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  • 02/15/2019 8:00 AM | Deleted user

    CEBBLOG

    February 15, 2019



    "Regardless of the type of interest, it’s absolutely crucial to record your client’s newly acquired real property interest. By recording the transfer, grantees, buyers, and lenders are protected against both future purchasers for value and unknown prior interests in the same property. Additionally, title insurance companies generally will only insure an interest if it’s recorded. These benefits may not attach, however, if the recordation—or the recorded instrument itself—was defective."



    https://blog.ceb.com/2019/02/15/7-tips-for-recording-a-real-property-interest/#more-22560





  • 02/12/2019 8:32 PM | Deleted user

    2019-03-01 Family Law Judicial Officers' Luncheon


    Date: Friday, March 1, 2019


    Time: Check-In: 11:30 am; Lunch and Presentation: 12:00 – 1:30 pm


    Judicial Officer(s):


    Hon. Shelly Averill, Supervising Judge, Sonoma County Superior Court


    Hon. Robert S. Boyd, Sonoma County Superior Court


    Hon. James G. Bertoli, Sonoma County Superior Court


    Hon. Becky Rasmason, Commissioner, Sonoma County Superior Court


    Place: Vintners Inn, 4350 Barnes Road, Santa Rosa, CA 95403


    Registration Fee: $85—SCBA Members | $105—Public


    Student: $45 (The student discount is now available online for SCBA Student Members. Students who are not members of SCBA may utilize the student discount by downloading the registration form and submitting it with proof of current enrollment to the SCBA Offices. For more information on becoming a member of SCBA, please contact Susan Demers at (707) 542-1190 ext. 18.)



    Click Here to Register



    Click Here to Download the Registration Flyer





  • 02/12/2019 8:30 PM | Deleted user

    ABA Journal News

    February 12, 2019



    Carmel “Kim” Prashker Ebb, a lawyer who lived “a life of legal firsts,” died Feb. 10 at age 94.


    Ebb wrote about her experiences in a story for ABAJournal.com. She graduated first in her Columbia Law School class in 1945 at age 21 after completing college and law school in five years. She went on to become the first female clerk for a federal appeals judge.


    Ebb secured the clerkship with Judge Jerome Frank of the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after contacting him about an article he wrote asserting that women should have the same workplace opportunities as men. Frank hired Ebb, who met her husband, another 2nd Circuit clerk, while on the job.


    She married Lawrence Ebb seven months after their first meeting, and they remained together until his death in 2000.


    After her clerkship, Ebb sought a job at private law firms, but was unable to land a position. At the time, Ebb wrote for ABAJournal.com, “the prospects for a female law graduate were pretty dismal. You might be hired to draw up wills in a law firm’s back room, where no client would discover that a woman had done the work, or toil anonymously for some legislative commission, drafting revisions of dusty statutes.”


    Ebb had also sought a clerkship on the U.S. Supreme Court. She had a promising interview with one of the justices, according to an obituary written by Ebb’s son, Peter, a partner at Ropes & Gray. She was turned down, however, when the justice said his wife would never let him work in such close proximity to a woman.


    Ebb found a job as a lawyer with the Atomic Energy Commission. She went on to work as a lawyer at several government agencies and as a labor lawyer at two law firms. During part of her career, she worked part time in a series of legal positions while raising three children.


    Peter Ebb said his mother “remained a formidable pingpong player into her 80s” and “grudgingly gave up kayaking with her grandchildren at what she considered to be the premature age of 91.”


    Read her piece from 2018:



    http://www.abajournal.com/voice/article/a_career_of_legal_firsts_including_romance_and_marriage







  • 02/10/2019 1:04 PM | Deleted user

    February 7, 2019 - News from the Bar



    San Francisco Superior Court is seeking volunteers for Civil Grand Jury service for the 2019-2020 term. The Civil Grand Jury is the “watchdog” for the City and County of San Francisco. The Civil Grand Jury investigates the operations of City government, including officials, departments, and agencies. Each year, the Civil Grand Jury issues reports based on its findings. Those reports are heard before the Board of Supervisors.


