West Virginia Supreme Court
Recent News About West Virginia Supreme Court
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Man waited too long to sue water company, Justices say
Albright CHARLESTON – Mark Roberts waited too long to sue West Virginia American Water Company for causing the toe of his hill to slide down on his road, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has decided. -
Supreme Court employees donate to Toys for Tots
Davis CHARLESTON -– The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals will end its fall 2007 term on Nov. 21 by donating toys to the U.S. Marine Corps' Toys for Tots program. -
Justices back judge who trimmed MPLA verdict
CHARLESTON – Attorneys Wesley Metheney and Paul Farrell Jr. of Huntington coaxed a $10 million verdict out of a Monongalia County jury when state law allowed no more than $1 million, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has decided. -
Supreme Court to review order erasing Raleigh flood verdict
CHARLESTON - The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has agreed to review an order wiping out a Raleigh County verdict against Western Pocahontas Properties for causing damage in a flood six years ago. -
Judge right to dismiss homicide indictment, Justices rule
CHARLESTON – Pine logs rolled off a truck and killed a woman, but according to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals that doesn't make the truck driver a criminal. -
Recht wrong to exclude expert witness, Justices say
Recht CHARLESTON – Ohio Circuit Judge Arthur Recht improperly excluded neurosurgeon Peter Sheptak as an expert witness in a trial over a car crash, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has decided. -
Surgeon must pay half of ex-wife's fees in divorce
CHARLESTON – A Beckley orthopedic surgeon must pay half of his former wife's $313,000 bill for legal fees and accounting services in their divorce, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has decided. -
Man doesn't deserve new trial, Maynard says in dissent
Maynard CHARLESTON – David Nelson does not deserve the new trial that the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals awarded him on charges that he joined four other men in brutally murdering a woman, according to Justice Spike Maynard. -
Justices give man another shot at trial
CHARLESTON – David Nelson, branded as a brute with his brothers and others in the murder of a mother, has won a second chance to prove his innocence. -
Supreme Court restores full custody to mother from babysitters
Maynard CHARLESTON – Swiftly and sternly, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals restored to a mother full custody of her 4-year-old daughter. -
Supreme Court OKs first med mal class-action suit
Masters CHARLESTON – Kanawha Circuit Judge Charles King will preside over West Virginia's first medical malpractice class-action lawsuit. -
Former legal star loses N.C., W.Va. licenses
Poling CHARLESTON – Attorney Richard Poling, a bright young star in West Virginia 25 years ago, flamed out in Charlotte and lost his law licenses there and back home. -
Felony incent still haunts Milton woman 20 years later
CHARLESTON – Fifteen years after Debbie Plumley finished serving time for felony incest, she must close an informal nursing home in Milton because of her crime. -
Braxton magistrate pleads not guilty to conspiracy charge
SUTTON – Braxton County Magistrate Carolyn Cruickshanks pleaded not guilty Oct. 23 to a charge that she conspired with her son to retaliate against a witness who helped send her son to jail. -
Not enough Justices to hear flood appeal
Calwell CHARLESTON – Charleston attorney Stuart Calwell approached the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals on Oct. 10 hoping to revive hundreds of six-year-old suits over flooding around Beckley, but the Court vanished before his eyes. -
Justices defend motherhood in Cabell case
Albright CHARLESTON – Becoming defenders of motherhood, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals protested a Cabell County court order forcing a mother to share custody of her three-year-old daughter with babysitters. -
Md. attorney hoping to keep W.Va. license
CHARLESTON – Despite losing it in two other states, a Maryland attorney is fighting to keep her license to practice law in West Virginia. -
Charleston wants Supreme Court to decide 'double dipping' case
CHARLESTON – City leaders, facing a lawsuit either from their police union or the Charleston Gazette in a struggle for evidence that officers "doubled dipped" as private guards, would rather let someone else decide which powerful force to offend. -
Man convicted in armed robbery pleads guilty to lesser crime
CHARLESTON – Julian Smith, who after 15 years behind bars overturned a jury that convicted him of aggravated armed robbery, has pleaded guilty to a lesser crime. -
Drunken driving case starts argument among Justices
CHARLESTON – Normally attorneys do all the arguing at the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, but a drunken driving case provoked an argument on the bench.