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Topic: Richard Court


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In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
 [No title]
Richard argues that the trial court erred in using his retirement benefits for assessing the proper level of child support, since those benefits were previously determined to be marital property and Barbara Klomps, Richard's ex-wife, was awarded a share of those benefits in the judgment of dissolution.
Richard filed a motion to dismiss Barbara's petition to modify, arguing that the pension could not be used for child support purposes, because it was previously classified as marital property in the dissolution and divided between the parties.
The appellate court in Tietz also affirmed the trial court's award of child support, where the noncustodial husband's income was generated from the same law practice that was determined to be a marital asset, the value of which was in part based upon accounts receivable.
www.state.il.us /court/opinions/AppellateCourt/1997/5thDistrict/February/HTML/5960351.txt   (2271 words)

  
 In re Angel N.
It noted that both Richard and Kathleen were awaiting the outcome of felony proceedings for theft in the superior court, for which Richard was later sentenced to six months in the house of correction.
The court also acknowledged the concern of Angel's counsel that Richard and Kathleen "have a long history of short-term improvement which deteriorates into long-term problems," and his fear that their past pattern of behavior would be repeated.
As in Kathleen's appeal, the factual underpinnings for the court's decision are lengthy.
www.state.nh.us /judiciary/supreme/opinions/1996/94-878.htm   (3225 words)

  
 [No title]
The court granted (1) Crystal temporary custody of M.F. and A.F., and (2) Richard "reasonable visitation privileges" with the children subject to certain terms and conditions, including that all visits had to be supervised by one of Richard's siblings or parents.
In child custody cases, courts have relied on this principle to hold that even when the parties stipulate that a successor judge may resolve factual questions by reviewing the record of prior proceedings, a new trial may still be warranted where critical determinations necessarily hinge upon the credibility of one witness over another.
Crystal specifically contends that the court's refusal to grant her a lump-sum reimbursement or short-term rehabilitative maintenance was manifestly unjust in light of her voluntary post-separation debt payments of $3,257.71 and the ultimate division of property and debts.
www.state.il.us /court/Opinions/AppellateCourt/1996/4thDistrict/October/HTML/4960166.txt   (4143 words)

  
 Securities Administrator v. Richard
Richard's subsequent motion to us for a stay pending appeal was denied, although he was granted an expedited schedule for the briefing and hearing of this matter.
Richard should also have been aware of his potential liability for fraud given the evidence the State introduced at the preliminary injunction hearing concerning the fraudulent activities of two other defendants, which nearly mirrored that introduced against Richard at subsequent hearings.
The court, however, does not specify whether waiver occurred in that circumstance by virtue of Richard's agreement at the hearing to supply an accounting (and therefore his failure to refuse then on Fifth Amendment grounds) or due to his submission of a purported accounting in September 1996.
www.courts.state.me.us /opinions/documents/97me144r.htm   (2156 words)

  
 COURTENAY - LoveToKnow Article on COURTENAY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
By his will he left his best mitre to his nephew Richard Courtenayson and pupil, as he styles himagainst the time he should be a bishop.
This Richard, a friend of Henry V. when prince, and treasurer of his household, was bishop of Norwich in 1413.
Twice chancellor of Oxford, he repelled Archbishop Arundel and all his train when that primate would have had a visitation of the university, although the claim of the university to independence was at last broken down.
18.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CO/COURTENAY.htm   (2805 words)

  
 Court TV: Talk
Court TV is developing a conventional contextualized documentary on confessions and all of the provocative issues around them.
COURT TV's mandate is to examine not only the criminal justice system and all of its parts - and “Confessions” is certainly a part -- but also, crime, the criminal, and the criminal mind.
COURT TV is sensitive, as certainly I am to the enormous pain of having someone in your family be the victim of a crime.
www.courttv.com /talk/chat_transcripts/confessions_richard.html   (1363 words)

