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8 Associates and 1 Chief Justice |
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John G. Roberts (Chief Justice) Antonin Scalia Anthony M. Kennedy Clarence Thomas Ruth Bader Ginsburg Stephen G. Breyer Samuel Anthony Alito Sonia Sotomayor Elena Kagan |
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Govern the relationships btw individuals and organizations; and btw both of these parties and government |
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PUBLIC LAW
PRIVATE LAW
COMMON LAW
STATUTORY LAW
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW |
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Deals with the relationships btw government and individuals Ex. criminal law |
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Deals with relationships among individuals Torts for malpractice |
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Derived from judicial decisions, both state and federal. Body of principles that has evolved and expanded from judicial decisions.
Origins in English Common Law |
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Written laws made by legislator, state and federal Written law emanating from legislative body |
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Public law, rules & regulations issued by administrative agencies to direct the enacted laws of the federal and state governments |
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Precedent: binding decision (previous)
Res Judicata: thing is decided and should not be relitigated. |
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Branches of the Government |
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Legislative Branch Executive Branch Judicial Branch |
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Enacts laws Amends and repeals ACA or HIPPA State Statues |
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Administers and enforces the law. Signs executive orders and males treaties |
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U.S. District Court U.S. Court of Appeals U.S. Supreme Court All Federal judges |
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Highest Court in the Land |
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All federal Judges are appointed by |
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the President, Approved by the Senate, and serve life |
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Trial court of Federal System 94 district court in 50 states, the District of Columbia, and territories One judge, with out w/o jury |
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Eleven circuits, plus D.C. and the Federal Circuit
6-29 judges together to get a uniform decision for that circuit |
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Highest federal court
Created by U.S. Constitution
Chief Justice Roberts |
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vary to state from state
1 trial court for each county=minor matter (misdemeanors and traffic offenses)
20 circuit courts for others general trial cases |
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has 5 district courts of appeals, and a supreme court with 7 justices |
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Write Laws Enacts Laws Senate confirm justices Enact taxes and set the budget |
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Veto Laws Wage war Appoint justices Refuse certain expenditures |
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Declare laws unconstitutional Interpret laws Apply Laws Compel Testimony |
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If a civil case does go to court the stages follow |
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1) Pleading 2) Discovery 3) Trial 4) Post-trial and appeals |
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Alternate Dispute Resolution
Arbitration and mediation
After 2000 Supreme court decided to allowed contracts to contain arbitration clauses (Financial v. Randolph |
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quicker, cheaper, more private, ofter have lower verdicts than jury verdicts |
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settle claims in flu nondisclosure not admit any guilt or liability
decided before, during, or even after appeal |
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Plaintiff's Summons & Complaint
-Allegations of fact -One or more legal causes of action -Includes damages -Defendant's answer (admits or denies) -Defendant's possible counterclaim |
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process of investigating facts of a case before trial. Rules promulgated to prevent trial |
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Testimony of a witness in a written format |
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doesn't mean we did anything wrong is just to see what we know or saw |
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Attorney-Client Privilege |
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Confidential btw client and attorney Exceptions |
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Review records Do not be antagonistic Be organized Answer only questions asked Explain simply, succinctly not ever-dramatize polite, sincere & courteous Dress and well groomed Listen objections Be honest ask for clarifications not sure say it |
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Occur before the trial After pleading Court examine the entire case decide wether enter judgment |
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Motion to dismiss a case
Motion for summary judgment |
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is an informal discussion during which the judge and the attorneys eliminate matters not in dispute, agree on the issues and settle procedural matters relating to the trial |
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defendant alleges plaintiff complaint does not set forth claim or cause of action recognized by law |
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Motion for Summary Judgment |
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Either party to a suit may make a motion for summary judgment, bc they believe there are no facts in dispute |
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VII amendment U.S. Constitution Grants right to trial by jury |
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Selected from jury list Determines issues of fact Determines damages, if any |
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a legal order requiring the appearance of a witness and/or the presentation of documents at a legal proceeding |
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Obligation of the plaintiff to persuade the jury regarding the truth of his or her case |
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legal doctrine that shifts the burden of proof from the plaintiff to the defendant Unusual cases |
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RES IPSA LOQUITUR Required |
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proof event causing injury defendant-control instrument causing injury Plaintiff- must not have contributed to the event causing injury |
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Plaintiff's attorney: views of the facts from plaintiff, description of the damages
Defense attorney: explain facts from the defendant's perspectives |
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Direct-testomony Demontsrative-things, photos Documentary-written Hearsay -medical books Expert necessary-outside experience of juror Expert not always necessary-within common knowledge |
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Negligence Defenses, Legal defendant's cases |
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Ignorance of Fact/Unintentional wrongs assumption of a risk Contributory/comparative negligence Good samaritan statutes Statute of limitations Sovereign immunity Intervening causes |
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Ignorance of Fact/Unintentional wrongs |
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ignorance of law excuses no man |
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knowing that the danger exist and voluntarily accepting the risk, aware that harm might occur |
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when person does not exercise reasonable care for his or her safety |
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healthcare providers relieve liability in emergency situations |
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legislatively imposed time constraints that restrict the period after the occurrence of an injury during which a legal action must be commenced |
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common law doctrine by which federal and state governments historically have been immune from the tortious conduct of employees |
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when the act of a third party, independent of the defendant's original negligent conduce, is the proximate cause of injury |
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Closing statements Judge's charge to Jury Jury deliberation & decision Awarding damages |
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Nominal: $1 recognition of wrong
Economic: Pay back for loss. Non capped
Non-economic or Hedonic : hard to quantify. pain, suffering. Some states caps, Florida 2013 threw out the caps McCall V. U.S.
