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Admissibility of Accident Reports in Jury Trials

In an opinion (Joines v. Moffitt) issued this morning by the NC Court of Appeals, the Court set forth an interesting discusssion of the admissibility of accident/crash reports in jury trials involving auto accidents.

The complete opinion can be found at:
http://appellate.nccourts.org/opinions/. The pertinent portion is quoted below:
…….”Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the
declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in
evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” N.C. R.
Evid. 801(c). Although hearsay is generally inadmissible,
records of regularly conducted business activities are
admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule under Rule 803 of
the North Carolina Rules of Evidence. N.C. R. Evid. 803(6).
This Court has held that highway accident reports may be
admitted under Rule 803(6) if properly authenticated. Wentz v.
Unifi, Inc., 89 N.C. App. 33, 39, 365 S.E.2d 198, 201 (1988).
Proper authentication requires a showing that the report was (1)
“prepared at or near the time of the act(s) reported”; (2)
prepared “by or from information transmitted by a person with
knowledge of the act(s)”; and (3) “kept in the course of a
regularly conducted business activity, with such being a regular
practice of that business activity.” Id. If a document meets
these criteria, it is admissible unless the circumstances
surrounding the preparation of the report “indicate a lack of
trustworthiness.” N.C. R. Evid. 803(6).”……

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NCAJ Mock Trial Competition

NCAJ Mock Trial Competition

Owens & Miller attorney, Kimberly Miller is very proud of her Enloe High School mock trial teams and their performance in the NCAJ Wade Edwards High School Mock Trial Tournament held on February 9, 2013! Kimberly reported that her teams were amazing and that she could not be prouder of all of her students. One of Kimberly’s teams made it to the Final Round and took 2nd place in the Competition.

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February 20, 2013 · 9:30 pm

Owens & Miller listed as 2013 Rising Stars in SuperLawyers Magazine!

Owens & Miller partners Will Owens and Kimberly Miller were honored to be included on the list of “Rising Stars” in the 2013 Edition of SuperLawyers Magazine. The magazine was included in Sunday’s edition of the Raleigh News & Observer. See page 41/42: http://digital.superlawyers.com/superlawyers/northcarolina2013#pg1

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Meyer new leader of NC Industrial Commission

The IC has a new leader. If Senate Bill 10 passes, all IC Commissioner will be replaced by new commissioners to be appointed by Gov. McCrory.

Meyer new leader of NC Industrial Commission

RALEIGH (AP) — The panel that determines workers’ compensation awards to injured workers in North Carolina has a new leader.

Gov. Pat McCrory announced Thursday that current commissioner Staci Meyer of Wake County has been elevated to chairwoman of the state Industrial Commission. She replaces Pamela Young, who announced last month she would leave to allow McCrory to pick his own choice.

Meyer formerly worked at the state Department of Justice and was chief deputy secretary and acting secretary of the Department of Cultural Resources. She was appointed to the six-member commission in 2009 by then-Gov. Mike Easley.

The Senate passed a bill last week that would dismiss all Industrial Commission members and let McCrory make his own picks.

By THe Associated Press
Published: February 14, 2013
Time posted: 4:48 pm

Read more: http://nclawyersweekly.com/2013/02/14/meyer-new-leader-of-nc-industrial-commission/#ixzz2Kzt9dNFg

Meyer new leader of NC Industrial Commission

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New day for Durham judicial system

Durham County is joining the ranks of Harnett, Mecklenburg, and Dare Counties as having one of the nicest courthouses in the State. The attorneys and staff at Owens & Miller are looking forward to litigating cases in this beautiful new facility!

http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/02/05/2657747/new-day-for-durham-judicial-system.html

Officials hope new facilities will be more pleasant for the public

By Jim Wise — jwise@newsobserver.com

DURHAM — Durham County moves into its fourth courthouse Monday, and court officials hope the public will find dealing with Durham’s judicial system a bit more pleasant than in the past.

Eleven stories tall, the new courthouse stands across Mangum Street from the Durham Performing Arts Center, dominating the view of downtown from the Durham Freeway. It adjoins the Durham County jail and a new, 897-space parking deck. Together, they fill a city block, forming a complex called the Durham County Judicial Center.

