The following cases categorized as "contract - consumer/commercial/debt" cases were on the docket in the Harris County Civil Court on May 14. All case details are allegations only and should not be taken as fact:
The Harris County Civil Court reported the following activity in the suit brought by Redstone Payment Solutions LLC against Georgetown Auto and Diesel Pros Inc. and V. L. Mong on May 14: 'Return Of Service'
The Harris County Civil Court reported the following activity in the suit brought by Redstone Payment Solutions LLC against Georgetown Auto and Diesel Pros Inc. and V. L. Mong on April 24: 'Original Petition Disclosures Citation Issued'
The following cases categorized as "contract - consumer/commercial/debt" cases were on the docket in the Harris County Civil Court on April 24. All case details are allegations only and should not be taken as fact:
The following cases categorized as "contract - consumer/commercial/debt" cases were on the docket in the Harris County Civil Court on April 22. All case details are allegations only and should not be taken as fact:
The Harris County Civil Court reported the following activities in the suit brought by Redstone Payment Solutions LLC against Georgetown Auto and Diesel Pros Inc. and V. L. Mong on April 22:
Texas A&M University School of Law Professor Lisa Alexander is among the 21 recipients honored for the second annual Presidential Impact Fellows award presented in late October. The award is given to faculty members within the Texas A&M system who embrace grand challenges, commit to core values and embody the unique “can-do” spirit that distinguishes Texas Aggies in service through education.
Bradley is pleased to announce that Jeffrey Davis, Ian P. Faria, and S. David Smith, partners in the firm’s Houston office, have been named 2018 Texas Super Lawyers and recognized as leading lawyers in the state.
DALLAS – A federal judge earlier this month dismissed the case of a Dallas-based international tax attorney who sued a Washington, D.C. university, his alma mater, he claimed discriminated against him when it banned his firm from attending a job fair following "mischaracterized information" on his resume.
HOUSTON – A certified mobile phlebotomist technician has filed a class-action lawsuit against a company over allegations she was not paid the appropriate rate for overtime work.
My law school years (1977-80) at the University of Texas were, in hindsight, close to idyllic. I loved my first-year professors, tuition at UT was dirt cheap, Austin was a wonderful place to live, and I reveled in the “college town” ambience, which was new to me. (Prior to arriving at UT, I had never attended a college football game. During my first year—when the Longhorns went undefeated in the regular season and Earl Campbell won the Heisman Trophy–I had season tickets on the 50-yard line at UT’s gigantic Memorial Stadium, for a pittance that even a broke law student could afford.) The post-game victory spectacle—honking horns on the Drag and the Tower lit up in orange—formed indelible memories.
The legal academy is a strange place.
It differs from other intellectual disciplines in that legal scholarship is published mainly in student-edited law reviews, not peer-reviewed journals. Most faculty members at elite law schools have never practiced law, or have done so only briefly and usually without professional distinction. The curricula at many of the nation’s law schools are larded with trendy courses devoted to identity politics and social issues du jour. Elite law schools eschew the teaching of “nuts and bolts” fundamentals, deriding such practical instruction as resembling a “trade school.”
Were the Founding Fathers anarchists? Did the ideas contained in John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty, published in 1859, somehow inspire the delegates to the Constitutional Convention in 1787? Does the Constitution contemplate Robert Nozick’s minimal state, presaging his 1974 magnum opus Anarchy, State, and Utopia?