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Report
From Counsel - Spring
2006 ISSUE:
WHERE
TO SUE? WEBSITES CAN AFFECT JURISDICTION
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS AND MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY
ADA PROTECTS EMPLOYEES WITH CANCER
SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER VERIFICATION
FOR EMPLOYERS
AEDS
HELP TREAT HEART ATTACKS . . .
NEW
401(K) INVESTMENT OPTION
LANDLORD/TENANT
- Winter
2005/2006 issue: An Introduction to College Savings
Plans; Golf Balls can be Trespassers; FLSA Overtime Update; "Pop-Ups"
Annoy But Don't Infringe; Junk Fax Protection Act; Contractor
Shielded from Liability; Do You Have Residences in More than
One State?
- Fall,
2005 issue: Careful!
New Rule Affects the Disposal of Credit Information;
Gifting as an Estate Planning Tool; Safeguards for
Electronic Banking; Retirement Guide for Small Businesses;
Protect Your Home with Title Insurance; Taster's Choice
Model Wins Big
- Summer,
2005 Issue: Business
Start-Up: Should You Be a Franchise Player?; Veterans' Benefits
Improve Act; Environmental Law Update; New Tax Deposit
Rules for Small Businesses; Family Limited Partnerships Draw
Irs Scrutiny
- Spring,
2005 issue and archives:
Real Estate Roundup; Pregnancy
Discrimination at Work; Minimize Your Risk of Identity
Theft; More Businesses
Eligible for C-EZ; Business Liable for Not Investigating Credit
Complaint; FDIC Insurance for Revocable Trusts
- Wills & Trusts
Seminars
- Legal
News
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WHERE
TO SUE? WEBSITES CAN AFFECT JURISDICTION
In a nation
of 50 different systems of state courts and a highly interconnected
national economy, the issue of when one state's courts can assert
jurisdiction over a nonresident person or business has always
been fertile ground for litigation. State legislatures have addressed
the matter with laws that are the civil counterparts to the notion
that criminals cannot escape the "long arm of the law." But "long-arm
statutes," as they are known, do have their limits. Essentially,
nonresidents can be sued in the courts of any state where they
have had such contacts inside the state that it is reasonable
to conclude that they have submitted themselves to the authority
of the courts in that state. The principle is vague, but it has
to be to cover the almost endless ways in which we conduct business.
In the business
world, conventional arguments over the application of long-arm
statutes have involved questions such as whether a party sought
to be sued had an office or personal representative in the forum
state, or whether a contract was signed by the parties in that
state. Those issues still arise, but in the information age,
courts increasingly have had to adapt the rules to business conducted
over the Internet. Just because a company's website is accessible
by customers in a given jurisdiction does not necessarily mean
that the company can be sued there. The emerging rule of law
is that the more that a customer can have online interactions
with a business based elsewhere, the more likely it is that if
things go wrong the business can be forced to play an "away game" in
court.
Close,
but No Cigar
Examples make
the point better than statements of rules of law. A Vermont furniture
store used a trucking company to deliver furniture to a customer
in North Carolina. When the buyer was injured during unloading,
he tried to sue the furniture company in a North Carolina court.
In this case, the "long arm" was not long enough to reach the
Vermont company. The furniture had been bought and paid for in
Vermont. The only respect in which the store had any connection
to North Carolina was that its website could be accessed there,
like anywhere else. But it was a passive site, giving information
about products, but not allowing purchases through the site.
When an Oklahoma
resident bought a laptop computer from a Georgia company, then
returned it for repairs, never to see the laptop again, he was
unable to sue the company in Oklahoma. The customer had learned
about the computer from the Georgia company's website, but he
had ordered it by telephone and had not used the website to make
the transaction.
Caught
by the "Long Arm of the Law"
At the other
end of the spectrum are cases in which businesses could be sued
in the states where their customers lived because the businesses
had a more substantial online "presence" in those states. A dog
breeder in Illinois could make a similar Oklahoma business defend
a lawsuit in Illinois because the Oklahoma business operated
an interactive website and also used chat rooms to reach potential
customers all over the country.
A California
customer of a hotel run by a Nevada casino was able to haul the
casino into a California court to defend allegations that it
had imposed an energy surcharge on customers without notice.
The plaintiff alleged that nothing in the casino's promotional
activities, including its website, informed customers of the
charge. It was important to the ruling that the casino used an
interactive website where out-of-state customers could get quotes
and book rooms. In addition, there was a close connection between
the alleged wrong--the misleading promotions--and the casino's
website that targeted millions of California residents.
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PROPERTY
TRANSFERS AND MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY
An applicant
for Medicaid may have eligibility for benefits delayed if he
or she has recently transferred real property to an individual
for less than the fair market value of the property. A penalty
period is imposed if the transfer took place during a span of
time known as the "look-back" period. This provision is meant
to prevent duplicitous gaming of the Medicaid system, but, as
a court recently noted, the provision does not justify viewing
every property transfer with skepticism and disapproval merely
because it precedes Medicaid eligibility.
