Mealey's Elder Law
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October 04, 2024
U.S. Supreme Court Grants Petition In Age Bias Suit Over Reopening Dismissed Case
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 4 agreed to take up a question asking whether a former employee’s Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41 voluntary dismissal of his age bias suit pending arbitration was a final judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b).
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October 02, 2024
Tennessee Panel Affirms Grandmother’s Visits Warranted, Remands For New Schedule
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A trial court correctly determined that a father severely reduced a grandmother’s visitation with her grandson and that grandparent visitation is warranted but established a visitation schedule that is “unreasonable and excessive,” the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled, affirming the lower court’s findings but vacating the visitation schedule and remanding for the establishment of a new schedule.
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October 01, 2024
Ruling Issued On Competing Motions In Beneficiary Dispute Over $1M Life Policy
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A Connecticut federal judge granted in part a husband’s motion for summary judgment in a dispute between him and his daughter over her deceased mother’s $1 million life insurance policy, finding that the daughter failed to show a dispute of material facts regarding her father’s alleged tortious conduct.
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September 30, 2024
Alaska High Court Sides With ‘Overwhelming Majority’ In Coronavirus Coverage Suit
ANCHORAGE, Ala. — Finding “no reason to differ from the overwhelming majority” in answering “no” to two certified questions from an Alaska federal court, the Alaska Supreme Court held Sept. 27 that neither the presence of the coronavirus at an insured’s property nor operating restrictions that were imposed on an insured property by pandemic-prompted governmental orders constitute “direct physical loss of or damage to” the insured property to trigger coverage.
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September 30, 2024
Judge Tosses Brother’s Suit Alleging Sister Mismanaged Deceased Father’s Trust
BROOKLYN, N.Y.— A New York federal judge granted a sister’s motion to dismiss her brother’s breach of fiduciary and unjust enrichment lawsuit alleging that she mismanaged their deceased father’s trust, finding that the brother does not have Article III or prudential standing to bring the claims against his sister.
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September 24, 2024
Panel Reverses Order Denying Motion To Compel Arbitration In Care Home Death Suit
SAN FRANCISCO — A California appellate court reversed and remanded a lower court order denying a nursing home facility’s motion to compel arbitration in a wrongful death suit filed against it over a former resident’s death from drinking industrial cleaner, finding that remand is appropriate to determine whether the arbitration agreement was “validly executed” as well as resolving the issue of arbitrable claims in this case where different persons were agents pursuant to a durable power of attorney (POA) and a health care POA.
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September 24, 2024
Split 11th Circuit Panel Addresses Sex-Plus Claims, Mixed-Motive Theories
ATLANTA — A split 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel in a decision affirming summary judgment for an employer in a gender and age discrimination and retaliation case by two former employees “clear[ed] up two other strands of our case law: sex-plus claims and mixed-motive theories of liability.”
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September 23, 2024
Confidentiality Stipulation Filed In $300M Ponzi Fraud Case Involving Insurers
MIAMI — Plaintiffs and defendant Wells Fargo filed a confidentiality stipulation in a Florida federal court in a putative class action suit alleging that Wells Fargo aided and abetted fraud in a “massive” Ponzi scheme purportedly orchestrated by owners of insurers, some of whom are now in receivership, resulting in elderly investor victims losing more than $300 million after scheme operators sold them promissory notes secured by collateral in stranger-oriented life insurance policies (STOLIs).
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September 23, 2024
Removal Of COVID-19 Suit By Senior Home Was Premature Without Amount In Controversy
CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. — In a lawsuit filed by the estate of a woman who died in a senior living facility during the COVID-19 pandemic alleging negligence on the part of the facility, a New York federal judge granted the estate’s motion to remand to state court because the amount in controversy was not stated or otherwise determinable, thereby nullifying diversity jurisdiction.
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September 17, 2024
Pennsylvania Panel Affirms Ruling That Will Lacked Legal Effect Due To Forgery
PITTSBURGH — A Pennsylvania appellate court on Sept. 16 affirmed a lower court ruling that a last will and testament had “no legal effect due to a forged signature,” finding that the lower court did not abuse its discretion in believing one handwriting expert who testified that the decedent’s signature in her will was forged over another handwriting expert who testified that it was not forged.
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September 13, 2024
Panel Affirms Jury Verdict Of Over $418,000 For Estate In Undue Influence Case
ATLANTA — A Georgia appellate court affirmed a jury verdict of $418,758.55 in an undue influence and fraud suit filed by the estate of a man against a woman almost five decades his junior who had moved in with him, promising to take care of him for the rest of his life, finding that the woman “failed to present any meaningful argument” to show a lack of evidence regarding her “egregious conduct” in gaining control over “an elderly, cognitively impaired man’s finances, assets, and property.”
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September 12, 2024
West Virginia Appeals Court Affirms Order Transferring Grandparent Visitation Case
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A West Virginia appellate court affirmed a family court order transferring a paternal grandmother’s petition for grandparent visitation to a circuit court, finding that because the family court did not have jurisdiction to hear the grandparent visitation dispute, it did not abuse its discretion in transferring the case.
