TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 27, 2022
News Type: Your Career

Ballad Health, an integrated healthcare system headquartered in Johnson City, is now accepting applications for its next executive vice president, general counsel and secretary of the board. The general counsel will serve as a legal advisor to Ballad Health's Leadership Team and Board of Directors, provide legal insight with respect to the strategic direction of the organization and participate in a wide range of projects where legal, regulatory and compliance knowledge is needed. The position will also provide guidance on all legal initiatives, corporate and commercial transactions, litigation, intellectual property and more. Learn more about the job and how to apply on the TBA’s JobLink site or browse all available job openings.   

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 23, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

Davidson County lawyer John Martin Drake was today reinstated to the active practice of law by the Tennessee Supreme Court. However, the court conditioned his reinstatement on him serving two years on probation during which time he must complete five addition hours of continuing legal education and engage a mentor in his area of practice. The mentor must report to the Board of Professional Responsibility every six months. Drake had been suspended on April 28, 2017, for two years. He filed a petition for reinstatement in March and a hearing panel found his petition to be satisfactory.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 23, 2022
News Type: Legal News

A Middle Tennessee State University professor is suing state Rep. Jeremy Faison, R-Cosby, after Faison blocked him on Facebook, WPLN reports. MTSU adjunct professor Dean Fox argues that being denied access from an elected official’s account violates his First Amendment right to speak freely in a public forum. Fox and Faison earlier this month exchanged words on the social media platform, resulting in the lawmaker deleting comments he had written to Fox and blocking the professor from his page. His attorneys are asking that Faison unblock Fox and stop him from deleting Fox's comments. 

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 23, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Former Administrative Office of the Courts Director Deborah Taylor Tate was recently honored with the 2022 Friend of the Conference Award from the Tennessee General Sessions Judges Conference. Hamilton County Judge Alex McVeagh presented Tate with the award, commending her “passion and care” for the work she has done to help those with mental illness and substance abuse issues in the state. Tate expressed how much the award meant to her and turned praise back on the event’s attendees for their work during the COVID-19 pandemic. The AOC has more on the story.  

Posted by: Kate Prince & Stacey Shrader Joslin on Sep 23, 2022
News Type: Upcoming

The Tennessee Department of Revenue will host a free webinar on Tuesday at 9 a.m. CDT to discuss out-of-state companies and nexus in Tennessee. Participants will learn about sales tax, business tax and Tennessee’s franchise and excise taxes. Register for the program here.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 22, 2022

In a first step to remove Shelby County Clerk Wanda Halbert, State Rep. Mark White, R-Memphis, says he will soon file a bill that would make it easier to trigger a recall election, the Commercial Appeal reports. Halbert, who was elected in August with 49% of the vote, has recently been criticized for a months-long backlog in the mailing of license plates, which she now says has been resolved. To deal with that backlog, Halbert closed the clerk’s office for two weeks. She faced further backlash after making a trip to Jamiaca during the first week’s closure. “Citizens of all community deserve the best from their elected officials,” White said in a news release. “The issues that have plagued the Shelby County Clerk’s Office are simply unacceptable. The bill would reduce the number of signatures needed for a recall election and would require a county legislative body to pass a resolution of no confidence of the officer at center of the recall election. According to the Daily Memphian, Halbert says she shouldn’t be subject to a modified state recall election bill because she is a whistleblower.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: Upcoming

YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee will host a Stand Against Injustice Lunch and Learn on Sept. 29 from noon until 1 p.m. CDT. The free webinar will focus on the school to prison pipeline and will feature a group of panelists who are working for social change in our communities. The panel includes YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee President and CEO Sharon K. Roberson, Davidson County Juvenile Court Judge Sheila Calloway, Disability Rights Tennessee Child & Youth Advocate Johnnie Hatten and The Education Trust in Tennessee's Reginald Nash. Register here.  

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The law license of Richard Hovey Dinkins was yesterday transferred to disability inactive status by the Tennessee Supreme Court. Dinkins cannot practice law while on disability inactive status and shall comply with the requirements of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 9, Sections 28 regarding the obligations and responsibilities of attorneys transferred to disability inactive status. To be reinstated, he must show the court his disability has been removed.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 21, 2022
News Type: Legal News

California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sunday signed a bill requiring legislative approval for regulatory sandbox spending, the ABA Journal reports. The legislation will limit proposals from the State Bar of California to explore law firm ownership by nonlawyers and allow paralegals to perform certain legal services. The new law also requires the bar to report how much it spent on a 2018 study on online legal services and delivery. Following the study, a bar-appointed task force released a report that recommended allowing qualified non-legal professionals to provide legal services under certain conditions and eliminating prohibitions against fee splitting and non-lawyer ownership of law firms. Chairs of California’s Senate and Assembly Judiciary committees criticized the proposals and raised concern about corporate interests and loosening prohibitions on non-lawyers owning law firms. California is one of the few states exploring attorney regulation changes.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 21, 2022
News Type: Legal News

A woman who police now believe was raped last year by the man accused of killing Eliza Fletcher has filed suit against the Memphis Police Department for failing to properly investigate her case, the Daily Memphian reports. Alicia Franklin says in the lawsuit that if her September 2021 assault had been taken more seriously, Fletcher’s abduction and murder could have been prevented. The suit names the City of Memphis as the sole defendant and seeks an unspecified amount of compensation for pain and suffering and other damages. “I was just an average Black girl in the city of Memphis, you know,” said Franklin, who allowed her identity to be published. “I just think it wasn’t a priority.”


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