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23 Sep 2011, 7:37 am by Gerard Magliocca
“The Constitution of the United States was a layman’s document, not a lawyer’s contract. [read post]
20 Sep 2011, 7:49 am by Mark S. Humphreys
This exception applies only in certain cases in which general experience and common sense enable a layman to determine the causal relationship with reasonable probability. [read post]
19 Sep 2011, 9:01 pm by Jim Dedman
 Marc Guggenheim is one, and so I’m able to lean on these guys pretty heavily for background and to sort of back stop me to make sure that my rudimentary layman’s knowledge of how a law office works, at least has some grounding in reality. [read post]
17 Sep 2011, 11:29 am
Even the intelligent and educated layman has small and sometimes no skill in the science of law. [read post]
17 Sep 2011, 10:44 am by Lovechilde
” In layman’s terms, the Tenth Amendment is simply a reminder that the Constitution contains an itemized list of federal powers—such as the power to regulate interstate commerce or establish post offices or make war on foreign nations—and anything not contained in that list is beyond Congress’s authority. [read post]
17 Sep 2011, 3:52 am by SHG
  While not realizing it, his discussion is of the sort we see so often, the naive layman who has first come to grips with the reality that the legal system is deeply flawed. [read post]
16 Sep 2011, 9:30 am by Jason Neufeld
The femur bone and the fibula & tibia bones are connected at one of the body’s major joints known as the knee. [read post]
13 Sep 2011, 6:44 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
"In layman's terms, these inventions, and others addressed in Gevo's pending patent applications, help to turn an industrial yeast strain into a highly efficient cell factory to produce isobutanol," said Brett Lund, EVP & General Counsel of Gevo. [read post]
13 Sep 2011, 10:58 am by Jason Neufeld
The spine includes nerves, bones, muscles and discs. [read post]
9 Sep 2011, 3:00 am by Kyle Krull
The inconsistent web of rules and regs can make it daunting for layman or lawyer alike. [read post]
7 Sep 2011, 5:01 pm by Oliver G. Randl
However, a patent specification is not aimed at a layman, but at a skilled person with common general knowledge in the technical field concerned. [read post]
7 Sep 2011, 6:00 am by Mandelman
Rptr. 367, the court provided the following rationale for regulating fee splitting between attorneys and non-lawyers: “Prohibited fee-splitting between lawyer and layman carries with it the danger of competitive solicitation; poses the possibility of control by the lay person, interested in his own profit rather than the client’s fate; facilitates the lay intermediary’s tendency to select the most generous, not the most competent, attorney. [read post]
2 Sep 2011, 6:47 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
AND "hoisted on its own petard" --> At the summary judgment stage, Mytee proposed that the level of skill in the art could be that of “an ordinary layman with average intelligence. [read post]
25 Aug 2011, 1:30 pm
This is because as a layman, you will be unaware of how to deal with the situation in court and you will also not be aware of the local DUI laws, and what actions you must take to defend yourself. [read post]
24 Aug 2011, 8:00 am by Above the Law
Meet Valora Technologies.Valora’s systems and processes combine a decade of legal document tagging experience with cutting edge software tools to provide defensible, custom-configured, Rules-Based Document Review.In layman’s terms, Valora’s process understands and interprets the document review rules set out by outside counsel, in the form of a review protocol or memo. [read post]
23 Aug 2011, 5:00 pm by The Greatest American Lawyer
For $19.95 a month, consumers can also have their documents reviewed by a real lawyer and even get legal advice at no additional cost.The multibillion-legal industry would seem to be a natural for disintermediation, or in layman’s terms, breaking up into higher-volume, lower-margin parts. [read post]
17 Aug 2011, 8:51 am by Lovechilde
" Put in layman’s terms: no organization crucial to national security spending really has much of an idea of how well or badly it is spending vast sums of taxpayer money -- and worse yet, Congress knows even less. [read post]