Falling down and proximate cause
By Robert T. Park
Civil Practice and Procedure,
April 2014
The recent decision in Vertin v. Mau illustrates that in a premises liability claim, plaintiff must show the reason for a fall, not just that defendant might be to blame.
Bankruptcy issues relating to personal injury cases
By Brett J. Swanson
Commercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy,
August 2012
In the recent case of Berge v. Kuno Mader and DMG America, Inc., the First District found that the doctrine of judicial estoppel bars a plaintiff from proceeding with a cause of action in state court where the plaintiff fails to disclose the action as an asset in a bankruptcy petition.
Bankruptcy issues relating to personal injury cases
By Brett J. Swanson
Tort Law,
May 2012
In the recent case of Berge v. Kuno Mader and DMG America, Inc., the First District found that the doctrine of judicial estoppel bars a plaintiff from proceeding with a cause of action in state court where the plaintiff fails to disclose the action as an asset in a bankruptcy petition.
Wrapping up the case: a primer
By Angelica W. Wawrzynek
Young Lawyers Division,
December 2011
A how-to for finalizing your first personal injury case.
Admissibility of vehicle impact photographs
By Timothy W. Kelly
Tort Law,
February 2010
The standard for the admissibility of photographs of a motor vehicle collision depicting minimal damage to the vehicles in a personal injury trial has been debated since the First District Appellate Court’s opinion inDicosola v. Bowman, 342 Ill. App. 3d 530 (1st Dist. 2003).
Case Note: Forsythe, et al. v. Clark USA, Inc.
By Kevin T. Veugeler
Tort Law,
September 2009
In a case of first impression, the Illinois Supreme Court has recognized a cause of action against a parent company for the actions of its subsidiary that results in a workplace injury.
Brainlash: Be aware of this insidious disorder
By Scott A. Berndtson
Tort Law,
June 2009
When you interview your next whiplash-injured client be alert for other latent problems resulting from a brainlash as well and what to do if they exist.
Choice of law in multi-state tort cases
By Jeffrey A. Parness
Civil Practice and Procedure,
January 2009
Gregory v. Beazer East provides a useful reminder of basic choice-of-law principles, including depecage and the “factual contacts” test.
Can a plaintiff climb out of the pothole issue?
By Michael J. Marovich
Civil Practice and Procedure,
February 2005
Many personal injury cases involve situations in which a defendant claims that they lost control of their motor vehicle due to the fact that they struck a pothole in the street.
Life after Voykin v. Estate of DeBoer, a plaintiff’s perspective
By Christopher M. Norem
Tort Law,
March 2004
Prior to the Illinois Supreme Court's holding in Voykin v. Estate of DeBoer, there was a significant split among the various state district courts on the so-called "same part of the body rule" (which presumed that a previous injury was automatically relevant simply because it was to the same part of the body) and how that affected the admissibility of evidence of prior injuries to the same part of a plaintiff's body.
Medical lienholders beware
By Michael J. Marovich
Civil Practice and Procedure,
May 2003
Any plaintiff's personal injury attorney eventually will have to deal with a health insurance carrier's attempts to collect healthcare payments made on behalf of a personal injury victim from the proceeds of any settlement or judgment
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