On May 1, 2013, I will attend and observe the court proceedings of the Maryland Court of Appeals in Annapolis. ย There are four cases on the docket: Attorney Grievance Commission v. Dean Clayton Kremer, AGC v. Jason Kobin, a family law, protective order and malicious prosecution case Joanna Anthony v. Peter Garrity and Ocean City, Maryland Chamber of Commerce Inc. v. Daniel J. Barufaldi. a case involving the reversal of a denial of an award of attorney’s fees in a wage payment and collection case. ย I will provide a recap of these cases’ arguments shortly after my “busman’s holiday” there.

I have no direct stake in any of the cases, but indirectly all four of the cases might impact me or my clients. ย All attorney discipline cases are relevant to every conscientious practitioner. ย I do not know of the allegations or dispositions regarding Messrs. Kremer or Kobin, though they presumably each underwent attorney discipline proceedings before a Circuit Court on delegation from the Maryland Court of Appeals. ย The family law case addresses among other issues the question of whether a protective order gives “probable cause” as a matter of law to call 911 when the subject of the order is on the street near property from which he is barred. ย In this context, “probable cause” refers not to the criminal standard for arrest but for the Maryland malicious prosecution element of lack of probable cause. ย I have litigated malicious prosecution claims only once in my career; the Maryland standard is fairly difficult for the plaintiff to meet in practice.

The Barufaldi case has most interest to my practice at least indirectly. ย I handle claims under the Maryland Wage Payment and Collection Law routinely including at this moment in several courts. ย The threat of attorney’s fees to a prevailing plaintiff is in practice an important motivator for the employer to pay the undisputed claim, along with the serious risk of a triple (or, most precisely for the sake of the pedantic Francophone snob, “treble”) ย damages claim. ย Arguably one is better off paying any other debt or expense only after paying workers’ wages because very few other debts – even taxes – will explode into a 3x+attorney’s fees nightmare. ย The issue of what scope a trial court has to deny an attorney’s fee award is directly on point before the Court of Appeals. ย The worker is represented by Philip Zipin, Esquire of Silver Spring; while his firm more often represents workers, I represented a worker against an associate of his in an unemployment hearing about 2 years ago and respected that associate highly for her professionalism and diligence.

The weather should be nice that day, which means that a walking trip down Rowe Boulevard to Chick and Ruth’s Deli on Main Street will probably be in the cards. ย Although I have participated in part of an appeal to the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, my practice has not involved advocacy before the Maryland Court of Special Appeals. ย I was last before the seven Judges in red robes (unique in the United States, it is said) at my swearing-in in December 1994.

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