In the case
before the court, a 67-year-old who suffered from Alzheimer's
disease and other ailments applied for Medicaid assistance. The
state agency that oversaw Medicaid rejected the application on
the ground that the applicant had transferred real property for
less than its value within the look-back period. The applicant,
in fact, had conveyed the home where she lived to her three children
as a gift, and the deed to the property was recorded shortly
before she applied for Medicaid.
Nonetheless,
the court overturned the agency decision because the agency had
not properly pegged the point in time when the property transfer
became effective as a matter of law. For various reasons, there
had been a lengthy delay in getting the executed deed recorded,
but the deed had been executed and delivered to the children
well before the look-back period began. The court favored a "benevolent" interpretation
of the family's well-intentioned but haphazard attempts to follow
up more promptly with recording the deed, rather than seeing
it as part of a scheme to delay the transfer until it was apparent
that the mother needed nursing home care and Medicaid money to
pay for it.
It is a well-settled
principle of property law that a transfer of real property is
complete upon the execution and delivery of a deed and its acceptance
by the recipient of the property, and nothing in the Medicaid
regulations contradicts that principle. In the case at hand,
there was no reason to suspect that the mother did not mean to
convey the property as soon as the deed was executed and delivered.
Since the transfer of the property was effective when the deed
was transferred, the transfer occurred outside the look-back
period and the applicant was eligible for Medicaid assistance.
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ADA
PROTECTS EMPLOYEES WITH CANCER
Now 15 years
old, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) protects disabled
persons from discrimination in employment settings. When you
first think of individuals with disabilities, the millions of
Americans who have some history of cancer may not immediately
come to mind. But, as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) discusses in a recently published guide, a cancer victim
may well be entitled to the protections afforded by the ADA.
Cancer
as a Disability
Cancer is a "disability" within
the meaning of the ADA when the cancer itself or its effects
substantially limit one or more of a person's major life activities.
The limiting condition needs to be more than just temporary in
nature. Just what constitutes a major life activity is difficult
to succinctly describe, but an exhaustive list would be a long
one. Interacting with others, sleeping, eating, and walking are
but a few examples. As with other types of conditions, cancer
will be treated as a disability if it does not, in fact, significantly
affect a major life activity but an employer treats the individual
as if it does. This reflects the ADA's goal of attacking
discriminatory stereotypes and assumptions when they motivate
an employer's decisionmaking.
Information
Gathering
During the
time period before any offer of employment has been made, an
employer may not ask an applicant if he or she has (or has had)
cancer, or about cancer-related treatments. The employer is permitted
to ask if an applicant can perform particular job requirements.
If an applicant has volunteered the information that he or she
has (or has had) cancer, the employer still may not question
the applicant about the cancer or the applicant's prognosis,
but the employer may ask questions about whether the applicant
will need an accommodation and, if so, what kind.
Once a job
offer has been made, the employer may ask health-related questions
and require a medical exam, as long as the employer treats all
applicants for the same type of position in the same manner.
The discovery that an applicant has (or has had) cancer cannot
be used to withdraw a job offer if the applicant can perform
safely all of a job's fundamental duties, with or without reasonable
accommodation. When an offer has been accepted, the employer
can ask questions about the employee's health or require a medical
exam only when it has a legitimate reason to believe that the
cancer may be affecting the employee's ability to do the job,
and to do it safely. With a few exceptions, an employer must
keep confidential any medical information learned about an applicant
or employee.
Reasonable
Accommodations
Within reason,
the ADA requires employers to make adjustments or accommodations
to enable people with disabilities to enjoy equal employment
opportunities. An employer is not required to subject itself
to undue hardship (that is, significant expense or difficulty)
in order to accommodate someone. Nor must an employer remove
an essential function from a job, although it may choose to do
so. As for cancer-related disabilities, some individuals may
need, and are entitled to, reasonable accommodations because
of the cancer itself, the effects of cancer medication and treatment,
or both. A request is necessary to trigger the duty to make a
reasonable accommodation, but no "magic words" are required and,
in fact, the request may come from someone acting on behalf of
the disabled person. The guidance is available on the EEOC's
website at www.eeoc.gov/facts/cancer.html.
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SOCIAL
SECURITY NUMBER VERIFICATION FOR EMPLOYERS
The Social
Security Number Verification Service (SSNVS), set up by the Social
Security Administration (SSA), allows employers to use the Internet
to match their records of employee names and Social Security
numbers with those of the Government's before preparing and submitting
W-2 forms. You can access the SSNVS at www.socialsecurity.gov/bso/bsowelcome.htm.
This is a faster and easier method to use than submitting requests
to the SSA by other means, including the telephone verification
option.
Verification
of data is important for both the employer and its employees.
