Bhanmattie Kumar was walking on a sidewalk in Flushing, New York, when she tripped over a chipped portion of the sidewalk and fell. The defective sidewalk was in front of a Pretty Girl store—one of a chain of apparel stores headquartered in Brooklyn—on premises leased from PI Associates, LLC. Kumar filed a claim in a New York state court against PI, seeking to recover damages for her injuries.
PI filed a cross-claim against Pretty Girl. On what basis would the court impose liability on PI? In what situation would Pretty Girl be the liable party? Is there any circumstance in which Kumar could be at least partially responsible for her injury? Discuss. [Bhanmattie Rajkumar Kumar v. PI Associates, LLC, 125 A.D.3d 609, 3 N.Y.S.3d 372 (2 Dept. 2015)]
> Under no circumstances should a local government be able to condemn property in order to sell it later to real estate developers for private use.
> Common carriers should not be able to limit their liability.
> Only the largest publicly held companies should be subject to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
> Laws against bait-and-switch advertising should be abolished because no consumer is ever forced to buy anything.
> The Internet and the rise of e-commerce have rendered our antitrust concepts and laws obsolete.
> Any changes to existing, fully witnessed wills should also have to be witnessed.
> One chemist claims that the list of “dangerous” chemicals is an example of “chemophobia.” What do you think he meant?
> In the 1990s, DuCoa, LP, made choline chloride, a B-complex vitamin essential for the growth and development of animals. The U.S. market for choline chloride was divided into thirds among DuCoa, Bioproducts, Inc., and Chinook Group, Ltd. To stabilize the
> In the long run, is astroturfing likely to benefit a company that is selling an inferior product? Why or why not?
> Companies subject to lengthy antitrust investigations and court proceedings in Europe argue that such delays result in “reputational damage.” Why might that be so?
> The publishing business is in dire straits today with retail bookstores going bankrupt and publishers laying off hundreds of employees. Why do you think the declining book business was worthy of so much attention from the Justice Department?
> FACTS In 1975, William Melton executed a will that, among other things, stated that his daughter, Vicki Palm, was to receive nothing. In 1979, he added a handwritten note to the will, saying that his friend, Alberta Kelleher, was to receive a small porti
> FACTS Alberto and Karelli Mila were insured under a homeowners’ liability policy. “Exclusion k” of the policy stated that coverage did not apply to “bodily injury arising out of sexual molestation, corporal punishment or physical or mental abuse.” Verush
> FACTS Donald Breeden and Willie Buchanan were married in Marion County, Mississippi. They lived in a home in Sandy Hook. Nationwide Property & Casualty Insurance Company insured the home under a policy bought by Breeden that named him as the insured. The
> FACTS Jeffrey Stambovsky signed a contract to buy Helen Ackley’s house in Nyack, New York. After the contract was signed, Stambovsky discovered that the house was widely reputed to be haunted. The Ackley family claimed to have seen poltergeists on numero
> FACTS Junior and Wilma Thompson sold twenty- one of their fifty acres of land in Missouri to Walnut Bowls, Inc. The deed expressly reserved an easement to the Thompsons’ remaining twenty- nine acres. The deed did not fix a precise location for the easeme
> FACTS Craig Matus held a life estate in certain residential real property in Huntington, New York. On the termination of the life estate, title to the property was to transfer to Main Omni Realty Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of New York Communi
> FACTS Gladys Piper died intestate (without a will) in 1982. At her death, she owned miscellaneous personal property worth $5,000 and had in her purse $200 in cash and two diamond rings. Wanda Brown, Piper’s niece, took the contents of the purse, allegedl
> St. Luke’s Health Systems, Ltd., operated an emergency clinic in Nampa, Idaho. Saltzer Medical Group, P.A., had thirty-four physicians practicing at its offices in Nampa. Saint Alphonsus Health System, Inc., operated the only hospital in Nampa. St. Luke’
> FACTS Rex Woodward contracted with Thomas DeVito, one of the original members of the Four Seasons rock band, to ghostwrite DeVito’s autobiography. Before it was published, Woodward died, and his interest in the manuscript’s copyright passed to his widow,