“It’s a beautiful building, worthy of being a courthouse,” said Chief Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson. “It has respect pouring out of it, and that’s what you want a courthouse to be like.”

The $119 million structure features enhanced security, with key-card-only admission to much of the interior to create separate “circulation areas” for judicial personnel, attorneys, defendants and the general public until they meet in one of the courtrooms. There will be 20 courtrooms initially, with room for expansion to 27.

Among other amenities:

• Eleven high-speed elevators, six for public use, in place of the three sluggish elevators in the current Judicial Building.

• A third-floor kiosk area, to be staffed with a magistrate and assistant district attorney, to expedite routine traffic cases.

• Sensors to automatically adjust lighting, “green roofs” to control stormwater runoff, and a cistern to hold rainwater for irrigation.

• A spacious jury-pool room with coffee, lockers, flat-screen televisions, and desks where prospective jurors can work while waiting to be called.

Days past are commemorated in the new courthouse with a photo-mosaic mural that covers more than 1,400 square feet on one wall of the lobby and forms an image of the 1916 courthouse, made up of several thousand postcard-size photographs of historic Durham scenes, and past and present court and local-government officials.

Those photographs include portraits of two former district attorneys who left office under unfortunate circumstances: Mike Nifong, who resigned in disgrace in 2008 over his handling of the Duke lacrosse case, and Tracey Cline, who was removed from office last year after a public feud with Hudson.

County Engineer Glen Whistler said the selection of photos was reviewed and approved by the county commissioners in February 2012. Hudson was on the committee that worked on the mural.

“We knew that (Nifong’s and Cline’s presence) might be somewhat controversial, but, you know, it is the ultimate history of the courthouse,” Hudson said.

“History may not be kind to some of the others on that mural,” he continued. “I hope that’s not the case, but what do we do when that happens? We can’t put an ‘X’ through it, you know, mark them out once they go up there.”

Wise: 919-641-5895

SOURCE: NEWS & OBSERVER, PUBLISHED February 6, 2012

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/02/05/2657747/new-day-for-durham-judicial-system.html#storylink=cpy

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NC Supreme Court: Fight over Big Rock prize will get trial

By Anne Blythe – ablythe@newsobserver.com

RALEIGH — The fishing crew from the 2010 Big Rock Blue Marlin Tournament angling to claim nearly a million dollars in prize money won part of its fight this week, but a larger legal battle looms.

The state Supreme Court issued a favorable ruling Friday for the crew and owners of the Citation, a fishing boat that reeled in an 883-pound marlin – the tournament’s biggest catch.

Tournament officials accused the crew of breaking the rules and withheld $910,000 in prize money.

The contest organizers said the Citation’s first mate, Peter Wann, did not have a valid recreational saltwater fishing license until two hours after the fish was caught.

The anglers contend they were in international waters when the fish was caught and a state license was not necessary. By the time the boat was back in state waters, attorneys for the Citation and crew contend, Wann had gone online and obtained the state license that tournament rules addressed.

Big Rock organizers have not awarded the money for the first prize while the lawsuit filed in June 2010 pends.

The state Supreme Court’s ruling on Friday sends the case back to Carteret County Superior Court where, in March 2011, Judge John Nobles dismissed the case.

Two Zebulon attorneys who represented the Citation owners and crew at the Supreme Court in January contended their clients should get a jury trial or a different judge.

Among the questions to be decided are whether the license misstep should have led to the disqualification and withholding of such a large prize.

The attorneys said the fishing crew did not gain a competitive edge by not having a license. They argued that tournament officials engaged in a breach of contract.

Attorneys representing Big Rock officials argued that such a decision should be at the sole discretion of tournament officials. If courts could decide such matters, the Big Rock attorneys said, competitors would seek a review any time tournament officials imposed a penalty to their dislike.

It was unclear Friday when the case might be added to a Carteret County Superior Court docket.

SOURCE RALEIGH NEWS AND OBSERVER. PUBLISHED Jan. 25, 2013

Blythe: 919-836-4948

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/01/25/2633757/fishing-tourney-could-go-to-trial.html#storylink=cpy

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Advocates seek a safety net for injured NC workers

RALEIGH — John Ashworth survives on a web of government programs never designed to help him.