Punitive Damages: extra damages. some state limited. |
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Verdict excessive Evidence rejected Inadmissible evidence permitted |
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Civil wrong. plaintiff must prove the tort by a preponderance of the evidence |
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Negligent Intentional Strict liability regardless of faults |
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is a form of conduct caused by heedlessness or carelessness without the standard of care. Malpractice
tort a civil or personal wrong. |
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Preservation of peace Culpability Deterrence Compensation |
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Negligent
Intentional torts: assault, battery, false imprisionment, invasion of privacy, infliction of mental distress
Strict liability: regardless of fault |
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Malfeasance: unlawful or improper act
Misfeasance: Improper performance
Nonfeasance: Failure to act. |
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Ordinary: failure to do
Gross negligence: Intentional omission of care or doing improperly |
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plaintiff has to prove
-Duty to use due care -breach of duty -injury/actual damages -Proximate cause/causation |
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Reasonable anticipation that harm or injury to result from an act or an omission to act |
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Comparative negligence: reduce damages
Assumption of the risk: warned and engaged anyway |
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Assault and battery False imprisionment False Arrest Defamation of character Fraud Invasion of privacy Intentional infliction of mental distress |
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deliberate threat. no contact. must fear it |
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intentional touching without consent |
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Unlawful restraint of individual |
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Legal Justification for Restraint or Seclusion |
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danger to self or others criminal conduct contagious diseases |
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Proof of harm not required to recover damages when |
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accusing a person of a crime person having a loathsome disease using harmful words to a person, profession or business calling a woman unchaste |
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is a written form of defamation |
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person who brings suit must prove special damages |
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Defenses to a defamation action |
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Truth- no liability for defamation Privilege: Absolute: statements confidential Qualified: third persons statements for a successful defense |
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lie or misrepresentation of a material fact by the defendant, cause damage, intentional |
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right to -left alone -be free unwarranted publicity -be free of exposure to public -free of intrusions -personal privacy -records kept confidential |
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Types of Invasion of Privacy |
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public disclosure of private facts Intrusion misappropriation of one's name false light |
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Intentional Infliction of Mental Distress |
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conduct that is so outrageous that it goes beyond bounds tolerated by decent society |
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causing another's death, intentional, negligently, or by strict liability |
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Concerning goods or services guarantee
Express warranty Implied warranty |
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includes specific promises by seller to buyer |
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implies protection to public |
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Elements required to establish strict liability |
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product manufactured by defendant Product defective and unreasonably dangerous 3 possible types of defects: -design - manufacturing defect -failure to warn |
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Products Liability & Res Ipsa Loquitur |
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Must establish
product did not perform in way intended product not tampered with buyer defect existed at time if left defendant |
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Products liability defenses |
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assumption of the risk intervening cause disclaimers contributory negligence comparative fault |
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to be inadequate in the prevention of medical practice Damage awards as deterrent have failed to hold # of claims Exorbitant jury awards & malpractice insurance premium |
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undertreatment: avoiding high risk test
Overtreatment: excessive use of diagnostic tests |
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arbitration & mediation Structured awards pre-trail screening panels Collateral source rule contingency fee limitation Countersuits & frivolous claims Joint & several liability malpractice CAPS no-fault system peer review profesional misconduct regulation of insurance practices implementation of best practices |
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Types of tort Damages (remedies) |
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Compensatory: pay back
Punitive: extra money to punish |
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economic: tangible losses
Noneconomic: intangible, pain, loss |
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few states cap economic losses
FL 2003 cap 1 million per incident, 1/2 million per claimant. March 2014 struck down for noneconomic damages |
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States caps
Guidelines on punitive damages -reprehensibility (how bad) -Ratio 1:1- 10:1 range -Comparable civil fines and penalties |
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body of statutory deal with crime and legal punishment |
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Social harm defined & made punishable by law |
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offense punishable by less than 1 yr. in jail and/or a fine |
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imprisonment in a state or federal prison for more than a year |
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Criminal Law vs. Civil Law |
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civil: wrong against and individual or business. Under statutory law or common law don't have to be on the books at the time of incident
Criminal: innocent until proven guilty. Constitutionally protected rights
Some incidents both criminal and civil |
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The Fifth Amendment requires |
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a grand jury indictment or information. doesn't prove guilt just probability |