> FACTS From 1999 through 2002, Todman & Company, CPAs, audited the financial statements of Direct Brokerage, Inc. (DBI), a broker-dealer in New York registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Each year, Todman issued an unqualified opin
> FACTS Domingo Martinez and Reyna Guido had two minor children when Martinez was killed in a hit-and-run accident. Guido became the personal representative of Martinez’s estate and retained attorney Sandra Stern to file a wrongful death lawsuit. Stern did
> FACTS The parents of B.L.H. (Barbara) lived in Virginia until their divorce, when primary custody of Barbara was granted to the mother. The mother and Barbara moved to North Carolina. Two years later, the father was convicted of drug-related offenses and
> FACTS Duane O’Malley operated Origin Fire Protection. Michael Pinski hired Origin to remove and dispose of 2,200 feet of insulation from a building Pinski owned in Kankakee, Illinois. The insulation contained asbestos, which Pinski, O’Malley, and O’Malle
> FACTS POM Wonderful, LLC makes and sells pomegranate-based products. In ads, POM touted medical studies claiming to show that daily consumption of its products could treat, prevent, or reduce the risk of heart disease, prostate cancer, and erectile dysfu
> FACTS James Batson bought a nonrefundable ticket from Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., to attend a rock concert at the Charter One Pavilion in Chicago. The front of the ticket noted that the price included a nine-dollar parking fee. Batson did not have a
> FACTS Lexmark International, Inc., sells the only style of toner cartridges that work with the company’s laser printers. Other businesses—known as remanufacturers— acquire and refurbish used Lexmark cartridges to sell in competition with the cartridges s
> FACTS Pipefittings join together pipes and help direct the flow of pressurized water in pipeline systems. Certain municipal, state, and federal laws require waterworks projects to use fittings made in the United States, so specifications for such project
> PAJ, Inc., a jewelry company, had a commercial general liability (CGL) policy from Hanover Insurance Company. The policy required PAJ to notify Hanover of any claim or suit against PAJ “as soon as practicable.” Yurman Designs sued PAJ for copyright infri
> The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS), in an effort to enhance player safety and reduce technology-driven home runs and other big hits, set a standard for non-wood basebal
> The Wallen family owned a cabin on Lummi Island in the state of Washington. A driveway ran from the cabin across their property to South Nugent Road. Floyd Massey bought the adjacent lot and built a cabin on it in 1983. To gain access to his property, Ma
> Go to Appendix G at the end of this text and examine the excerpt of Case No. 7, Town of Midland v. Morris. Review and then brief the case, making sure that your brief answers the following questions. 1. Issue: On what issue did the parties ask the court
> On learning that Sébastien planned to travel abroad, Roslyn asked him to deliver $25,000 in cash to her family in Mexico. During a customs inspection at the border, Sébastien told the customs inspector that he carried less than $10,000. The officer disco
> Napster, Inc., offered a service that allowed its users to browse digital music files on other users’ computers and download selections for free. Music industry principals sued Napster for copyright infringement, and the court ordered Napster to remove f
> Many states have enacted laws that go even further than federal laws to protect consumers. These laws vary tremendously from state to state. 1. The first group will decide whether having different laws is fair to sellers, who may be prohibited from eng
> Residents of the city of Madison, Wisconsin, became concerned about overconsumption of liquor near the campus of the University of Wisconsin (UW). The city initiated a new policy, imposing conditions on area bars to discourage reduced-price “specials” th
> Go to Appendix G at the end of this text and examine the excerpt of Case No. 6, Leegin Creative Leather Products, Inc. v. PSKS, Inc. Review and then brief the case, making sure that your brief answers the following questions. 1. Issue: The dispute in t
> Write two paragraphs explaining some ways in which antitrust laws might place too great of a burden on commerce in the global marketplace.
