Monthly Archives: January 2006

Two Real-Life Stories about Leases

Yesterday was lease story day. First I went down to this wonderful luggage store in Kendall that I’ve been going to for many years (a bag needed repair after being very badly abused by an airline) and discovered it was closing. Why? The shop next door in the mall’s lease is up, and has threatened to leave unless they can have his space. The luggage shop has seven years left on his lease. But it seems the mall management inserted a clause into his lease at last year’s renewal that gives the mall the right to unilaterally relocate the store to other, much less desirable (no foot traffic), areas — perhaps because they knew this demand was coming. The luggage shop owner, who says he trusted the family who runs the mall, had been doing business with them for more than a decade, didn’t notice this when he signed the renewal. He says he’s moved before to help them out — but only within the covered part of the small mall, not to the wasteland of the far side, where no one ever goes.

So he went to a lawyer. The lawyer told him he had a slam-dunk case, was certain to win, and charged him $7,000 plus filing fees to file suit against the mall. But after the first meeting with the other side’s lawyer, and after cashing the first check, the lawyer warned him that — although he still thought they would win — it would cost $100,000 to $200,000 to litigate to the end (a price that strikes me as absurdly high for anything except the very biggest firm litigation). The shop owner decided he couldn’t afford it, and is angry he wasn’t warned about the huge possible total cost in advance. (I wonder if the lawyer was lying: could it be that he decided he was going to lose the case after all?). He’s not real happy about closing. ‘It’s corporate America in the age of globalization,’ he sighed. (OK, he’s a luggage guy, not a political scientist.) “It’s a change in life; who knows what the next chapter will bring.”

It’s surprising how disturbing this is: both that an infrequently visited specialist shop I trusted — they may not have had the lowest prices on the planet, but they had nice stuff at reasonable discounts, and if they said it would last, it would last — is closing, and that a nice guy got done dirty by the legal system — in a way that’s so obviously painful. That to some extent it’s his own fault for trustingly not reading the fine print doesn’t help much; it might make it worse. I added my email to the list in the shop to be notified if they open up again somewhere else; I hope they do.

Later that afternoon, we encounter another similar lost-your-lease story. We’re at a street fair in South Miami (this is the magical time of year in south Florida when it’s very nice out, like spring or fall in normal places, and we have two or three outdoor fairs every weekend). I want to show the family the amusing menu at the new Zen Dog hotdog store that only opened a few weeks ago. Although I haven’t eaten there, I think the menu is amusing, and was thinking we might take the kids some day. But it’s closed. The windows are papered over. The folks at the shop next door explain that neighboring bank, which owns the land, was planning to build a bunch of town homes on a parcel that includes the shop, and stretches back for two blocks. So they evicted the new Zen Dogs, exercising a development right in the lease that the bank’s VP had orally assured the tenants was “just a formality” and could never happen. (It gets better: the bank recenlty dropped the project due to increased construction costs after hurricane Wilma.)

Law on the ground, as in the books: the parole evidence rule rules. (Landlords are not fiduciaries.)

Posted in Law: Everything Else | 4 Comments

Hamachi Sounds Great, I Think

Lifehacker points out Hamachi,

Free software Hamachi lets you create a quick, simple, and secure virtual network between any two or more computers with a connection to the Internet.

This sounds wonderful, even better than young Yellowtail tuna sushi, except for two little things:

  1. I’d have to trust they guys running it to do what they said, otherwise they’d have a huge tunnel right into all my files. And I have no idea who they are.
  2. Plus, if they messed up the coding, and there’s a side door somewhere, everyone has a huge tunnel right into my files.

Do I dare?

(answer below the fold)

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Posted in Internet | 2 Comments

Kennedy Sets Out the Alito ‘Credibility’ Case

I mentioned before that the anti-Alito case would have three legs: Roe/women’s issues, “he’ll say anything to get a job,” and life-long spear-carrier for the imperial presidency.

Now Senator Kennedy sets out the case on the second issue: Alito’s Credibility Problem. And of course links it cleverly to the other two issues as well.

Posted in Law: The Supremes | 4 Comments

Padilla’s Family, Visiting Rules & Photos

The Miami Herald has a writeup of yesterday’s Padilla hearing; the only part of it new to me was the information that Padilla has family in Broward County, which is the county just north of Miami-Dade, and only a short drive from here. In the ordinary case that would strengthen the argument for bail. But maybe not for someone who the government wants to portray as the most dangerous man in America?

The print edition, but not alas the online version, has a picture of Padilla’s mother, who attended the hearing but sensibly didn’t speak to reporters. Looking for an online version of the photo led me to an interesting MS-NBC article from 2002 that describes Padilla’s uber-dysfunctional family background, although it’s not exactly neutral in tone (it starts out trying to explain “Padilla’s malevolent streak”).

Meanwhile, if Padilla does not get bail, he’ll presumably be kept in Miami’s “special housing unit”. The visiting rules for this facility are, I think, here and here.

Wire service images included below (since I’m just including not copying these pictures, some may be only temporary).

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The Posada Carriles Case Flies Under the Radar

A reader writes:

Miami Herald reports (only in their Spanish language edition) on 1/4/2006 that Posada Carriles is perhaps soon to be released from detention by US Immigration, with no action taken by the Justice Department on the extradition requests by Venezuela.

There has been no known English-language coverage in the US!

One of the Venezuelan lawyers has commented publicly following the Herald’s quiet report.

This isn’t a case I’ve followed beyond reading the accounts in the local papers, so I’m afraid I don’t feel very well informed about it. But given that there indeed don’t seem to have been many reports about recent developments in the English language press (outside of the Cuban media, which doesn’t really count for these purposes), it seemed worth mentioning.

Posted in Law: Criminal Law | 5 Comments

Padilla Hearing to Go To Third Round

David Marcus has the account of today’s Padilla hearing. The bottom line is that not much happened, and everyone is coming back on TuesdayThursday morning for best of three, in which Padilla will enter a plea and the Magistrate Judge will presumably rule on bail. (The US asked he be held without bail, no surprise there.)

There was one odd thing, though. As the Magistrate Judge prepared to appoint the Public Defender’s office as lead counsel, with Padilla’s current attorney (who’s not a member of the Florida bar) as co-counsel, the US Attorney’s office objected:

AUSA Stephanie Pell then told the Judge that there was a potential conflict with the Miami office accepting the appointment. [Chief Assistant Federal Defender Michael] Caruso said that his office has reviewed everything and that he could say “without equivocation” that there was no conflict. Garber took the matter up at sidebar and after conferring, he kept the Miami Defenders as lead counsel.

They’re playing hardball alright, but what on earth could they have been talking about?

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