The Law Office of Kurt H King

February 9, 2010

Recovering Attorney Fees in Missouri Courts

Filed under: Litigation — kurthking @ 5:11 pm
Tags: ,

How to get your opponent to pay your attorney fees under Missouri law in some instances–something that rarely happens as Missouri generally follows the American rule that each side pay their own attorney fees?

But it can happen if a statute or contract provision gives the prevailing party the right to recover attorney fees from the “losing party.”

A recent Missouri court of appeals case discusses the Private Prompt Payment Act (PPPA), section 431.180, RSMo 2010.  That law gives a court or abitrator the DISCRETION to award attorney fees when a person/entity fails to make all the scheduled payments under a contract for private design or construction work after August 28, 1995.  In other words, the court or arbitrator MAY award attorney fees and interest to the winning/prevailing party in such a payment dispute.

Note that 431.180 reads that it does NOT apply to “contracts for private construction work for the building, improvement, repair or remodeling of OWNER-OCCUPIED RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY OF FOUR UNITS OR LESS.”

IMPORTANT:  Remember to plead a count in your petition for payment on the contract setting out your claim for recovery of attorney fees and interest under Missouri’s PPPA.  The recent Missouri case of Lucas Stucco & EIFS Design v. Landau (Eastern District, 2/2/2010), teaches us that if you don’t so set out your claim for attorney fees and interest under the PPPA, then you are unlikely to be awarded any under that law.

www.kurthking.com

Kurt H. King
Law Office of Kurt H. King
816.781.6000
20 E. Franklin
Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068
http://www.kurthking.com

Bankruptcy, Child Custody and Support, Divorce and Modification, Family Law
Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

February 8, 2010

Proof of Sexual Abuse by Expert In Missouri

Filed under: Custody,Family Law,Litigation — kurthking @ 5:04 pm
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Say you are in a child custody or criminal court case in Missouri, perhaps Clay County, involving allegations of sexual abuse of a child.   For example, what if the mother accuses the father or step-father of abusing a young girl, and moves the court for an order that the father have no visitation or contact with the child–or only supervised visitaiton?

How to prove innocence?–or guilt?   What if the alleged perpetrator undergoes an psychological evaluation by an expert to determine if he or she did abuse the child?  Will an examination really prove anything about whether he did so?

I recently spoke with a national expert on this issue and learned that the evaluation generally canNOT support a finding that a particular person sexually abused the child.  (I say “generally” because of exceptions where the accused admits guilt, a witness saw it happen, or there is other concrete evidence that a person did abuse, and so on.)

The reason given: there is no “official” profile of a sex abuser.   So it is bunk when the expert says that a person “fits the profile” of a sex abuser” and therefore did abuse. 

Nor does such testing enable the expert to come to court and testify that the mental evaluation established that the accused “shows characteristics of a child abuser.”  (One question for any such expert would be how does he/she know what the public norm is for any test to reveal such “characteristics”–i.e., what percentage of the public would look at younger persons of a sex for longer than older persons and for what reasons.)

More importantly, even if testing could show such characteristics, it is no proof that the father/defendant abused the particular child in question.  

If a person is on the defense side of this issue, and the other side finds an expert to say the person is child sex abuser, or fits the profile of one, or has such characteristics, then be proactive.  Get a credible expert to come to report or testify on your behalf to explain why a mental examination generally does not establish that a person did sexually abuse a child.  File a Daubert motion or some other motion to disqualify the expert that claims that his mental evaluation proves a person is the child’s sexual abuser.

But realize that even if you discredit the expert, some stain may still remain from the child abuse allegations.  Rarely will the accused come completely clear of the allegations barring the child or accusing parent admitting it was all false.  Winning primary or residential child custody will be difficult for the person accused of sexual abuse of a child.

Kurt H. King
Law Office of Kurt H. King
816.781.6000
20 E. Franklin
Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64024
http://www.kurthking.com

Bankruptcy, Child Custody and Support, Divorce and Modification, Family Law
Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

February 1, 2010

Setting Aside Paternity In Missouri

Filed under: Custody,Family Law,Paternity,Support — kurthking @ 4:26 pm
Tags: , , , ,

Couple things fathers may need to know about paternity cases in Missouri. A 2009 Missouri law, 210.854, lets fathers get a court order of DNA paternity testing even after a court says that a particular guy is the father of the child involved. Deadline to file is December 31, 2011, but after that date you have to file the petition to set aside the paternity judgment within 2 years of the date that established paternity. If you wait too long, you may be out of luck. Second thing to know is that the local Clay County, Missouri, court clerk requires that you know the child’s SSN to file the case. Some mother’s don’t want to tell a guy that he is the father and do not trust him with the child’s SSN.

This law is a good thing for a father who failed to request a paternity test.  That happens sometimes when a father does not understand the Missouri court rules, did not see the notice of his right to request a paternity test, or maybe simply was sure he was the father but now is not.

Kurt H. King
Law Office of Kurt H. King
816.781.6000
20 E. Franklin
Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068
http://www.kurthking.com

Bankruptcy, Child Custody and Support, Divorce and Modification, Family Law
Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

January 31, 2010

Welcome

Filed under: Welcome — kurthking @ 1:42 pm

Welcome to Kurt’s Take on Law.

Click on the recent posts or categories in the Sidebar to the right to see the blog posts.  Hope you find something new of value.  Enjoy!

Kurt is a licensed attorney in Kansas and Missouri and has been practicing law for over 30 years!  Stop by this blog to expand your mind on legal topics like family law, personal injury, bankruptcy, divorce, malpractice, workman’s comp, and much more!  Remember, knowledge is power!

IMPORTANT:  All the information on this Blog is general.  Law changes and what you read here may become out of date.   Nothing is meant to form an attorney-client relationship as the facts of each case differ and this information is not tailored to apply to any one reader.  You should contact me or another lawyer to determine what applies in your case.  This blog is simply to post information which may be of interest.

Kurt H King
Law Office of Kurt H. King
816.781.6000
20 E. Franklin
Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068
http://www.kurthking.com

Bankruptcy, Pesonal Injury,, Child Custody and Support, Divorce and Modification, Workers’ Compensation

www.kurthking.com

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