> Vickie Lynn Smith, an actress and model also known as Anna Nicole Smith, met J. Howard Marshall II in 1991. During their courtship, J. Howard lavished gifts and large sums of money on Anna Nicole, and they married on June 27, 1994. J. Howard died on Augu
> Andrew Walker executed a will giving a certain parcel of real estate in fee simple to his three children from a previous marriage, Mark Walker, Michelle Peters, and Andrea Knox, with a “life use” in the property granted to his current spouse, Nora Walker
> Dayton Superior Corp. sells its products in interstate commerce to several companies, including Spa Steel Products, Inc. The purchasers often compete directly with each other for customers. From 2005 to 2007, one of Spa Steel’s customers purchased Dayton
> Sherman Hemsley was a wellknown actor from the 1970s. Most notably, he played George Jefferson on the television shows All in the Family and The Jeffersons. He was born to Arsena Chisolm and William Thornton. Thornton was married to another woman, and He
> Darling’s Rent-a-Car carried property insurance on its cars under a policy issued by Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Co. The policy listed Darling’s as the “insured.” Darling’s rented a car to Joshuah Farrington. In the rental contract, Farrington agree
> Susie Walker executed a will that left her entire estate to her grandson. When her grandson died, Susie executed a new will that named her great-grandson as her sole beneficiary and specifically disinherited her son, Tommy. At the time, Tommy’s ex-wife w
> Marion Peterson executed a will that contained a bequest to Vasta Lucas in the form of a trust. On Lucas’s death, the trustee was to distribute the assets to four beneficiaries, including Peterson’s brother and sister, Arvin and Carolyn. Later, without w
> A Florida statute provides that the right of election of a surviving spouse can be waived by written agreement: “A waiver of ‘all rights,’ or equivalent language, in the property or estate of a present or prospective spouse . . . is a waiver of all righ
> Benjamin is a widower who has two married children, Edward and Patricia. Patricia has two children, Perry and Paul. Edward has no children. Benjamin makes a will leaving all his property equally to Edward and Patricia. The will provides that should a chi
> On October 10, Joleen Vora applied for a $50,000 life insurance policy with Magnum Life Insurance Co. She named her husband, Jay, as the beneficiary. Joleen paid the insurance company the first year’s premium on making the application. Two days later, be
> Alana Mansell built a garage on her property that encroached on the property of her neighbor, Betty Hunter, by fourteen feet. Hunter knew of the encroachment and informally agreed to it, but she did not transfer ownership of the property to Mansell. A su
> Flawlace, LLC, leased unfinished commercial real estate in Las Vegas, Nevada, from Francis Lin to operate a beauty salon. The lease required Flawlace to obtain a “certificate of occupancy” from the city to commence business. This required the installatio
> Together, EMI, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group Recordings, Inc., and Warner Music Group Corp. produced, licensed, and distributed 80 percent of the digital music sold in the United States. The companies formed MusicNet to sell music t
> The McKeag family operated a marina on their lakefront property in Bolton, New York. For more than forty years, the McKeags used a section of property belonging to their neighbors, the Finleys, as a beach for the marina’s customers. The McKeags also stor
> Gi Hwa Park entered into a lease with Landmark HHH, LLC, for retail space in the Plaza at Landmark, a shopping center in Virginia. The lease provided that the landlord would keep the roof “in good repair” and that the tenant would obtain insurance on her
> Sarah has rented a house from Frank. The house is only two years old, but the roof leaks every time it rains. The water that has accumulated in the attic has caused stucco to fall off ceilings in the upstairs bedrooms, and one ceiling has started to sag.