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September 11, 2024
Citing Lack Of Jurisdiction, Alabama High Court Issues Reversal In Probate Row
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Ruling that a probate court lacked jurisdiction to enter a judgment granting equitable relief in a real property ownership dispute, the Alabama Supreme Court reversed and remanded a circuit court’s denial of a motion to set aside the judgment.
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September 10, 2024
Agent Under POA Alleges Negligence Against Care Home Over Pressure Injuries
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An agent pursuant to a power of attorney (POA) sued a rehabilitation facility, a related entity and the facility owners and operators in a Missouri federal court, asserting that their negligence in failing to adequately staff the facility and provide the appropriate care resulted in a former resident developing pressure injuries, causing “pain, suffering and mental anguish.”
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September 09, 2024
Class Certification Bid Fails In Remanded ERISA Case Over LTC Premium Hikes
BOSTON — On remand after partial revival of an Employee Retirement Income Security Act challenge to long-term care (LTC) insurance premium increases, a Massachusetts federal judge declined to certify injunctive relief and damages classes, saying in part that the central dispute “can only be resolved by examining extrinsic evidence that is necessarily individualized in nature.”
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September 09, 2024
Company Urges Dismissal After Arbitration Bid Denied In Care Home Negligence Suit
NORTHERN JACKSON, Miss. — One day after a Mississippi federal judge denied a skilled nursing facility’s motion to compel arbitration in a negligence and medical malpractice suit filed against it and an affiliated limited liability corporation by a former resident through his guardian, the company filed a reply brief urging the judge to dismiss the case against it for lack of personal jurisdiction.
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September 09, 2024
Care Gig Platform, FTC Reach $8.5M Agreement In Case Over Wages, Cancellations
AUSTIN, Texas — Care.com, a child and older adult care gig platform, will pay $8.5 million to end claims by the Federal Trade Commission that it has systematically deceived caregivers about wages available for potential jobs and at the same time failed to give families looking for care an easy way to cancel their paid memberships.
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September 06, 2024
Louisiana Panel Affirms Man With Dementia Lacked Capacity To Author Will
SHREVEPORT, La. — Noting that it “found the orchestrated and intensified efforts” of a caregiver to obtain control over the estate of an elderly man with dementia “alarming,” a Louisiana appellate panel affirmed a lower court’s order denying the caretaker’s petition to probate a handwritten will purportedly authored by the man.
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September 04, 2024
Minnesota Panel Affirms Dismissal Of Estate Dispute For Lack Of Jurisdiction
RAMSEY, Minn. — The Minnesota Court of Appeals on Sept. 3 affirmed a lower court’s ruling dismissing an executrix’s suit against her brother to quiet title and asserting claims for unjust enrichment and financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult related to the sale of their father’s trust property, finding that the lower court correctly determined that it lacked personal jurisdiction due to the brother’s lack of minimum contacts with Minnesota.
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September 03, 2024
6th Circuit: No Bargaining Need For Nursing Home’s Pandemic Hiring, Pay Decisions
CINCINNATI — A nursing home owner’s hiring and pay decisions in response to staffing shortages at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 were made due to exigent circumstances and did not require bargaining with the union representing two groups of employees, a Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel ruled, partially affirming and partially reversing a decision by the National Labor Relations Board.
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September 03, 2024
HHS Issues Status Report In Decade-Old Medicare Coverage Row Over Hospital Stays
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — The secretary of Health and Human Services filed a status report in a Connecticut federal court regarding progress in implementing a final rule to comply with a court order and injunction in a long-running class action in which a district court in 2020 allowed a portion of a class of Medicare beneficiaries placed on observation status after being admitted to the hospital as inpatients to appeal their denial of coverage.
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August 29, 2024
Production Of Full Funding Agreement Ordered In DUFTA Case Involving Insurer
WILMINGTON, Del. — Saying his relevance conclusion sprang from “the class action context . . . and the express terms of the Funding Agreement itself,” a Delaware Chancery Court vice chancellor ordered the plaintiffs in a suit over an alleged scheme to strip capital from an insurance subsidiary on which many policyholders depend for long-term care (LTC) disability benefits to produce the funding and contingent fee agreements in their entirety.
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August 29, 2024
After $90M Settlement Reached, Judge Dismisses FCA Suit Alleging False CMS Bids
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — After being notified that Humana Inc. agreed to pay $90 million to settle a case against it, a Kentucky federal judge dismissed the case, which accused Humana of violating the False Claims Act (FCA) by receiving overpayments after it knowingly submitted false bids to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
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August 28, 2024
Woman Sues Long-Term Care Insurer On Breach Of Contract, Bad Faith Theories
OKLAHOMA CITY — A long-term care (LTC) insurer “intentionally, by design, conducted an inadequate investigation in order to avoid the facts that would further substantiate coverage,” a woman with cognitive impairment whose benefits were terminated claims in a complaint filed in a federal court to recover LTC benefits on breach of contract and bad faith theories.
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August 28, 2024
Split S.D. High Court Affirms Ruling Denying Bid For Share Of Ranch Owner’s Estate
PIERRE, S.D. — In a 3-2 decision, the majority of the South Dakota Supreme Court affirmed a lower court ruling denying a spouse’s petition for an intestate share of her deceased husband’s estate, finding that the lower court correctly determined that the available evidence showed that the decedent intended to exclude his wife from his will.