What is an Inventory?
What will be an ideal response?
Inventory: a detailed list of the decedent’s property including the value of each item.
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Linda and Karen, both paralegals for the same attorney in a small general practice office, are riding home from work together on the bus. During their ride, they discuss a client who was in the office that day seeking to file for divorce. The client, who works in their building, is someone whom they have known for a long time, and they are shocked. What they don't know is that the client's wife is sitting in the seat behind them. The client's wife learns of the divorce and successfully hides $200,000 from a bank account so that it cannot be located and divided up as part of the property settlement. Once the divorce is final, the client says to his wife, "You must have known that I was planning to divorce you or you wouldn't have been able to hide that money." Without admitting that she
hid the money, the client's wife says, "If you're so upset about losing the $200,000, why don't you sue your attorney and those two bigmouths who work for him and ride my bus?" Which of the following actions can the client take?? A. ?Seek to have a disciplinary action brought against the attorney for violation of the rule of client confidentiality. B. Bring a malpractice lawsuit against the attorney and his two paralegals.? C. ?Demand that the attorney pay him the $200,000 and fire his paralegals. D. ?All of these choices are correct.
A legal administrator
a. receives the compensation and status on par with an attorney b. handles all of the clerical work for a firm c. is responsible for the accounting functions in a firm d. never attends partner meetings e. none of the above
The requirements for a bond and surety vary from state to state.?
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
In Chandler v. Miller, the Georgia legislature enacted a statute requiring candidates for public office to submit to drug tests. The court determined:
a. the public's interest in having drug-free political representatives outweighs the candidate's privacy rights, so the law was constitutional b. the interest in having drug-free political officials did not constitute a special need, so the law was unconstitutional c. although the state's interest did not constitute a special need, the symbolic need was sufficient to validate the constitutionality of the statute d. although political officials do not operate nuclear power plants, handle or sell firearms, or operate equipment that directly affects the public, they regulate these and other public safety-intensive industries, so they must be held to the same standards as the regulated industry employees, making the statute constitutional