> Wiley and Gemma are neighbors. Wiley’s lot is extremely large, and his present and future use of it will not involve the entire area. Gemma wants to build a single-car garage and driveway along the present lot boundary. Because the placement of her exist
> Twenty-two years ago, Lorenz was a wanderer. At that time, he decided to settle down on an unoccupied, three-acre parcel of land that he did not own. People in the area told him that they had no idea who owned the property. Lorenz built a house on the la
> Marcella Lashmett was engaged in farming in Illinois. She had two daughters, Christine Montgomery and Cheryl Thomas. Christine was also a farmer. She often borrowed Marcella’s farm equipment. More than once, Christine used the equipment as a trade-in on
> Sara Simon misplaced her Galaxy cell phone in Manhattan, Kansas. Days later, Shawn Vargo contacted her, claiming to have bought the phone from someone else. He promised to mail it to Simon if she would wire $100 to him through a third party, Mark Lawrenc
> Jennifer Koerner adopted a dog—called the Stig—from the Anti-Cruelty Society in Chicago, Illinois, for $95. Koerner wrote a poem and presented it to Kent Nielsen, her live-in boyfriend. In the poem, she expressed her intent to give the Stig to him as a g
> Bob Moreland left his plane at Don Gray’s aircraft repair shop to be painted. When Moreland picked up the airplane, he was disappointed in the quality of the work and pointed out numerous defects. Moreland refused to pay Gray and flew the plane to anothe
> John Wasniewski opened a brokerage account with Quick and Reilly, Inc., in his son James’s name. Twelve years later, when the balance was $52,085, the account was closed, and the funds were transferred to a joint account in the names of John and James’s
> When Deer Valley Resort Co. (DVRC) was developing its ski resort in the Wasatch Mountains near Park City, Utah, it sold parcels of land in the resort village to third parties. Each sales contract reserved the right of approval over the conduct of certain
> Orlando borrows a rototiller from his neighbor, Max. Max has not used the rototiller for two years. Orlando has never owned a rototiller and is not familiar with using one. Max previously used this rototiller often, and if he had made a reasonable inspec
> Curtis is an executive on a business trip to the West Coast. He has driven his car on this trip and checks into the Hotel Ritz. The hotel has a guarded underground parking lot. Curtis gives his car keys to the parking lot attendant but fails to notify th
> Jaspal has a severe heart attack and is taken to the hospital. He is aware that he is not expected to live. Because he is a bachelor with no close relatives nearby, Jaspal gives his car keys to his close friend Friedrich, telling Friedrich that he is exp
> Discuss the standard of care traditionally required of the bailee for the bailed property in each of the following situations, and determine whether the bailee breached that duty. 1. Ricardo borrows Steve’s lawn mower because his own lawn mower needs re
> Portland Shellfish Co. processes live shellfish in Maine. As one of the firm’s two owners, Frank Wetmore held 300 voting and 150 nonvoting shares of the stock. Donna Holden held the other 300 voting shares. Donna’s husband, Jeff, managed the company’s da
> Luis and Maria Rojas contracted to buy a house in Westchester County, New York, from Andrew and Karen Paine. The house was on property designated as “Lot No. 8” on a subdivision map filed in the county clerk’s office. The Paines had acquired the property
> In 2006, twenty- seven parties became limited partners in two hedge funds that had invested with Bernard Madoff and his investment firm. The partners’ investment adviser gave them various investment information, including a memorandum indicating that an
> Jeffery Guerrero hired James McDonald, a certified public accountant, to represent him and his business in an appeal to the Internal Revenue Service. The appeal concerned audits that showed Guerrero owed more taxes. When the appeal failed, McDonald assis
> Soon after Teresa DeYoung’s husband died, her mother-in-law also died, leaving an inheritance of more than $400,000 for DeYoung’s children. DeYoung hired John Ruggerio, an attorney, to ensure that her children would receive it. Ruggerio advised her to in
> A West Virginia bank ran its asset value from $100 million to $1 billion over seven years by aggressively marketing subprime loans. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, a federal regulator, audited the bank and discovered that the books had bee
> John Sheridan owned a Marathon gas station franchise. He sued Marathon Petroleum Co. under Section 1 of the Sherman Act and Section 3 of the Clayton Act, charging it with illegally tying the processing of credit-card sales to the gas station. As a condit
> The accounting firm of Goldman, Walters, Johnson & Co. prepared financial statements for Lucy’s Fashions, Inc. After reviewing the financial statements, Happydays State Bank agreed to loan Lucy’s Fashions $35,000 for expansion. When Lucy’s Fashions decla
> Larkin, Inc., retains Howard Perkins to manage its books and prepare its financial statements. Perkins, a certified public accountant, lives in Indiana and practices there. After twenty years, Perkins has become a bit bored with generally accepted accoun
> ICG Hazard, LLC, operates the Thunder Ridge surface coal mine in Leslie County, Kentucky, under a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit issued by the Kentucky Division of Water (KDOW). As part of the operation, ICG discharges selenium in
> Innovative Marketing, Inc. (IMI), sold “scareware”—computer security software. IMI’s Internet ads redirected consumers to sites where they were told that a scan of their computers had detected dangerous files—viruses, spyware, and “illegal” pornography.