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formal reading of the charges Includes the setting of bail, if the judge grants bail |
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meeting for purposes of deliberation Plea bargaining time Commences with the goal of an agreed-upon disposition |
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Sixth amendment of the Constitution |
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right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury |
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Jury selection opening statements Presentation of witnesses and evidence Summation/closing statements Instructions to the jury by the judge Jury deliberations Verdict Opportunity to appeals |
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31 U.S. Code 3729-33 1863 suppliers to the Union Army Became a crime to submit false claims to the government |
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False claim to the government false record to get claim paid false record to avoid an obligation to pay government |
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used in the defense industry, medicare/medicaid fraud whisteblowers may recover 15-25% of government recovers |
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42 U.S. Code Section 1320a-7b Provides criminal penalties for offering or receiving referral payments for medicate or medicaid programs, laboratory, architectural contract and ambulance services |
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Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act |
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1996 criminal and civil enforcement tools and funding to fight healthcare fraud Privacy rules, security rules, date breach notification rules
Set national standards for pt privacy rules all types of communication no monetary damages for pt's wrongfully disclosed |
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similar to tort of fraud Intentionally deceiving about a material fact which the defendant knows but victim doesn't |
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grounds for criminal prosecution provider could lose medicare & medicaid funding |
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is the mistreatment or neglect of individuals who are under the care of a healthcare organization |
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criminal consequences state of law
Fatal injection of pavilion, lidocaine, codeine, anesthesia, wrongful removal of life support |
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Constitution First 3 articles |
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check and balances 1- Legislative powers 2- executive powers 3- Judicial powers |
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don't have to quarter soldiers in our homes during peace time |
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no unreasonable searches and seizures, no warrant without probable cause
Exception: emergency, consent, border searches, plain view |
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no double jeopardy property cannot be taken for public use |
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right to public trial, impartial jury, and process |
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right to trial by jury in some civil cases |
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no excessive bail or excessive fines no cruel and unusual punishment |
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the powers not enumerated to the Federal Government by the Constitution are left to the States or the people |
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fifth extended to state proceedings equal protection |
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1789 most recent no midterm pay raises for Congress |
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Healthcare entity structured Examples |
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Government entity Nonprofit corporation For-profit corporation Partnership, general or limited LLC Sole proprietorship |
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First step for healthcare entities |
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federal and state statutes spend the most per patients open meeting and open records VA, Military |
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Corporations, for an not-for profit |
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separate legal entity set up by articles of incorporation under state of law
Can lose resources
Individuals have liabilities |
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charitable organization for tax purposes Subject to state rules |
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5 or fewer shareholders board of directs federal and state securities laws |
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publicly traded corporations
audits, annual and quarterly reports no insider trading balance sheet transactions internal controls code of ethics criminal fraud accountability whistle-blowing protection |
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negligence in hiring or failing to supervise subordinates
Contract liability |
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must give under 14th amendment, minimum notice opportunity to correct deficiencies degree of violation and penalties |
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chapter 11 reorganization chapter 7 bankruptcy |
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Foreign Corrupt Practices Act |
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US Department of Justice criminal and civil enforcement of domestic companies, foreign and national companies
applies to any individual, firm, officer, director employee, or agent on behalf of a firm
Corruption intent, conscious, or deliberate ignorance
no payment or anything of value
no third party agents
permissible payments for permits or routine
Criminal penalties: 2 million corporations and business. $250,000 employees agents, alternatives fines act double the value
Civil penalties 10,000 against corp. 5,000-100,000 per person or up to 50,000-500,000 entity |
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is responsible for civil enforcement with respect to security issues |
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Background: Bartlett was Prescribed Clinoril (NSAID) Medication But Pharmacist dispensed generic sulindac and it caused Bartlett Toxic epidermal necrolysis There was no specific warning in labeling Case was taken to court Mutual Pharmaceutical moved to federal court Supreme Court FDA legislation laws premp this. FDA has to rewrite the law. |
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In March 2014, the Florida Supreme Court struck down those caps as unconstitutional in medical malpractice wrongful death cases in Estate |
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Allows contracts to contain arbitration clauses. After 2000 by Supreme Court |
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$185,846 appeal. Utah Supreme Court later 145 million punitive damages. U.S. Supreme court reduce by amendment 14 Punitive damages were remitted to $9 million. Approximately 9:1 ratio |
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Prescribed Clinoril NSAID. Delvelop necrolysis. adequacy of Warning, punitive damages, non label warning theories, negligence based on failure to survey medical literacy Not guilty |
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