To sue a court-appointed master who has quasi-judicial immunity, an individual must seek leave of the appointing court. This includes court-appointed forensic accountants who were acting within the scope of their duties
In Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2011] UKSC 58 [2012] 2 W.L.R. 55 the ...
In 1940 defendant, a state judge, granted an ex parte order transferring plaintiff, then a voluntary...
The plaintiff sued to set aside a trustee\u27s deed in favor of the defendant. After the case was se...
To sue a court-appointed master who has quasi-judicial immunity, an individual must seek leave of th...
The Court clarified that NRS 608.140 allows for private causes of action for unpaid wages based on t...
The plaintiff who seeks to maintain an action in tort against a federal employee has basically two c...
In November 2020, the NSW Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal seeking to overturn a decision refusi...
Article III of the Constitution grants federal district judges, appellate court judges, and Supreme ...
(Excerpt) In Barton v. Barbour, the Supreme Court established the general rule that a lawsuit cannot...
Qualified immunity is a judicially created doctrine that shields government officials from personal ...
NRS 7.085 allows a district court to make an attorney personally liable for the attorney fees and co...
On June 1, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court decided unanimously in Samantar v. Yousef that the Foreign S...
(Excerpt) Quasi-judicial immunity is best understood as a blessing and a curse. A bankruptcy trustee...
E. George Minns, a Virginia state prisoner, brought an action against his court-appointed attorney, ...
In the American judicial system, few more serious threats to indi-vidual liberty can be imagined tha...
In Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2011] UKSC 58 [2012] 2 W.L.R. 55 the ...
In 1940 defendant, a state judge, granted an ex parte order transferring plaintiff, then a voluntary...
The plaintiff sued to set aside a trustee\u27s deed in favor of the defendant. After the case was se...
To sue a court-appointed master who has quasi-judicial immunity, an individual must seek leave of th...
The Court clarified that NRS 608.140 allows for private causes of action for unpaid wages based on t...
The plaintiff who seeks to maintain an action in tort against a federal employee has basically two c...
In November 2020, the NSW Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal seeking to overturn a decision refusi...
Article III of the Constitution grants federal district judges, appellate court judges, and Supreme ...
(Excerpt) In Barton v. Barbour, the Supreme Court established the general rule that a lawsuit cannot...
Qualified immunity is a judicially created doctrine that shields government officials from personal ...
NRS 7.085 allows a district court to make an attorney personally liable for the attorney fees and co...
On June 1, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court decided unanimously in Samantar v. Yousef that the Foreign S...
(Excerpt) Quasi-judicial immunity is best understood as a blessing and a curse. A bankruptcy trustee...
E. George Minns, a Virginia state prisoner, brought an action against his court-appointed attorney, ...
In the American judicial system, few more serious threats to indi-vidual liberty can be imagined tha...
In Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2011] UKSC 58 [2012] 2 W.L.R. 55 the ...
In 1940 defendant, a state judge, granted an ex parte order transferring plaintiff, then a voluntary...
The plaintiff sued to set aside a trustee\u27s deed in favor of the defendant. After the case was se...