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Started Nov 27 2012, 16:41
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Nov 27 2012, 16:41
The plaintiff in a medical negligence case bears the burden of proof. The plaintiff has to establish his case by a preponderance of the evidence. For this purpose the plaintiff may need testimonies from experts, other witnesses, documents and reports that support his claim. All that the threshold of preponderance of evidence requires is that the plaintiff’s evidence should be more plausible that the defendant’s evidence. The reason is medical negligence cases come under civil litigation, where the parties do not need to establish their cases beyond reasonable doubt. But in criminal trials, the plaintiff must establish his care beyond reasonable doubts, which means the plaintiff must eliminate every single doubt that exist in favor of the defendant.
Peter 12253649
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Nov 29 2012, 03:57
The case includes a discussion of Michigan law regarding arbitration (Mich. ...
John Walsh, provides for the establishment of business courts with ... March 29,
2012 - Small Business Forum-Commercial Litigation Committee Seminar:
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