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Georgia Court of Appeals reverses coal plant CO2 ruling

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

The Georgia Court of Appeals today reversed a landmark 2008 Fulton County Superior Court ruling regarding a proposed “clean coal” plant in southwest Georgia.

That ruling invalidated an air quality permit issued to Plant Longleaf in Early County because the state failed to place a limit on the facility’s carbon emissions.

UPDATE after the jump.

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Voter’s Guide update! We endorse Meyer von Bremen for Appeals Court

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Better late than never, we endorse state Sen. Michael Meyer von Bremen in the only contested Georgia Court of Appeals contest. See the rest of our Voter’s Guide and our Fulton and DeKalb Cheat Sheet.

In the Court of Appeals contest: While there are other strong candidates, Meyer von Bremen has proven himself as a fair and judicious public servant, and stands the best chance at turning over a religious right-winger’s attempt to win the seat.

Georgia Court of Appeals: The most important vote you may skip on Tuesday

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Perry McGuire has never argued before the Georgia Court of Appeals, is a harshly partisan politician running for a nonpartisan post, and was deemed in a State Bar poll of attorneys to be the least qualified in a field of seven candidates this year for an open seat on the Court of Appeals.

But McGuire’s likely to come in first after tomorrow’s vote. And, if he doesn’t win outright, he may be favored to win the seat in a Dec. 2 runoff. Unless you do something about it. (more…)

Orkin wins a round

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

A lawsuit against Atlanta’s home-grown termite control giant, Orkin, was dealt a serious setback earlier this month when the Court of Appeals of Georgia threw out class action status for the litigation.

A class action lawsuit allows a large number of people who have suffered similar injuries from the same company to band together and try their cases together. Former Gov. Roy Barnes and another lawyer in his firm, John Salter, had won class action status in August 2006. Their clients, Ernest and Dolores Warren, claim Orkin failed to abide by its contractual promises to reinspect and retreat their home, and that the company concealed termite damage. As in other states where Orkin is under legal attack, Barnes says thousands of Georgia homes and businesses have been cheated by the pest control company.

The appellate court reversed the 2006 ruling, deciding that each Orkin case would have to prove a separate set of circumstances, thereby making it ineligible for a class action. Barnes and Salter intend to appeal that decision to the Georgia Supreme Court.

At the heart of the disputes throughout the Southeast — where juries have awarded a number of big verdicts against Orkin, including one in Alabama for $81 million (later reduced by a judge) — are charges that the company knowingly did not keep its promises.

For example, Orkin had promised to reinspect homes each year. But, former employees testified that reinspection forms often contained forged customer signatures. One memo from Orkin executives that I disclosed in previous news accounts stated: “[T]here have been instances of fraud, theft and forgery in the company. … We are also seeing far too many instances … [of] finding customers being charged for services not rendered.”

For more on the Orkin lawsuits, read this and this.