Episode Transcript
You're listening to bill Handle on Demand from KFI A M six forty.
Speaker 2This is handle on the law Marginal lea the advice where I tell you have absolutely no case.
Speaker 3Now that little.
Speaker 2Recycle symbol that you see on packaging milk cartons, for example, you're not going to see on milk cartons anymore.
It's the recycling symbol that's really coveted, and it has those you know, chasing arrows in that triangular shape, and it is now on its way out when it comes to milk cartons, which is probably one of the most recycled products that we have recycled packaging that exists.
Speaker 3There was a letter.
Speaker 2That Waste Management, one of the nation's largest waste companies, letters sent to California.
Speaker 3This is a California issue.
Speaker 2Waste Management sent to the state that it would no longer sort cartons out of the waste stream for recycling at the big facility as in Sacramento.
What it will do is send those milk packages, those milk cartons straight to the landfill.
Speaker 3Now that is a very big deal.
Speaker 2I mean, California is at the forefront of recycling, still is, and the way recycling works, it's all hand done.
Speaker 3It's all manual labor.
Speaker 2Out of the recycling bins that people put in front of the house is picked up by recycling trucks.
It's a separate bin that is then thrown into the center and conveyor belts pick it up and people just literally pick and choose.
They have to pick up the stuff that is recyclable and let the rest go.
That goes into a landfill, and then the recycling part of it goes to various companies, various organizations that use that recycled material.
Well used to be that milk was part of it, but it's just not being able to be recycled.
It really actually never was because of just how difficult it is because beverage and food cartons, despite the fact that they are paper, well they're really layers of paper and plastic and sometimes aluminum, and this blend extends shelf life, so it makes it really attractive for the manufacturers the companies, but it really can't be recycled.
And in California we're so crazy about recycling that.
Matter of fact, I literally have two of these recycling bins in my house.
One is general recycling and the other one is paper recycling.
Where I do cartons, because everybody now does Amazon and ships everything, so we have cartons up the inning.
So and it's waste management, by the way, the company that picks up my trash, and well it used to be and I drink milk.
So those days are done.
All right, Let's take some phone calls.
Marvin, Hello, Marvin, welcome.
Good more than yes.
Speaker 4And my problem is that I actually purchased two different batteries.
Speaker 3I came in and told them.
Speaker 4For my boat, and there were six vote batteries I turned in, and they inadvertently put twelve vote batteries in my cart I installed the twelve vote batteries, not knowing the difference, and it ended up burning up my motor.
I had two different mechanics come out and verified that that is what damaged my boat.
Speaker 3Okay, okay, fair enough, I'll buy that.
Speaker 2So let me ask you how much the motor burned out if you were to repair today or replaced it.
Speaker 3How much mone are you talking about?
Speaker 4Probably I think my bill was somewhere around twelve hundred dollars.
Speaker 2Okay, So now it being said you when you said they inadvertently, someone picked up a battery and put it in.
Speaker 3Your cart, correct, yes or no batteries in okay?
Speaker 2And then they wrote and then they replaced it in the cart that you pull the cart, you put it into the you went over to the auto repair place.
Speaker 3Right, that is correct?
Okay?
Speaker 4On the battery, all right?
Speaker 3And now all right they were confused, got it?
Now that gets interesting?
Speaker 2So now my question is you does it say pretty clearly twelve votes, twelve vote versus sixfold?
Speaker 5Oh?
Speaker 6Nowhere on it?
Speaker 2Oh, you can't even tell what's a twelve vote?
And what's a six volt?
Speaker 4Well, twelve vote has two openings to put water in, and I guess a six volt only has one.
Speaker 3That's what I oh?
Speaker 2And that is the wait a second, and that is the only difference.
There isn't any kind of label or anything.
Speaker 3What does What does the label say?
Speaker 5It?
Speaker 3Does it?
Does it even give the name of the battery?
Speaker 2Or is it just a battery that's a square battery with nothing on it except to a whole or two holes at the top.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's just a bigger battery.
It's bigger than a six foot I'm not arguing.
Speaker 3That is it.
Just let me ask you this.
Speaker 2It's just a black box with nose with basically this with nothing on.
It doesn't say battery, doesn't say the manufacturer, doesn't say the voltage, nothing, it's just a black box.
Yeah, this is a manufacturer, okay, but it doesn't say voltage.
Speaker 3It doesn't say voltage anywhere on.
Speaker 4There no not that I can ever see.
Speaker 3Wow, that's an interesting one.
Speaker 2I can't imagine that a battery wouldn't say somewhere with the voltage is okay, So what have you done about it?
Speaker 4Well, I went to them a month ago and uh he sets the information to his lawyers, who came back and says is not responsible.
Speaker 3Okay, that's all right, fair enough.
So you assue them.
Speaker 2So you take them a small claims court, and here's your argument.
You bring in you bring in the battery, and you say you're honored.
There's nothing here to indicate it's a twelve vote or a six volt at all.
It's it's there's no signage on it or there's no labeling it at all.
Speaker 3And the only difference is one hole versus two holes at the top.
Speaker 2And if the judge says you're right, there's no way to know which you know.
I mean, I can't imagine a manufacturer not putting even the voltage on a battery.
Speaker 3I mean that one got me on that one.
Speaker 2But should just argue if the judge buys you, they put in the wrong voltage, and they're going to say, well, this is what you asked for.
Okay, that's what they're gonna say, you asked for this battery.
You go, no, I didn't.
I asked for the other battery, and they go, no, you didn't, you asked for this one, and you I have to effectively prove on that or more so that what you say is the truth versus what they say, because it's easy for them to say, you asked for this battery, we put it in, and we put it in your cart.
