'm writing several times a day about products liability for Law.com/The National Law Journal. Occasionally I cross-post a blog I find particularly interesting.

One plaintiff's lawsuit in Louisiana federal court over allegations that diabetes drug Actos increases the risk of bladder cancer resulted in a $9 billion verdict. What might a jury do in a case consolidating claims by two plaintiffs?

Takeda Pharmaceuticals America Inc. is at trial over combined claims by Delores Cipriano and Bertha Triana, who allege they received inadequate warnings about Actos. Cipriano's attorney, Robert Eglet, said he plans to seek a multibillion-dollar verdict, the Las Vegas Review Journal reported.

Before the trial started, attorneys Kelly Evans, Chad Fears and Justin Hepworth, of Snell & Wilmer in Las Vegas, with other defense lawyers, asked the Nevada Supreme Court to bar consolidation of the two cases.

“Consolidation causes prejudice on the issue of causation by creating false cancer clusters which, in turn, magnifies juror sympathy for each individual plaintiff,” Takeda's counsel wrote. “Magnification of such juror sympathy should be a real concern in mass tort litigation in light of the colossal verdicts entered recently in consolidated trials in Nevada.”

The state high court rejected the defense petition for extraordinary writ relief. The consolidated case is expected to run until May.

Actos plaintiffs haven’t always met with success in Nevada. One such trial resulted in a defense verdict. But in Louisiana federal court, last week’s the verdict in Allen v. Takeda Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. was the first of nearly 3,000 lawsuits coordinated for pretrial purposes in federal multidistrict litigation.

In that case, the jury awarded $1.475 million in compensatory damages. Takeda was found 75 percent liable and Eli Lilly & Co., which co-promoted Actos, was found 25 percent liable. The jury awarded $9 billion in punitive damages, with $6 billion against Takeda and $3 billion against Lilly.

Federal Judge Orders Ohio to Recognize Out-of-State Same-Sex Marriages Globally

U.S. District Judge Timothy Black ordered Ohio to recognize same-sex marriages from other states, calling the ban "arbitrary discrimination," WKSU Public Radio reports. The order is a global one in comparison to an order in Indiana from late last week that allowed for recognition of an out-of-state same-sex marriage because one spouse has stage 4 ovarian cancer.

Indiana Ordered to Recognize Out-of-State Same-Sex Marriage

A federal judge has ordered Indiana to recognize the out-of-state marriage of a same-sex couple because one of the women has stage 4 ovarian cancer, the Associated Press reports. The court issued a temporary restraining order specific to just that couple. One of the couple's concerns is being able to access the safety net "available to a surviving spouse and the children of the person who has died," the AP reports.

Blogger Released After 'Unconstitutional' Pre-Publication Restraining Order

Alabama blogger Roger Shuler was released last month after he spent five months in jail for refusing to delete allegedly defamatory posts about a lawyer and the son of a former Alabama governor, Reporters Without Borders reports. Shuler finally asked his wife to remove the articles in order to get out jail, but his release is conditional.

Reporters Without Border said that the court order "'constitutes prior censorship. It is unacceptable that this blogger has had to renounce his freedom to inform for the sake of his physical freedom.'"

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