The program that should have – a swift and efficient workers’ compensation program – has failed repeatedly to make Ashworth whole since he shattered both feet after falling off a roof in 2008.

His former boss, Robert Wayne House of State Wide Roofing in Franklin County, didn’t have insurance required by law and owes him more than $70,000 in lost wages; another employee who fell off a roof is due more than $100,000. Though the N.C. Industrial Commission has been leaning on House this year to settle the debt, he has shelled out a total of $75. 

Ashworth spent more than the $25 monthly settlement payment on parking fees and gas traveling from Franklin County to the hearings in Raleigh.

“This is not even worth my time,” said Ashworth, 53. Ashworth is now disabled and gets by with Social Security disability, food stamps and Medicaid.

Advocates for injured workers say the state needs a safety net to catch vulnerable workers such as Ashworth. They want state leaders to create a fund to pay for lost wages and medical bills quickly so these workers aren’t left destitute while their employers try to pay the claim.

At least half of the states, including many that border North Carolina, offer compensation to workers hurt while working for companies without insurance.

“These folks are hurt, broke and seem to have no place to go …,” said Harry Payne, a former state labor commissioner and now a workers’ advocate at the N.C. Justice Center. “Any time you look at the effect of this on the ground, you find these workers laying around in all these impossible situations.”

The problem of uninsured employers in North Carolina is pressing. The News & Observer reported in April that 30,000 or more employers required to carry insurance don’t. Little has been done to find these companies or to order them to buy insurance before workers get hurt.

Over the last several years, the commission has heard from between 300 and 500 workers a year hurt while working for an uninsured boss. The commission vets the cases and often awards payments, but collecting the money is often a futile effort.

After the N&O’s reports in April, the commission called back hundreds of old uninsured cases. It threatened the employers with penalties and trips to jail. Some workers collected payments they had waited years to see.

But many, like Ashworth, languish as the commission tries to flex its muscle and force employers such as House, who is now disabled, to take care of his injured workers. House has said in hearings that he’s broke, too, and that he’s no longer in business.

Arresting the boss

Frankie Boykin knows what it’s like to wait to be made whole again.

Boykin was called back to the Industrial Commission in May, four years after a major head injury caused by the brakes going out on a truck he was moving at a used car dealership in Smithfield. He was out of work for nearly two years, and even now, his injury lingers, robbing him of his short-term memory and some muscle function.

He fell behind on child support payments and once spent the night in jail for his inability to support his teenage son. He relied on the charity of relatives to eat and find a place to stay.

“My whole world was upside down,” said Boykin.

Until earlier this month, Boykin’s former boss, Andy Salvatore, owner of Smithfield Auto Center, hadn’t paid Boykin a dollar of the more than $120,000 he owed. After months of Salvatore’s ignoring the commission’s order to come to a hearing and explain why he hadn’t paid Boykin, officials finally arrested Salvatore this month for failing to appear.

The arrest got his attention, and Salvatore came to Raleigh and agreed to settle the claim with Boykin for $1,000 a month until he paid $65,000. He also agreed to pay more than $100,000 in medical bills to WakeMed and Johnston Memorial Hospitals.

Salvatore offered no explanation to a deputy commissioner for his delinquency. He told a reporter that he hadn’t noticed the orders to appear for hearings because he gets so much mail. He said his business has faltered during the recession.

A deputy attorney general told Salvatore that the state would likely spare him more than $100,000 in penalties for failing to carry insurance if he made good on his payments to Boykin.

Salvatore handed over his first installment this month in a makeshift courtroom at the Industrial Commission: $1,000 in cash.

Boykin counted the stack of $100 bills as tears welled in his eyes. He talked about his son and all he’d deprived him of in those years he was without work.

“This means more than you know,” he told an investigator at the commission.

An idea for help

State leaders have been wrestling with the problem of businesses skirting their tax and insurance obligations to gain an edge in the marketplace. A task force of agency leaders and a separate legislative subcommittee met this past fall to discuss how to crack down on businesses that cheat.

