
Supreme Court Haiku Reporter. The Law of the Land in Seventeen Syllables …

Supreme Court Haiku Reporter. The Law of the Land in Seventeen Syllables …

From Suzanne Saenz of Houston (Suzanne is a legal assistant with Ronald W. Ryan), this excerpt from the plaintiff’s deposition in a medical malpractice case …

Most of the questions I think of asking players and coaches at Texans offseason practices are things you are asking me about …
The Law of the Land in Seventeen Syllables. PPL Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue …
This marvelous!!! contribution is from Justice Bailey C. Moseley of Texarkana (Court of Appeals, 6th Appellate Dis-trict), who writes: “A number of years ago, I was engaged in a jury trial in Rusk County …

Ran across an interesting article in The New Yorker called, “Why we need answers: A theory of cognitive closure …

From Beverly Hays of Dallas (Beverly is a paralegal with Patterson, Lamberty, etc. who “hopes this one makes the cut”), this excerpt from a personal injury deposition …
Speedy trial case
Improvidently granted
The writ is dismissed
Editors like draft grades because readers like draft grades. I’ve done draft grades before when I used to work for FanHouse because my editor asked for them, but always a bit begrudgingly. For me, all draft grades are by nature “Incompletes.” General draft boards do not look at things like team fit…
Upstream Color. Back in 2004, director Shane Carruth made a splash with Primer, a time-travel film he made for $7,000. I didn’t care for that movie, and I really didn’t care for this one. At first it’s a somewhat gross sci-fi movie about a thief who can basically hypnotize you into doing anything he wants you to if he can…