  
 No. 01-1916   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
In reaching its conclusion that the evidence was minimally probative, the circuit court relied upon its experience as a judge in observing the types of individuals that have been involved in sexual assaults as well as studies supplied by the parties in their briefs.
Although the circuit court does not clearly set forth its reasoning, the circuit court seems to be arguing that because the various individuals the judge had seen in sexual assault cases did not appear to him to be of a similar profile, such profile evidence was not reliable.
Walters, 2003 WI App 24, ¶17, 260 Wis.2d210, 659 N.W.2d151, the decision of the court of appeals carefully and frequently recognizes that the admission of evidence is a discretionary decision for the circuit court.
www.wisbar.org /res/sup/2004/01-1916.htm   (6057 words)

  
 OSCN Found Document:RICHARD v. RICHARD
In rendering the judgment in the instant case, the court took into consideration the amounts which Eastman Richard had paid Cinda and her children back in 1913, and found that it was a fair and reasonable property settlement at that time, but allowed Cinda the sum of $ 2,500 as attorneys' fees.
The court found that legal common-law marriage existed between plaintiff and defendant, and that children were born of that marriage, and that they were never divorced.
The court also found that Cinda Richard was overreached and imposed upon at the time she signed the agreement in 1913, where she admitted, or rather stated, that she was never the wife of Eastman Richard.
www.oscn.net /applications/oscn/DeliverDocument.asp?citeID=44418   (1195 words)

  
 Richard III: Not Guilty Again
Richard III had a clear and strong motive to kill the Princes since they had a better claim to the throne and because the chances of his surviving the Protectorate were dubious.
Richard had the opportunity to have his nephews killed since he controlled access to the Tower and he had already executed their defenders (Rivers et al.).
Once crowned, Richard had no motive to kill the Princes: in 1483, while the Princes were alive, Lords and Commons of England reviewed charges of their illegitimacy and asked Richard to take the throne, and Parliament reaffirmed his title in the Titulus Regius.
www.r3.org /trial/trial2.html   (655 words)

  
 [No title]
In fact, defendant agreed to remain subject to the court's jurisdiction and agreed to pay for a significant portion of the children's travel expenses for visitation with plaintiff, indicating that it was unlikely that defendant was attempting to frustrate visitation.
After reviewing the trial court's findings with respect to some of these factors, I find its application of the factors to be against the great weight of the evidence and her decision to grant custody to the father to be an abuse of discretion.
In recounting this incident, the trial court stated: However, this Court finds that mother's handling of the situation was insensitive and her choice of discipline was disproportionate to the incident.
www.michbar.org /opinions/appeals/1999/111299/5562.html   (3056 words)

  
 Margaret Smith Court
Court won a record 62 Grand Slam titles and was ranked No.1 in the world seven times: 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1969, 1970, and in 1973.
Court is one of only three players to have a "boxed set" of Grand Slam titles—i.e., every possible title (singles, same-sex doubles, and mixed doubles) from each Grand Slam event.
Court was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame and in January of 2003, Show Court One at Melbourne Park was renamed Margaret Court Arena.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/m/ma/margaret_smith_court.html   (469 words)

  
 R.I. v C.C. (8/18/00) sp-5308
Richard's complaint asked the court to (1) restrain the defendants from attempting to collect money from him; (2) order paternity testing; (3) award him physical custody of Cindy; and (4) order the return of monies that had been collected from him.
Richard argues that the superior court erred in failing to order paternity testing, suggesting that it is in Cindy's best interests to know who her biological father is. Constance argues that the paternity testing issue is not properly before this court for review.
The current version of AS 25.20.050(e) also requires courts to order paternity testing in certain "proceedings in which paternity is contested." Footnote 21: Richard's major reason for seeking paternity testing appears to be to confirm that he is Cindy's biological father, not to prove that he is not her biological father.
touchngo.com /sp/html/sp-5308.htm   (2812 words)

