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On this page, you can search and view the Supreme Court’s opinions. If you wish to review the docket or documents filed in a matter, please go to the Court’s public portal search page.

5551 - 5560 of 12359 results

State v. Lee 2004 ND 176
Docket No.: 20030336
Filing Date: 9/15/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Criminal - Misc. Misdemeanor
Author: Sandstrom, Dale

Highlight: If a party does not object to an alleged error at the time it occurs, and does not give the court time to remedy any possible prejudice that may result, the party waives any ground of complaint against its admission upon appeal.
If a party does not object to an alleged error during trial, the party alleging an error has the burden of proving the alleged error was obvious by showing it is plain and it affects substantial rights of the party. The alleged error is not obvious unless it is a clear deviation from an applicable legal rule under current law.

City of Wahpeton v. Timmerman (Consolidated w/ 20040076 & 20040077) 2004 ND 175
Docket No.: 20040075
Filing Date: 9/15/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Criminal - DUI/DUS/APC
Author: Per Curiam

Highlight: Convictions of driving without a license and resisting arrest and subsequent denials of motions to dismiss charges and withdraw guilty pleas are summarily affirmed under N.D.R.App.P. 35.1(a)(1), (2) and (4).

Nodak Mutual Ins. Co. v. Wamsley, et al. 2004 ND 174
Docket No.: 20030374
Filing Date: 9/13/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Civil - Insurance
Author: Kapsner, Carol

Highlight: The significant-contacts approach to choice-of-law questions is appropriate in contract cases with multistate factual contacts.
In insurance contract cases, consideration of predictability of results favors application of the law of the state in which the insurance policy was negotiated, issued, and the premiums paid.

Flatt v. Kantak, et al. 2004 ND 173
Docket No.: 20030285
Filing Date: 9/3/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Civil - Personal Injury
Author: VandeWalle, Gerald

Highlight: A physician must disclose material risks to obtain a patient's informed consent for a medical procedure.
On appeal, a trial court's rulings on expert testimony are reviewed under the abuse-of-discretion standard.
A trial court is not required to instruct a jury in the exact language sought by a party if the court's instructions correctly and adequately inform the jury of the applicable law.
A physician's duty of disclosure in an informed consent case is measured under the reasonable patient standard.
A party challenging the constitutionality of a statute must allege an injury traceable to the statute.

Judicial Conduct Commission v. Giese 2004 ND 172
Docket No.: 20040177
Filing Date: 9/2/2004
Case Type: Discipline - Judge - Original Proceeding
Author: Per Curiam

Highlight: Former municipal judge censured.

Judicial Conduct Commission v. McGuire 2004 ND 171
Docket No.: 20040073
Filing Date: 8/31/2004
Case Type: Discipline - Judge - Original Proceeding
Author: Per Curiam

Highlight: Clear and convincing evidence in a judicial disciplinary proceeding means evidence which leads to a firm belief or conviction that the allegations are true.
In judicial disciplinary proceedings, the party seeking discovery has to show a need for the information beyond mere relevance.
Extra-judicial conduct is not simply conduct arising geographically outside of the courtroom, but is conduct which arises from something outside of the events of the courtroom itself.
Suspending a judge from office without pay does not violate the constitutional directive that a judge's salary shall not be diminished during this term of office.
The purpose of discipline in judicial conduct cases is not to punish a judge, but is to preserve the integrity of the judicial system and public confidence in the system and, when necessary, safeguard the bench and public from those who are unfit.
A respondent in a judicial disciplinary proceeding is not initially responsible for payment of the cost of a hearing transcript, but if the respondent is ultimately found to have committed misconduct, the cost of the hearing transcript may be assessed against the respondent.

Interest of R.H. 2004 ND 170
Docket No.: 20040053
Filing Date: 8/31/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Civil - Child Support
Author: Neumann, William

Highlight: A party against whom a presumption is directed has the burden of proving that the nonexistence of the presumed fact is more probable than its existence.

Smith Enterprises v. In-Touch Phone Cards, et al. 2004 ND 169
Docket No.: 20040039
Filing Date: 8/31/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Civil - Contracts
Author: Kapsner, Carol

Highlight: A determination of the terms of an oral contract is a question of fact and will be reversed on appeal only if clearly erroneous.
To prevail on a claim of unlawful interference with business, a plaintiff must prove: (1) the existence of a valid business relationship or expectancy; (2) knowledge by the interferer of the relationship or expectancy; (3) an independently tortious or otherwise unlawful act of interference by the interferer; (4) proof the interference caused the harm sustained; and (5) actual damages to the party whose relationship or expectancy was disrupted.

State v. Spidahl (Consolidated w/20030349-20030352) 2004 ND 168
Docket No.: 20030348
Filing Date: 8/31/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Criminal - Drugs/Contraband
Author: VandeWalle, Gerald

Highlight: Probable cause to arrest does not require that commission of the offense be established with absolute certainty, or proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

Investors Real Estate Trust Properties v. Terra Pacific Midwest, et al. 2004 ND 167
Docket No.: 20030363
Filing Date: 8/31/2004
Case Type: Appeal - Civil - Torts (Negligence, Liab., Nuis.)
Author: Maring, Mary

Highlight: A plaintiff alleging negligence must present affirmative evidence that the defendant's conduct caused the injury, and may not establish causation solely by discrediting other possible causes.
A plaintiff relying upon the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur must show the defendant had exclusive control of the specific instrumentality that caused a fire, not merely control of the location or area where the fire occurred.

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