This is the property of the Daily Journal Corporation and fully protected by copyright. It is made available only to Daily Journal subscribers for personal or collaborative purposes and may not be distributed, reproduced, modified, stored or transferred without written permission. Please click "Reprint" to order presentation-ready copies to distribute to clients or use in commercial marketing materials or for permission to post on a website. and copyright (showing year of publication) at the bottom.
Subscribe to the Daily Journal for access to Daily Appellate Reports, Verdicts, Judicial Profiles and more...

    Filter by date
     to 
    Search by Author
    Search by Category
    Search by Headline


Tax

Don’t miss April 18 tax day, here’s why

Mar. 29, 2022
By Robert W. Wood

Late tax returns incur penalties, and they can be big. Late payment triggers other penalties. That’s right, the IRS penalizes ...


Ediscovery

Some practical advice for using exhibits at trial

Mar. 29, 2022
By Robert J. Moss

Using documents at trial is not difficult. However, not knowing the routine for marking and admitting documents into evidence ...


Environmental & Energy, Legal Education

Before we undermine the integrity of our state’s environmental protection system, we should do a reality check on the UC Berke...


Criminal

A preventable murder

Mar. 28, 2022
By Kathleen Cady

The tragedy of Alejandro Garcia’s murder is compounded by the fact that if we had an elected district attorney who enforced th...


Constitutional Law

The unconstitutional conditions doctrine

Mar. 28, 2022
By Michael M. Berger

Supreme Court justices have expressed unhappiness with the lack of clarity in the court’s jurisprudence surrounding this issue...


Judges and Judiciary, U.S. Supreme Court

With over nine years as a federal judge, Judge Jackson has more judicial experience than Justices Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh...


Tax, Technology

In the tax world, a simple yes or no question can be a surprisingly big deal — if you answer wrong.


Government, Legal Education

Mutiny in California during WWII

Mar. 25, 2022
By John S. Caragozian

On July 17, 1944, a ship being loaded with bombs and ammunition near San Francisco Bay exploded, instantly killing 320 men and...


Alternative Dispute Resolution

Who should do the heavy lifting?

Mar. 25, 2022
By Robert S. Mann

Understanding your client’s expectations, learning more about your client’s perceptions of the legal system and your client’s ...


Alternative Dispute Resolution, Law Practice

Managing the mayhem of multiparty mediation

Mar. 24, 2022
By Robert S. Mann

Mutliparty cases present special challenges for not only the mediator, but also the lawyers, their clients and the insurance c...


Government, Law Practice

Bounties for enforcing public values are hardly novel

Mar. 24, 2022
By Richard A. Schulman

What might be novel is that a state with opposing politics, i.e., Texas, decided to use the same system.


Environmental & Energy, Government

California has its clean car authority back. Now the question is how aggressively it will wield that newly restored power to p...


Alternative Dispute Resolution

Had Vince Lombardi coached mediators and not football players, his famous proverb might sound something like this: “Great comm...


Alternative Dispute Resolution, Law Practice

Small and solo firms: Level the playing field through mediation

Mar. 23, 2022
By Alice M. Graham, Jan Frankel Schau

By harnessing the power of mediation, the sole or small firm practitioner can drive home the options if an agreement is not re...


California Supreme Court, Civil Litigation, Insurance

High court declines to review whether COVID can cause property damage

Mar. 23, 2022
By Rani Gupta, David B. Goodwin

On March 10, the California Supreme Court announced that it has declined to weigh in — for now — on the biggest brewing insura...


Law Practice

Recover hourly rates higher than local rates?

Mar. 23, 2022
By John D. O’Connor


Criminal

The Los Angeles DA’s epiphany that his blanket Youth Justice Policy was a mistake is little solace to the families of murder v...


Data Privacy, Technology

The California Consumer Privacy Act, widely hailed as the most stringent consumer privacy law in the country, has produced a m...


Constitutional Law, Criminal, U.S. Supreme Court

You Complete Me

Mar. 22, 2022
By Brian M. Hoffstadt

In a recent ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court penned the latest chapter in what might be called “The Chronicles of Crawford.”


Civil Litigation, Law Practice

Over the past year, I have written about myriad litigation-related topics — yet, I have never written about the litigants them...


For countless law enforcement agencies, the scope of disclosures they are legally required to make often turns on what constit...


Constitutional Law, Criminal, Law Practice

When Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the Senate Bill 98, media groups hailed its passage and reported that it “exempts media professi...


Appellate Practice, Law Practice

Trial lawyers juggle many balls at once — and the balls keep changing as the case moves along. Appellants’ lawyers are on a di...


Covid Columns, Law Practice

How the pandemic changed the legal landscape

Mar. 21, 2022
By Brian S. Kabateck

With the threat of COVID not entirely behind us yet, it’s crucial now more than ever to embrace the changes the pandemic has b...


Tax

No IRS SOL on audit? How can this be?

Mar. 21, 2022
By Robert W. Wood

Tax audits are unnerving and can be expensive. Even if you end up with the coveted “no change” letter that is the stuff of leg...


Judges and Judiciary, U.S. Supreme Court

Last month, President Joe Biden nominated Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court. On Monday, the Senate Judicia...


Civil Litigation, Covid Columns, Law Practice, Torts/Personal Injury

COVID-19 negligent exposure cases: Not a plaintiff’s paradise

Mar. 21, 2022
By J. Kevin Morrison, Noah A. Phillips

While the factual circumstances underlying COVID-19 negligence lawsuits may be as novel as the virus itself and often present ...


Labor/Employment

Along with all the other social impacts, the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly reshaped the workplace and much of employment...


Constitutional Law, Legal Education

Under Article IX, section 9, the Legislature has no authority to rename the college, and that constitutional provision more br...


Administrative/Regulatory, Environmental & Energy

NEM 3.0 final design will determine fate of California’s solar market

Mar. 18, 2022
By Addison Berry, Elizabeth Levin

Though a fair amount of uncertainty remains about the timing and final design of NEM 3.0, the critical question is whether sta...