Leonard Jernigan, a veteran plaintiffs’ attorney, implored leaders at these meetings to consider setting up a fund to help injured workers whose employers had no insurance. Jernigan has handled uninsured cases for years and has seen how the workers’ needs get absorbed elsewhere: by Social Security disability, food stamps and Medicaid.

“The taxpayer ends up paying for this one way or another,” Jernigan said.

He urged leaders to beef up enforcement efforts and use penalties to help feed the fund.

One legislator asked for more information about how others states’ programs work, but nothing formal has been presented.

What S.C. does

South Carolina leaders set up a similar fund 30 years ago. A fee assessed on workers’ compensation policies supports the fund, drawing about $18 million a year.

“We wanted to make sure the person gets help and back to work as quickly as possible,” said Gary Cannon, executive director of the S.C. Workers’ Compensation Commission. “We don’t want them out there struggling.”

Ray Evans, general manager of the N.C. Rate Bureau, which represents insurance companies in requests for rate adjustments, said the problem of uninsured employers is pressing. He said a fund would be a big help to injured workers but wouldn’t address the problem of compliance.

“There’s always the problem of where the money will come from,” he said. “When it’s been discussed, employers weren’t too keen on any sort of new tax, and insurance carriers are not excited to pay more. The idea of this has come and gone, but not the problem.”

Leaders at the N.C. Chamber, the state’s major business lobby, worry that assessing any fees from businesses abiding by the law is unfair and could hinder job growth. Gary Salamido, the Chamber’s vice president for governmental affairs, said the state needs to do a better job educating businesses about their responsibility to carry insurance.

He also urged better enforcement against those who refuse.

“We need to identify businesses that are skirting the system without intention of ever becoming compliant, and ensure that the Industrial Commission has the authority to take appropriate action to shut down their business until they secure workers’ compensation insurance,” Salamido said.

Penalties from uninsured employers, as it stands now, couldn’t float any sort of uninsured fund.

In the fiscal year that ended in 2011, the commission collected $30,900 in penalties from uninsured employers. That same year, it handled claims for 378 uninsured workers.

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Sunny Again

Republican Rep. Dale Folwell of Forsyth County is a level-headed lawmaker with expertise on budget issues and a lot of the fine print in business regulation. He’s also got an independent streak and isn’t afraid to admit when he makes a mistake. Those are refreshing qualities in a legislative atmosphere of harsh partisanship.

Folwell now reckons he created some unintended consequences when, at the request of Pamela Young, chair of the state Industrial Commission, he changed the law to, in effect keep private data on employers and their insurance policies. That made it impossible for workers to check and see if their employers had workers’ compensation coverage, which would protect them in case they were injured on the job.

Now, Folwell says the law will be reversed, and those records will be available.

Young never should have made that request. She and other members of the commission were embarrassed, or at least let’s hope they were, by News & Observer reports in April that some 30,000 employers, many of them small businesses, were supposed to have workers’ comp insurance but did not. That meant workers were not protected, guaranteed payment for lost work because of injuries and for medical coverage. They did have the alternative to sue, a cumbersome process, and one more costly to negligent employers than carrying insurance would have been.

The commission stepped things up a bit, but the situation in terms of all those businesses without coverage never should have been allowed to develop. As The N&O showed, some of the fault was in a failure on the part of state agencies that dealt with regulations of one kind or another related to businesses to share information with each other.

But there was fault to go around (some of it with the commission, members of which are handsomely compensated appointees of the governor) and a task force is looking still at ways to improve oversight. The legislature should have the opportunity to address any suggestions of the task force that will offer more protection for workers.

For now, however, this plan to reopen these improperly shielded records is at the top of the list. Workers in North Carolina deserve to know whether those for whom they work have the necessary insurance to protect them and their families from bankruptcy in case they are injured on the job. It’s not as if those in North Carolina’s labor force, including many who do hazardous work, have a host of protections and benefits. But they certainly have the right to know what they do have.
Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/12/21/2560136/sunny-again.html#storylink=cpy

SOURCE:  Raleigh News & Observer;  Published Friday December 21, 2012

http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/12/21/2560136/sunny-again.html

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Owens & Miller Attorney Will Owens Judge’s Mock Trial Competition

