Sneak peek: Products liability and over-assessed real estate highlight
July Wisconsin Lawyer
July 19, 2011
– The July Wisconsin Lawyer, now available
online and in mailboxes soon, features the inspiring story of the
State Bar of Wisconsin’s new president, big changes in Wisconsin
products liability law, the importance of understanding property tax
assessments, and other topics to inform and entertain readers. Here are
some of the highlights:
Writer Dianne Molvig gets
personal with new State Bar President Jim Brennan,
who literally came back to life after a sudden cardiac
arrest in 2008 and continues to pursue justice as a public
interest lawyer in immigration law.
“Some people don’t like to hear this,” Brennan notes,
“but we have hundreds of thousands of folks who have immigration
problems that could be solved if they could find an attorney who is
competent in this complicated area of the law and is willing to take
their cases.”
In their article,
“A New Era: Products Liability Law in Wisconsin,” Axley Brynelson lawyers
Timothy D. Edwards and Jessica E. Ozalp discuss the
“sea change” in Wisconsin’s
products liability law under the Omnibus Tort Reform Act,
including a new “hotly debated” test for defectiveness when
a plaintiff alleges injury by product design defect.
Thomas J. McAdams, a commissioner for the Wisconsin Tax Appeals
Commission, talks tax assessments, appraisals, and
appeals in his article,
“Over Assessed? Appealing Home Tax Assessments,” noting that
an “estimated 60 percent of the nation’s taxable property
may be over assessed.”
In “Leaving a Client: Confidentiality Upon Withdrawal,”
State Bar Ethics Counsel Timothy J. Pierce gives
guidance when motions to withdraw conflict with the duty of
confidentiality. If a judge requires a reason for withdrawal,
Pierce notes, “how then does a lawyer go about withdrawing in a
manner that does not breach the duty of confidentiality?”
In addition, Dean R. Dietrich, past chair of the State Bar’s
Ethics Committee, advises
on the ethical implications of “witness
preparation” in his monthly ethics column. And the “Managing
Risk” column by attorney Thomas J. Watson, director of
communications at Wisconsin Lawyer’s Mutual Insurance Co.,
highlights the most common mistakes that can lead to
malpractice claims.
“The Power of Remembrance” is the theme of
State Bar Executive Director George Brown’s column.
In it, Brown remembers the late Justice Bill Bablitch and highlights the power in
remembering the important work that lawyers and judges do every day.
Don’t miss the first of a two-part article
on women lawyer’s and the work-life balancing act
by attorney Michael Moore, a professional coach for lawyers. “In
many law firms, the generational evolution of new values has not
overcome institutionalized practices,” Moore writes.
“Despite these obstacles, many women lawyers continue to walk the
tightrope to success.”
Finally, online social media guru Genae Girard explains
how Facebooking with humor, interactive
questions, content, current events, using profession facts, and promos
and specials – the so-called HICCUP method
– will keep clients connected to the firm or business.