  
 No. 03-3311   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
She claims that the court erred in granting Richard the authority to determine Spencer's place of school enrollment because the order interferes with her right, as the child's primary physical custodian, to determine Spencer's place of residence.
A trial court's consideration and weighing of factors to determine what course of action is in a child's best interests is an exercise of discretion, and we may not substitute our own judgment for the trial court's properly exercised discretion.
The court commented that it believed "that was part of the original order," and Richard's counsel responded that "[n]othing changed [in] the judgment other than the school decision." The appealed order, as well as the commissioner's order that the court "affirmed" and "adopted," are silent on the topic of physical placement.
www.wisbar.org /res/capp/2004/03-3311.htm   (3927 words)

  
 Bennett, M   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
In the case of the next major breakthrough, that of the mid-1380s, the grounds for attributing a role to the court are even stronger.
Ladies certainly figured prominently in court circles, and it is significant that his improvements at Eltham and Clarendon included dancing rooms.
John Gower rapidly repented of his association with the court, and perhaps from the early 1390s was looking to Henry of Bolingbroke as England’s savior.
phoenixandturtle.net /excerptmill/Bennett.htm   (647 words)

  
 CB Richard Ellis - Court Chillingworth
Court Chillingworth joined the Corporate Services division of CB Richard Ellis in September 2002, and Court has already had a significant impact on CBRE's client service.
Prior to joining CB Richard Ellis, Court was a member of the legislative staff of Congressman Thomas Petri in Washington, DC.
For Symmetricom, Court helped design a spreadsheet model that allowed the client to see how much each leased property was feeding into its overall run-rate and where dispositions could be made to cut costs and add value, taking into consideration the cost of disposition.
www.cbre.com /court.chillingworth   (402 words)

  
 How Appealing's 20 questions site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Both you and your younger brother, Morris Sheppard Arnold, serve as judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and both of you first served as U.S. District Judges.
Your brother, however, was nominated to the district court by President Ronald W. Reagan and to the Eighth Circuit by President George H.W. Bush, while President Carter was responsible for your nominations.
The statute was enacted in the aftermath of the confirmation of Willie Fletcher to be a United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit.
legalaffairs.org /howappealing/20q/2003_11_01_20q-appellateblog_archive.html   (2644 words)

  
 Judges of the Superior Court
She was elected Judge of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania in November 1989 and retained in 1999.
JUDGE RICHARD B. Judge Richard B. Klein was born in Philadelphia, the son of the late Philadelphia Orphans’ Court Judge Charles Klein and Rosalie Benson Klein.
Judge Kelly was elected to the Superior Court as the nominee of both the Republicans and the Democrats in 1985 and was retained for a second term in 1995.
www.superior.court.state.pa.us /bios.htm   (5994 words)

  
 AM Archive - Court Reflects
HAMISH ROBERTSON: The former premier of Western Australia, Richard Court, says it's too early to write off a coalition victory in the forthcoming federal election, but it will be tough.
RICHARD COURT: There is certainly a mood in the electorate.
RICHARD COURT: Remember, I've lived with it since I was five years old when my father first went into parliament.
www.abc.net.au /am/stories/s284601.htm   (701 words)

  
 Richard Swepson of Lunenburg & Mecklenburg, Virginia
Richard Swepson first appears in the Lunenburg Court records in 1753, and he is mentioned often, either as a member of the Jury, as well as other miscellaneous duties, and a few times as a defendant himself.
Richard Swepson's close association with John Jeffries and Thomas Carleton and the extensive use of Swepson as a given name among their descendants, has probably contributed to the common assumption that either or both men were married to sisters of Richard Swepson, and/or he to a sister of one of them.
and Alexander Boyd Exr of Richard Swepson, Dec.d Defts.
pages.prodigy.net /procyon/swepson/swepson.htm   (9731 words)

  
 Opinion
The woman who gave birth to Richard, willingly placed him for adoption and then said the boy was dead - the woman with whom, thanks to the Illinois Supreme Court, Richard now lives - went back to court recently.
The Illinois Supreme Court ordered Richard removed from his adoptive home; at the age of 4, in tears, he was loaded into a van and driven away by his biological father and his biological mother.
Since the day Richard was put into that van - since the day he and his adoptive brother were promised, in the presence of a pastor of the Lutheran Church, that they could be a part of each other's lives - more than 800 days have passed.
www.texnews.com /opinion97/greene073097.html   (852 words)