Owens & Miller Attorney Will Owens was happy to spend this past Saturday serving as a judge at The 7th Annual Tobacco Road Invitational Mock Trial Competition at the Durham County Courthouse. The competition was hosted by Duke University. Will helped judge a wrongful death trial in which a team of future lawyers from Elon University competed against their counterparts from the University of South Carolina. They called 6 witnesses (including 2 experts), performed opening statements and closing arguments. It was quite impressive!  You can find more information on Duke’s Mock Trial program at http://duke.edu/web/dukemocktrial/Duke_Mock_Trial/Welcome_to_Duke_Mock_Trial%21.html

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Lawmakers say they will reverse course on worker comp law

The same state lawmakers who passed a law making it impossible for workers to find out whether their employers carry workers’ compensation insurance are now promising to reverse course.

State Rep. Dale Folwell, the No. 2 ranking Republican in the House, said Wednesday he didn’t know the provision he tucked into a last-minute budget bill earlier this year would block employee access to the records.

At a packed legislative committee meeting, he pointed the finger at the N.C. Industrial Commission and the N.C. Rate Bureau, cross-examining leaders of the two state entities about the language they gave him to put into the bill. 

“The legislature shouldn’t seal information from employees,” said Folwell, a lame-duck lawmaker who lost a bid for lieutenant governor.  The News & Observer used the data in April to reveal that as many as 30,000 North Carolina employers failed to carry the required workers’ compensation insurance, leaving their employees at risk if they were hurt on the job.

But in July, lawmakers made much of the data the newspaper used confidential at the request of the Rate Bureau, a state-created organization that works for the insurance industry.

Ray Evans, the bureau’s general manager, said he is a “fan of sunshine and transparency” but later said his agency asked to make most the data private to protect insurance companies from facing competition on their rates.

Mark Prak, a lawyer for the N.C. Press Association, which also represents The N&O, countered by saying the public has a right to know the information.

“The larger policy question is what information needs to be capable of being seen by people … looking for a job wanting to make sure there is coverage or whatever their motivation or reason for looking at public information,” he said.

Senate GOP leader Harry Brown said he expects lawmakers to change the law in the coming legislative session. At the same time, he isn’t sure where to draw the line on what should be available to the public and worried about how the information may be used.

“I think the public should know but … we just need to be careful that we do it right,” said Brown, a Jacksonville business owner.

The joint Senate-House panel on worker’s compensation insurance and fraud prevention also confronted so-called ghost policies, policies that are supposed to cover a single “future” worker who might go to work for the employer at some time. The coverage purchased by some business owners sometimes leaves injured workers vulnerable and fighting for needed medical care.

The topic is one lawmakers didn’t tackle a year ago when they sought to reform the state’s workers’ compensation system. It is still plagued by regulators’ inability to track and stop businesses that misclassify employees as contractors to avoid paying taxes and buying workers’ compensation insurance.

The problem is particularly acute in the construction industry but it is also spreading to other sectors. A main sticking point lawmakers debated is what to do in the case of a general contractor at a construction site who is responsible for providing coverage to all workers. The contractor often employs individual subcontractors, such as painters or masons, who buy ghost policies that don’t cover their own job site injuries.

“The potential for misunderstanding … is just tremendously increased with those ghost policies,” said Stuart Powell, a vice president at the Independent Insurance Agents of North Carolina.

The question of who is covered by whom and who is responsible when an injury occurs is a thorny issue, a half dozen experts told lawmakers. And what to do to fix it remains equally uncertain.

Mike Carpenter, an executive vice president for the N.C. Home Builders Association, said the ghost policies – formally known as minimum premium policies – serve a purpose in case the subcontractors hire other workers. He said the problem is more abuse of the system and lawmakers need to understand that some business owners don’t have the money to pay for insurance for themselves.

Leonard Jernigan, a workers’ compensation attorney who represents laborers, said the state should consider creating an uninsured employee fund for those who fall through the cracks while others pushed for more investigators to crack down on fraud.

More recommendations are expected from a task force convened by Gov. Bev Perdue in response to The N&O’s reporting. Its report is due to the legislature in February.

At the end of the meeting, Brown, a committee chairman, said he expects to craft legislative to fix the problems.

“There’s some tweaking that needs to be done,” he said.

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