Re: America, land of the....sued
I suspect there was more to this. For example, calling the company a mafia style criminal organisation in a submission, or accusing the court of favouring the company. Outrage à la cour is roughly contempt of court, I think...
Well, odd cases... here we had a state liabilty case against a local government. Guy files for a building permit on a hill, gets it, but the hill is unstable and the house gets destroyed in a landslide. The local government's permit was unlawful (that's clear), and the guy got compensation (which is far from clear and caused cries about getting american "Zustände" here...)
Originally posted by Spectator
Here in Canada a women tried the same thing. She tried to sue Imperial tabacco because she could'nt stop smoking. The Juge condemned her to 2 month in jail for (sorry I only know the legal terms in french) waste of time for the court (outrage a la cour) and bashing the reputation of Imperial Tabacco (atteinte a la réputation).
Here in Canada a women tried the same thing. She tried to sue Imperial tabacco because she could'nt stop smoking. The Juge condemned her to 2 month in jail for (sorry I only know the legal terms in french) waste of time for the court (outrage a la cour) and bashing the reputation of Imperial Tabacco (atteinte a la réputation).
Well, odd cases... here we had a state liabilty case against a local government. Guy files for a building permit on a hill, gets it, but the hill is unstable and the house gets destroyed in a landslide. The local government's permit was unlawful (that's clear), and the guy got compensation (which is far from clear and caused cries about getting american "Zustände" here...)
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