  
 Flordia Court Finds Richard E. Maseri in Contempt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
In his national marketing campaign, the court found that Maseri falsely maintained that he was generating substantial profits in a firm account by trading according to the CAT-FX program.
The court also found that Maseri misled customers by highlighting his experience at major brokerage firms while failing to disclose that he had been discharged for cause by those same firms.
The court further found that Maseri failed to register with the CFTC as a commodity trading advisor, futures commission merchant and commodity pool operator or to provide customers with disclosure documents as required under the CEA.
www.cftc.gov /opa/enf97/opa4081-97.htm   (271 words)

  
 NHBA - Bar News Issue
The motion to reinstate Richard P. Marsh to the practice of law is granted.
Richard P. Marsh is hereby reinstated to the practice of law in New Hampshire.
The District Court establishes these small claims mediation rules to increase access to justice; to increase parties’ satisfaction with the outcome; to reduce future litigation by the same parties; to make more efficient use of judicial resources; and to expand dispute resolution resources available to the parties.
www.nhbar.org /publications/archives/display-news-issue.asp?id=2524   (413 words)

  
 SSRN-The Little Rock School Desegregation Cases in Richard Arnold's Court by Polly Price
For twenty-two years Judge Richard S. Arnold was a central figure in the Little Rock school desegregation cases.
The particular resolution of the Little Rock school cases is largely attributable to the influence of this one judge, however one may assess the success or failure of the litigation to desegregate the Little Rock public schools.
Richard Arnold's synthesis was driven largely by pragmatism.
papers.ssrn.com /sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=783950   (537 words)

  
 Vote “NO” to Retain MO Supreme Court Judge Richard B. Teitelman
As with ballot issues, this gives us the freedom to make recommendations as to whether or not judges appointed through the Nonpartisan Court Plan should be retained or rejected.
This realignment of Missouri’s judiciary to a liberal activist court poses a real threat to the culture that our children and our children’s children will inherit.
Teitelman is forging a new course for the State’s Supreme Court.
www.metrovoice.net /2004/1104_stlweb/1104_articles/teitelman_retention.html   (1043 words)

  
 SSRN-Adjudicative Competence in the Modern Juvenile Court by Richard Redding, Lynda Frost
In recent years, as juvenile justice systems across the country have become more punitive and courts have held that juveniles are entitled to adult-like levels of due process protection, the adjudicative competence of juveniles has increasingly come into question.
To clarify this trend, we reviewed the current state of the law in the fifty states and the District of Columbia, focusing on recent court opinions and legislation as of January of 2000.
Redding, Richard E. and Frost, Lynda E., "Adjudicative Competence in the Modern Juvenile Court" (December 2002).
papers.ssrn.com /sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=376801   (375 words)

  
 CNN.com - 'Night Court's' Richard Moll - Mar. 19, 2003
When Richard Moll walked in to audition for the role of Bull Shannon on the sitcom "Night Court" in 1983, he had no idea that being bald would be a dealmaker.
In fact, "Night Court's" producers rethought their vision for the character once he was cast.
Post-"Night Court," Moll has appeared in a number of films, including a small role in 2001's "Scary Movie 2." He also had a recurring role on the Nickelodeon kids' series "100 Deeds for Eddie McDowd," which debuted in 1999 and aired for three seasons.
www.cnn.com /2003/SHOWBIZ/News/03/19/people.watn.moll   (746 words)

  
 Night Court actor Richard Moll (50) weds Susan Brown (32) July 24 in History
Night Court actor Richard Moll (50) weds Susan Brown (32) July 24 in History
Night Court actor Richard Moll (50) weds Susan Brown (32)
We can see, so we are always blind to things deeper than skin.
www.brainyhistory.com /events/1993/july_24_1993_168561.html   (50 words)

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