- Joined
- Aug 5, 2019
More likely than you'd think, unfortunately. Chupp needs to go back to chasing ambulances.
Maybe this time he should try consulting with the business end of the ambulance.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
More likely than you'd think, unfortunately. Chupp needs to go back to chasing ambulances.
Erm cept the facts aren't against Vic, seeing as Chupp ignored them and wasn't really listening to EITHER side at the hearingGood fucking lord, judicial elections are stupid and it's for exactly this reason.
Procedurally, any judge you run against Chupp would not be able to express any position for/against the case (and it wouldn't last that long), if they did they'd have to recuse themselves. Moreover, that wouldn't solve the problem where the facts and the law are solidly against Vic's case.
Would've really appreciated to see which facts Chupp considered when writing his order granting TCPA, instead doing literally nothing.Erm cept the facts aren't against Vic, seeing as Chupp ignored them and wasn't really listening to EITHER side at the hearing
Ain't that interesting how he doesn't do that, instead made very general and vague rulings.Would've really appreciated to see which facts Chupp considered when writing his order granting TCPA, instead doing literally nothing.
It's not a super-appeal for bad decisions, it is however an "appeal" for decisions that are so bad that normal appeals don't helpIt's not a matter of how bad it is, but whether it can be remedied on appeal along with any other errors made during trial. It's not some kind of super-appeal for really bad decisions, but for when the error can't be corrected any other way.
Are you saying that John Chupp just wants to live a quiet life?Maybe this time he should try consulting with the business end of the ambulance.
It's not a super-appeal for bad decisions, it is however an "appeal" for decisions that are so bad that normal appeals don't help
I guess my line of thought was, that if a writ is required, the fuckup must be so incredibly bad, that it utterly destroys the very function of the regular course of events in a case and an extraordinary remedy is needed."Bad" doesn't enter into it. It's for decisions that can't be rectified on appeal. For instance, an appeal of the denial of an assertion of a privilege. Or as in the church case, letting lawyers without authority to represent a corporation represent it at trial, as doing that was the damage. It couldn't be rectified on appeal because after the trial was over, the damage would already have happened.
Decisions that get such a writ often are staggeringly bad, but it isn't necessary or sufficient, or even relevant.
So you're saying that if Chupp grants Lemoine's insanity, a motion for a writ of mandamus would be the correct course in front of appeals court?
Erm cept the facts aren't against Vic, seeing as Chupp ignored them and wasn't really listening to EITHER side at the hearing
On the subject of stupid, I think it's amusing that when obvious laypeople ask a genuine question about something in the law they clearly don't know (and are trying to correct by asking), lawtwit and its ilk think "rather than give a normal and straightforward answer, this is my chance to dunk! Mom will be proud of me! People will love me! I'll have friends!"
Trying to get Chupp off the case would be a waste of time. What Ty needs to do is get the appeals court to rule in a way that not only smacks down the TCPA but also says in no uncertain terms that if Ty has to appeal an adverse summary judgement to the same court they will not be happy.
Ty can do this as well. Chupp essentially demanded a burden of proof required for summary judgement rather then an Anti-SLAPP hearing.
The TCPA burden is pretty much the same as on summary judgment but the plaintiff has not had the benefit of discovery. Vic's case easily passed both for the bulk of the causes of action. Chupp is just a pinhead.
Sounds more like a not-so-quiet death to me.Are you saying that John Chupp just wants to live a quiet life?
Would that not include Martinez Hsu?Let me just suggest that there's some rumor that a new lawyer or two may be joining Vic's team for the appeal, and that those lawyers may be out for Lemoine's oxygen-deficient blood. Ty is in the middle of a nine-figure property dispute and that's eating up a lot of his time. We should know this week if these rumors are valid, though.
Would that not include Martinez Hsu?
If Vic ends up hiring three new lawyers, I guess I can't make fun of MoRon's exceptional lawyer army anymore.No. He's already been present for a hearing; apparently at least one true new lawyer may be coming in.