We at the Washington County Law Library are pleased to announce the premiere of our newly redesigned website. We’ve reorganized our content and added some new navigation menus. A new navigation tab has been added for CLE information, and we organized our legal research resources into subject-area subsites (general resources, Oregon resources, subject guides, etc.). We’ve also added direct links from our home page to the library catalog and the subject guides page. One of the most exciting additions to the website (at least to us) is the document index, where we have compiled all of the documents available on the website. Another exciting new subsite is the Divorce/Family Law page, accessible through both our website and the county’s homepage (from the Key Services & Information menu). We invite you to explore the redesigned site and discover all our library has to offer.
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New Legal Research Guide – Collecting Judgments
Back in March, OregonLive.com ran a David vs. Goliath story on a man from Philadelphia who “foreclosed” on a Wells Fargo Home Mortgage branch. The man didn’t actually foreclose on the branch; he won a judgment against Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, resulting in a lien that would have led to a Sheriff’s sale of the branch’s contents. Judgment collection situations aren’t always that interesting, but we do get quite a few questions about judgments and how to actually collect on them. So, we recently added a new legal research guide on collecting judgments to the law library’s website.
For information on setting up a debt-collection business in Oregon, see Laura’s post from January 4, 2009.
Hot Coffee, the Movie: A Documentary Film
Oregon Nonprofits and the Law
Eight Rules of Implementing Court E-Filing Systems
Meeting of the Law Librarian Bloggers, AALL 2011, Philadelphia
Advice (from law students) for New Law Students
Update on Online Law Schools
Oregon Legislature May Increase Small Claims Court Jurisdictional Limit to $10,000
You can find this bill (HB 2710 B-engrossed, June 27, 2011) from the Legislature’s Measure Search or Bills website.
Legal minds will differ on this, but my informal tally so far shows that there are an awful lot of consumer-friendly lawyers worrying about this increase in jurisdictional amount from $7,500 to $10,000, without some corresponding court-managed small claims case preparation assistance made available (the way the courts provide family law assistance for self-represented litigants).