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Action

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Wednesday Review/Preview - ESPN
espn.go.com
Wednesday Review/Preview - ESPN
Thu, 29 Jul 2010 07:23:10 GMT+00:00
espn lucas Gilman/ESPN Action Sports Adam Taylor, en route to third place in Big Air Elims. Last year's Skate Big Air top three receive automatic ...
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Thu Jul 29 04:33:42 2010
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Mon Jul 26 12:34:17 2010
 Action : South Florida gambling | Sun-Sentinel Blogs | Hard Rock ...
blogs.trb.com
Action : South Florida gambling | Sun-Sentinel Blogs | Hard Rock ...

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Fri, 30 Jul 2010 16:50:59 GM

Schaffel, who also has played some recently at the Isle Casino & Racing, said the . action. was about right for a player like him, but he thinks the Mizrachis would like games with even bigger stakes. He also was surprised that there have ...

Google Blogs Search: action,
Fri Jul 30 23:22:22 2010
What is the approriate form cause of action against an insurance company that won't indemnify a defendant?
Q. A defendant is being sued in federal court and contends that his insurance company should be paying for the litigation as well as any potential award. What is the approriate action against the insurance company? Do you file an interpleader action to join the insurance company to the existing case, do you seek a declaratory judgment against the insurer in a separate action, or is there a third option I'm not considering?
Asked by Rob - Fri Oct 12 10:51:12 2007 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments

A. It depends - are you the plaintiff or the defendant? I assume you are the defendant. You cannot file an interpleader - that would only be the option for a third person/entity who is not currently a party to the lawsuit and wants to be a party to the lawsuit. You have two options: 1. File a complaint for breach of contract and declaratory relief (and ask for the two actions to be consolidated); OR 2. File a cross-complaint for breach of contract (you have a contract with the insurance company) and declaratory relief. In either option, you have to determine whether there is diversity of citizenship between the parties (everyone is a citizen of a different state and for the insurance company - its place of incorporation or principal… [cont.]
Answered by Princess Leia - Sat Oct 13 20:49:35 2007

Yahoo Answers Search: action,
Fri Jul 30 16:24:53 2010