Friday, July 27, 2012

Superior Court Issues Preliminary Injunction To Save Historic Garden

Today the Superior Court granted a motion filed by yours truly, Walter W. Moore of the Law Offices of John R. Walton, P.C., for a preliminary injunction to preserve the beautiful and historic Hannah Carter Japanese Gardens in Bel Air.  We represent the plaintiffs.  You can read all about it in the Beverly Hills Courier, which has covered the story from Day One -- bless their hearts -- and in the Los Angeles Times.

If you'd like to read the Court's decision for yourself, just click here.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

The Los Angeles Times Is Blowing Its Coverage Of The Mayor's Race -- Again

"Masthead?"  More like "meathead."
Arrogance, thy name is Jim Newton.

Who? Jim Newton is the employee of the still-bankrupt local newspaper, the Los Angeles Times, who has decided to provide far more coverage on the campaigns of the three indistinguishable career politicians vying to succeed Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa (i.e., Garcetti, Greueul and Perry) than to the campaign of Kevin James. 

Why is Newton snubbing Kevin James, an attorney and former federal prosecutor who has raised more than enough money to qualify for matching funds well ahead of the election? Well, Newton himself recently explained why: Newton is very, very smart, and he understands local politics way better than you, so he can already predict, just sitting in his office, who will get a significant share of the vote in March 2013, and, alas, James just hasn't passed the Newtonian threshold. 

But here's the problem:  Newton is absolutely terrible at predicting who will get a substantial share of the vote. That's not an opinion, it's a fact. Allow me to explain.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Declare Your Independence: Send $17.76 to Kevin James for Mayor

The Founding Fathers were revolting . . . against taxation without representation by an out-of-touch, uncaring aristocracy. It's like living in L.A., but without the British accents. Declare YOUR independence, today, by fighting back against the feckless career politicians running to replace Villaraigosa as Mayor of Los Angeles.  Contribute $17.76 to Kevin James for Mayor right now.

Otherwise, you'll get stuck with four more years of the same abysmal "leadership" that has brought the city to the brink of bankruptcy, and has driven so many jobs away that our unemployment rate towers above the national, state and county averages. You can't afford Garcetti, Greuel or Perry. You can afford $17.76.  So pony up, patriot.



Monday, July 2, 2012

Justice Delayed Is Justice Denied: Why Is It Taking So Long To Get A Ruling?


How long does it take to get justice? At some point, it takes too long, hence the expression "justice delayed is justice denied."

We filed our lawsuit against Safeco in state court in early February 2011.  Safeco removed the action to federal court -- made a federal case out of it. We diligently prosecuted our case. We spent tens of thousands of dollars on court reporters and videographers for depositions, and for experts.

After marshaling evidence to support our case, we filed motions for partial summary judgment.  The Court conducted a hearing on those motions back in October 2011, and the trial was scheduled to begin in January 2012.  Then in December 2011, the Court vacated the trial date without ruling on any of the motions.

Now, here it is, July 2, 2012, with no ruling on any of the motions, and no trial date. We, the plaintiffs, are stuck in limbo, living in a partially demolished house that Safeco's own field examiner labelled, in writing, "uninhabitable." That suits Safeco just fine, of course.

So I did some digging in the data this weekend to see if our case is the only one going nowhere fast. It is not. The following chart shows cases filed during 2011 and assigned to our judge, that are still open. There are 182 such cases, according to my research. The vertical axis shows how many days each case has been pending. Our case, as of July 2, 2012, has been pending for 486 days.  By way of comparison, the "standard" time to resolve cases in state court -- where we filed this action -- is one year, i.e., 365 days.



In fairness to the Court, I personally cannot imagine handling hundreds of cases at a time.  I've got my hands more than full if I have a dozen. Plus, this chart does not show all the cases file during 2011 that the Court closed. Even so, it is incredibly frustrating to live in a partially demolished house, unable to do anything to get one's day in court. That, presumably, is what big insurance companies like Safeco and Liberty Mutual count on as part of their bad-faith campaign to grind down people who have the temerity to insist that they keep their written promises. Justice delayed is the insurance company's business plan.