Quantcast

News published on Southeast Texas Record in March 2008

SOUTHEAST TEXAS RECORD

Saturday, November 23, 2024

News from March 2008





Suit against Office Depot claims fall on unsecured rug led to woman's death

By David Yates |
A Jefferson County man is alleging that an improperly secured rug led to the death of his 70-year-old wife.

DuPont asbestos trial nearing conclusion

By David Yates |
With possibly millions of dollars on the line, DuPont's attorneys produced additional evidence on Wednesday, March 19, in a video deposition of one of its former safety engineers who said he worked with the chemical company to develop safety programs as early as the 1950s.

Man claims he was falsely imprisoned by Market Basket

By David Yates |
Carlton J. Ford claims he was "thrown to the ground and falsely imprisoned" while leaving Bruce's Market Basket by a grocery store employee.

Slip and fall suit filed against AutoZone

By David Yates |
AutoZone may be well known for selling the parts needed to maintain an automobile, but Sherry Grandchampt claims the company failed to maintain its premises, negligently allowing her to slip and fall in a puddle of water.

Family of refinery worker sues Texaco, Chevron for benzene exposure

By David Yates |
Keith Hyde Alfred Willis, a former Texaco employee, died of lymphoma last January. Now, his wife, Betty Wills, and child, Alpha Shine, are suing the oil company, which they claim negligently exposed him to benzene.

New business licenses/assumed names issued in Jefferson County

By Marilyn Tennissen |
Orig. Filing Date: 03/13/2008 Certificate #: 72393

Recent real estate foreclosures

By David Yates |
Nationstar Mortgage has filed an application for foreclosure against the property of Robert and Susan Stone, located at 7032 39th Street, Groves, Texas 77619.

Recent patent/copyright infringement cases filed in U.S. District Courts

By Marilyn Tennissen |
Marshall Division, Eastern District of Texas

58th Court district april 2008

By The SE Texas Record |
58th Court District

Judge rejects Weyerhaeuser's motion to dismiss in toxic tort case

By Michelle Massey, East Texas Bureau |
TEXARKANA, Ark. -- U.S. Federal Court Judge Harry F. Barnes ruled against Weyerhaeuser's Motion to Dismiss in a case involving allegations that the Dierks plywood and lumber mill emitted hazardous substances and toxins into the environment.

Process server sues over dog bite

By David Yates |
Bitten by a dog while serving a legal notice, Andrea Jones has decided to bite back and sue.

Family of metal worker sues refineries for benzene exposure more than 50 years ago

By David Yates |
From 1946 through 1952, Lonnie Logsdon worked as a sheet metal apprentice at various refineries in Port Arthur, where he was allegedly exposed to enough benzene to develop leukemia.

Hull suing for defective hull on new boat

By The SE Texas Record |
Aksano F-18 GALVESTON -- Ironically, a man named Hull is suing over alleged defects in the hull of his new boat.

Texas Times: Reality and the Federal Budget

By U.S. Sen John Cornyn |
The late William F. Buckley once observed that "The spirit of Christmas extends throughout the congressional season, and a penny here, a penny there, results in $100 billion per year deficits."

Default judgment granted in trip-and-fall case against Albertson's

By Michelle Massey, East Texas Bureau |
TEXARKANA, Ark. -- While shopping at a Texarkana Albertson's a few days before Christmas in 2003, Gloria West tripped over a mat and fell. She states the fall caused her to fracture her left hip.

Plaintiff's attorney files two separate Lemon Law suits against Ford on same day

By David Yates |
Claiming their fairly new Ford vehicles keep breaking down, a pair of Jefferson County residents have sought the legal expertise of plaintiff's attorney Richard Dalton, who has filed two separate Lemon Law suits against Ford and the dealerships who sold the them the vehicles.

Due process argument prevails, hearing postponed in Colossus class action

By Michelle Massey, East Texas Bureau |
TEXARKANA, Ark. -- At a hearing March 17 in the Arkansas Colossus class action, plaintiffs' attorneys were expected to argue that the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege would require public disclosure of an inadvertently disclosed document written between USAA's attorneys and employees.