Correct names and numbers are critical to successful processing
of wage reports, and unmatched records can cause additional processing
costs for the employer. From the employees' standpoint, verified
names and numbers allow the Government to properly credit employees'
earnings records. Any uncredited earnings can adversely affect
future eligibility for Social Security's retirement, disability,
and survivors programs.
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AEDS
HELP TREAT HEART ATTACKS . . .
But Can
Cause Legal Headaches
An automated
external defibrillator (AED) is used to treat people suffering
sudden cardiac arrest whose hearts have an irregular heartbeat.
Since September of 2004, when the Federal Food and Drug Administration
approved over-the-counter sales of AEDs, it has been possible
for individuals and businesses to have AEDs on hand, instead
of waiting for them to be brought by medical personnel.
The greater
availability of AEDs has been a mixed blessing from a legal standpoint.
Businesses most likely to put an AED to use (and what business
cannot foresee that a customer might have a heart attack on its
premises?) are now in the position of having to decide whether
they should have an AED at their facilities. If they do not,
there is a risk that a customer who needed an AED could cite
the failure as negligence in a lawsuit. That is the "damned if
you don't" part, but the rest of the saying may apply as well.
If a business--for
example, a fitness center--decides that it would be prudent to
have its own AED, it may be commended for preparing for an emergency,
but it also may have created a legal headache. Under the right
set of facts, the business could be liable for a range of acts
or omissions, such as not training its personnel to properly
use the AED, or even something as simple as not keeping fresh
batteries in the AED. There are already lawsuits in which such
allegations have been made, and court cases from the period before
over-the-counter sales began suggest that businesses can be held
liable if the AED is not kept in good working order or if the
use (or non-use) of the AED is especially negligent.
Businesses
with AEDs on premises should think in terms of having a comprehensive
AED program, not just the piece of equipment. With a view toward
quick and effective use of the AED, the program should include:
* good means
of communication about emergencies requiring an AED;
* training
of workers in the use of the AED;
* procedures
for regular checking and maintenance of the AED, and;
* storage of
the AED in an accessible location, identified by clear signs.
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NEW
401(K) INVESTMENT OPTION
As of January
1, 2006, employers are able to offer a new retirement savings
option, the Roth 401(k). The new account allows the features
of a Roth IRA to be incorporated into the setting of a 401(k)
account, but without the income restrictions that limit a Roth
IRA. Contributions will be made with after-tax dollars, but the
account will grow tax-free, and withdrawals taken in retirement
will also be tax-free, assuming an individual is at least 59-1/2
years old and has held the account for at least 5 years.
Roth 401(k)
accounts will be subject to the same contribution limits as regular
401(k)s. In 2006, this means a contribution limit of $15,000,
or $20,000 for individuals 50 and over. The contribution limits
apply to regular and Roth 401(k) plans combined, so, for example,
an individual could not put $15,000 in a regular 401(k) and $15,000
in a Roth 401(k). Still, the opportunity to put more money into
a retirement account that will have tax-free withdrawals will
be enhanced, given that in 2006 the contribution limits for a
regular Roth IRA will be $4,000, or $5,000 for those 50 or older.
If an employer matches the employee's contributions to a Roth
401(k), the matches will be made with pre-tax dollars in a regular
401(k) account that will be taxed as ordinary income at withdrawal.
Although it
is only now becoming available, the Roth 401(k) originated in
a big piece of tax legislation that was enacted in 2001, with
a sunset provision to take effect in 2010. Thus, it remains to
be seen whether over the long run the Roth 401(k) will be seen
as an option that was available in a small window of time, or
a permanent fixture in retirement planning.
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LANDLORD/TENANT
Insurer
May Sue Renter for Fire Damage
Unless there
is a contract or lease that provides otherwise, a tenant generally
is liable to a landlord for negligently damaging the landlord's
property, such as by accidentally starting a fire. But, depending
on the language in the landlord's fire insurance policy, the
tenant could end up defending himself against a powerful insurance
company rather than the landlord.
Many insurance
policies provide for subrogation, meaning that if the insurer
pays a claim from the landlord for losses due to a negligently
started fire, the rights of the landlord against the wrongdoer
are transferred to the insurance company. In effect, the insurance
company steps into the shoes of the landlord.
This scenario
played out in two recent cases that were consolidated because
of their similarity. In one case, a person renting a single-family
home caused a fire by leaving a flammable item unattended on
an electric stove. In the other case, an apartment tenant accidentally
started a fire with candles left burning in the bedroom. In both
instances, the insurers had subrogation clauses in the policies
taken out by the landlords.
Without success,
the tenants argued that they should be treated as co-insureds,
and therefore they should not be subject to a lawsuit by the
insurers. The court ruled that tenants may well have an insurable
interest in the leased premises, but they are on their own in
terms of liability, unless a contract provides otherwise. The
court reasoned that allowing an insurance company to sue a tenant
avoids a double recovery by the landlord (from the insurer and
the tenant), and it prevents culpable tenants from evading responsibility
for their conduct.
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