> The U.S. Forest Service (USFS) proposed a travel management plan (TMP) for the Beartooth Ranger District in the Pryor and Absaroka Mountains in the Custer National Forest of southern Montana. The TMP would convert unauthorized user-created routes within
> A by-product of phosphate fertilizer production is pyrite waste, which contains arsenic and lead. From 1884 to 1906, seven phosphate fertilizer plants operated on a forty- three-acre site in Charleston, South Carolina. Planters Fertilizer & Phosphate Co.
> What are three main goals of the Clean Water Act?
> What agencies of the federal government enforce the federal antitrust laws?
> Under what common law theories may professionals be liable to clients?
> What is the main type of activity prohibited by Section 2 of the Sherman Act?
> What law protects consumers against contaminated and misbranded foods and drugs?
> What is a monopoly? What is market power? How do these concepts relate to each other?
> What is the difference between a per stirpes distribution and a per capita distribution of an estate to the grandchildren of the deceased?
> What are the basic requirements for executing a will?
> Bank of America hired Atlantic Resource Management, LLC, to collect a debt from Michael Engler. Atlantic called Engler’s employer and asked his supervisor about the company’s policy concerning the execution of warrants. The caller then told the superviso
> How do courts interpret ambiguities in an insurance policy?
> What are the requirements for acquiring property by adverse possession?
> What are the three elements of a bailment?
> What are the necessary elements for an effective gift?
> Bernie sells his house to Consuela under a warranty deed. Later, Delmira appears, holding a better title to the house than Consuela has. Delmira wants Consuela off the property. What can Consuela do?
> Dave, an accountant, prepares a financial statement for Excel Company, a client, knowing that Excel will use the statement to obtain a loan from First National Bank. Dave makes negligent omissions in the statement that result in a loss to the bank. Can t
> FACTS Bridge Tower Dental, P.A., contracted with Meridian Computer Center, Inc., to develop a computer system for its dental practice. Bridge Tower then paid a computer consultant, Al Colson, to install the system and provide maintenance and support. In
> In early 2016, Bennett, Inc., offered a substantial number of new common shares to the public. Harvey Helms had a long-standing interest in Bennett because his grandfather had once been president of the company. On receiving Bennett’s prospectus, Helms w
> Why might an online executor need a copy of the deceased’s death certificate?
> How might a couple who enjoy purchasing virtual and digital goods together avoid property division issues in the event of a divorce?
> A McDonald’s Happy Meal® consists of an entrée, a small order of French fries, a small drink, and a toy. In the early 1990s, McDonald’s Corp. began to aim its Happy Meal marketing at children aged one to three. In 1995, McDonald’s began making nutritiona
> In June 2015, Bernard Ramish set up a $48,000 trust fund through West Plains Credit Union to provide tuition for his nephew, Nathan Covacek, to attend Tri-State Polytechnic Institute. The trust was established under Ramish’s control and went into effect