Section 9-11-9.1 of the Georgia Code might be the state\u27s most notorious procedural statute. Enacted in 1987 to protect professionals against the harm done by groundless malpractice litigation, the statute provides that a professional malpractice claim ordinarily must be accompanied by an affidavit executed by an expert. In the affidavit, the expert must substantiate the claim by attesting that some act or omission alleged in the claim was a negligent act or omission--a departure from a professional standard of conduct. During the past decade, Georgia\u27s appellate courts have returned again and again to the problem of what section 9-11-9.1 means, generating scores of decisions on who qualifies as a professional, what constitutes malpra...
Private litigation under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and rule 10b-5 is at p...
During its 1968 session the Georgia Legislature passed a bill intending to create a right of action ...
An attorney is not an insurer of the result of a case in which he is employed, without a special con...
Section 9-11-9.1 of the Georgia Code might be the state\u27s most notorious procedural statute. Enac...
The Act makes several changes to the provisions relating to the affidavit that must be filed by a pl...
In an effort to combat the rise in potentially frivolous lawsuits against professionals, including p...
The legal profession is largely self-regulated, and each state has a bar association charged with cr...
The most noteworthy and important developments in trial practice and procedure during this survey pe...
The Act provides for civil justice reform in Georgia, amending Titles 9, 24, 33, 43, and 51 of the O...
Our most distinguished professions do not maintain congruency between membership standards and actua...
Developments in the law of personal jurisdiction and venue, the professional malpractice affidavit p...
Part II of this Article addresses the threshold issue of when a court may consider a medical acciden...
Many taxpayer dollars are paid to private contractors supplying goods and services necessary to carr...
In Hewett v. Kalish, plaintiff, Hewett, sued Kalish, a podiatrist, for the negligent treatment of he...
Since the creation of the Antiterrorism and EffectiveDeath Penalty Act, attorneys have struggled to ...
Private litigation under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and rule 10b-5 is at p...
During its 1968 session the Georgia Legislature passed a bill intending to create a right of action ...
An attorney is not an insurer of the result of a case in which he is employed, without a special con...
Section 9-11-9.1 of the Georgia Code might be the state\u27s most notorious procedural statute. Enac...
The Act makes several changes to the provisions relating to the affidavit that must be filed by a pl...
In an effort to combat the rise in potentially frivolous lawsuits against professionals, including p...
The legal profession is largely self-regulated, and each state has a bar association charged with cr...
The most noteworthy and important developments in trial practice and procedure during this survey pe...
The Act provides for civil justice reform in Georgia, amending Titles 9, 24, 33, 43, and 51 of the O...
Our most distinguished professions do not maintain congruency between membership standards and actua...
Developments in the law of personal jurisdiction and venue, the professional malpractice affidavit p...
Part II of this Article addresses the threshold issue of when a court may consider a medical acciden...
Many taxpayer dollars are paid to private contractors supplying goods and services necessary to carr...
In Hewett v. Kalish, plaintiff, Hewett, sued Kalish, a podiatrist, for the negligent treatment of he...
Since the creation of the Antiterrorism and EffectiveDeath Penalty Act, attorneys have struggled to ...
Private litigation under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and rule 10b-5 is at p...
During its 1968 session the Georgia Legislature passed a bill intending to create a right of action ...
An attorney is not an insurer of the result of a case in which he is employed, without a special con...