    The Civil Grand Jury will serve from July 1, 2019 through June 30, 2020.



    https://blog.sfbar.org/2019/02/07/volunteer-to-serve-on-the-san-francisco-civil-grand-jury/




  • 02/10/2019 1:02 PM | Deleted user

    The Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society 

    Inaugural Bill Edlund Award Event: March 27, 2019


    The NJCHS and the Northern District Court Historical Society invite you to join us on March 27, 2019, as we honor Louise Renne as the inaugural recipient of the Bill Edlund Award for Professionalism in the Law.


    In addition to having served as a member of the Board of Supervisors, Ms. Renne was also the indefatigable City Attorney for the City and County of San Francisco, and the first woman to serve in that position; a position she held from 1986 to 2001.


    We will celebrate both Bill Edlund and Louise Renne with a short program, and a reception to follow.


    Wed, March 27, 2019
    4:30 PM – 6:30 PM PDT


    United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit 
    95 7th Street
    San Francisco, CA 94103


    The program is free, but reservations are required.


    https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bill-edlund-award-celebration-honoring-louise-renne-tickets-56070057050 






  • 02/10/2019 1:00 PM | Deleted user

    Belmont University School of Law

    February 6, 2019



    The Honorable John G. Roberts, Jr., Chief Justice of the United States, participated Wednesday in a 45-minute conversation with Belmont Law Dean Alberto Gonzales in Belmont’s Baskin Center. Judge Gonzales, the former U.S. Attorney General, led a discussion with the Chief Justice in front of an audience of Belmont Law students, invited dignitaries and local judges.



    https://youtu.be/x-2vV84d6RY




  • 02/09/2019 6:02 AM | Deleted user

    New York Times

    February 8, 2019



    "Despite the large sums of money, the fight is a family squabble like any other, although one that played out in New York newspapers and trade publications. Most people would want to avoid such costly and destructive courtroom battles, but they are increasingly common. In fact, legal action among family members has become a booming business for lawyers who specialize in estate litigation."



    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/08/your-money/family-estate-court-fight.html




  • 02/09/2019 6:00 AM | Deleted user

    Vallejo Times Herald

    February 6, 2019


    "Passed by California voters, Proposition 64 legalized the possession and use of recreational marijuana by adults. It also decreased penalties for possession with intent to sell, sales, transportation and cultivation of marijuana. Prop. 64 was retroactive, allowing for reductions and dismissals for previously imposed punishments, officials said."



    https://www.timesheraldonline.com/2019/02/06/napa-county-erases-dozens-of-past-pot-convictions-reduces-others/




  • 02/08/2019 7:00 AM | Deleted user

    Stanford Legal Radio

    January 19, 2019



    Is climate change to blame for recent natural disasters like California’s Camp Fire? Will law and policy make the appropriate adjustments to protect lives and property? Barton “Buzz” Thompson, an expert in water and natural resources law, shares his expertise on the issue.


    This episode originally aired on SiriusXM on January 19, 2019.



    https://soundcloud.com/user-458541487/wildfire-issues-with-guest-buzz-thompson




  • 02/04/2019 4:15 PM | Deleted user

    CalMatters

    February 3, 2019

    By Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar



    California’s courts serve a state with nearly 40 million people, whose daily lives trigger disputes about matters ranging from child custody to housing to digital privacy. But ensuring that all people in the state can protect their rights and interests by accessing the courts means we must contend with California’s enormous—indeed, almost unique—linguistic diversity.


    On any given day, in courthouses throughout the state, members of the public fluent in dozens of languages—yet lacking fluency in English—show up in court. In California—home to the most linguistically diverse population in the nation—the challenge has been formidable.



    https://calmatters.org/articles/commentary/my-turn-how-to-ensure-equal-access-to-the-law-when-we-speak-200-different-languages/






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