Speaker 6Well goes, I need better.
Speaker 4On my receipt is a six vote battery, but they gave me a twelve vote battery.
Speaker 3Well that helps.
Speaker 2That helps, That helps, and that's part of your lawsuit.
You bring that into court.
So give that a shot.
Speaker 3That was kind of interesting.
Speaker 2Have you ever seen a battery that doesn't have any indication of what.
Speaker 3The voltage is?
Speaker 2Just basically a black box like a generic battery.
Speaker 3Go figure that one out.
Speaker 2This is handle on the law welcome back handle on the law marginal legal Advice.
Speaker 6Peter.
Speaker 3Hello, Peter, welcome to handle on the law.
Speaker 6Hey, how you doing?
Speaker 3What can I do?
Speaker 6Three part?
I had a three part question for you, if you don't mind.
First of all, I was involved in two automobile accidents twenty six days apart.
The insurance company rolled the first claim into the second claim and said it was all one claim.
I was insured for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars personal injury protection on each accident, as far as my policy said it specifically said to each accident.
After the accidents, they sent me a letter detailing that that I had the two hundred and fifty thousand dollars policy.
They capped me at two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 2Oh wait a sec hold on how bad?
Wait a minute, Peter?
How bad was this accident?
I mean, how badly was someone hurt?
Speaker 7Well?
Speaker 6I was.
I was struck both times.
I was not at fault either time, and I received the injuries I've had at one spinal fusion, Oh gumbo, Okay, I'm looking at another one in amar.
Speaker 2Okay, so you're the one that's banged up, all right, So two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
I mean, you've got some serious medical costs, all right.
So they're saying two fifty, you're saying five hundred thousand because it's two separate accidents.
Speaker 3Okay, And what is your question, Peter?
Speaker 6Can I go after them for breach of contract?
Speaker 8Now?
Speaker 2You can only go after them for the money.
You have a lawyer in this, of course I do.
Okay, you turn it over to your lawyer and go.
You figure it out, because, believe me, the lawyer is as motivated to get five hundred thousand dollars coverage as you are to get five hundred thousand.
If the lawyer isn't aggressively going after that insurance company.
I mean even to the point where he's willing to file a lawsuit against the insurance companies, not necessarily against the drivers who struck you, which of course they're going to do.
Speaker 3Uh, it's you've got the wrong attorney.
Speaker 6Well, I have a lawsuit against the driver that struck me.
Yeah you have to.
Yeah, it's gone to arbitration twice.
Two judges have told them to pay the policy they've denied to pay.
Speaker 2All right, trial, then you know what, there's nothing you do, Peter, you go to trial.
Yeah, your lawyer's gonna you've bought yourself a trial if that's the case.
Speaker 6So can I still go after the insurance company, Yeah.
Speaker 2You're going to go after you.
No, you're not going to go after the insurance company.
If it's their insurance company.
Uh, that's denying it.
Then you're suing the driver.
That's who you're suing.
And then they have to cover it.
And if they don't cover it, then it gets kind of interesting because I've never heard of an insurance of of a defendant losing the case and the insurance company saying we don't care, we're not going to pay it.
Speaker 3That is a breach.
Speaker 2I mean, they'd lose their license to do business in the state.
That's ignoring a court decision by a judge or a jury.
That's a judgment that has in fact been decided.
They just can't arbitragally do that because then you have insurance companies say, no, we're not going to cover it.
Now we're not, even though we're required by a lot of cover it.
Speaker 3No, we've just changed our minds.
Speaker 2Maybe every insurance company would do that all day long, and that's a violation of law and that's controlled by the insurance commissioner.
They'd lose their license to practice to sell insurance policies in a heartbeat.
Speaker 3So it's your lawyer tgles.
Speaker 6At all, it's my insurance company.
Speaker 2That it doesn't matter, It doesn't matter who you sue if it's well, your insurance company is not going to pay you unless you're declaring uninsured motors, which is not.
So you're just going to file a claim against your insurance company.
Speaker 3Now you've got to win against the drive.
Speaker 6Isn't my insurance company responsible for the personal injury protection?
Speaker 2Yeah, that's up to five thousand, that's probably up to five thousand dollars.
Speaker 6No, it's two hundred and fifty thousand.
Speaker 2On medical expenses.
It's under uninsured motors.
Under your uninsured motorists, you're responsible for two hundred and.
Speaker 6Fifty that's no, that's not uninsured motors.
That's personal injury protection.
This happened in the state of New Jersey.
Speaker 2Okay, it's a little complicated, But in the end, because I'm not familiar with the law of that, in the end, it's your lawyer that's going to end up suing the insurance company and saying it's five hundred thousand instead of two fifty.
Speaker 3It's that simple.
Speaker 2It's it's it's basically a trial.
You bought yourself a trial, and so you do it.
I'm assuming your lawyer is willing to do that work.
Speaker 6Well, yes, we're awaiting trial, okay, and then you're good.
Speaker 3Then you're good.
Speaker 6Against against the guy that hit me, but not with my insurance co.
Speaker 2Well, your insurance company is going to have to pay because you've got legitimate medical expenses unless they say you're you're at fault and we're not going to cover you.
But that's when you kick in where you pay me come hell or high water.
I haven't seen your policy, but I think that's what's going to end up happening.
That was a little complicated, and I hope I understood that correctly.
Speaker 3And there's a very good chance I didn't understand any of that.
Speaker 2Uh.
Speaker 3There you are, Sarah, Hello, Sarah, welcome.
Speaker 9Hellow clad is it trust?
I want to know how iron clad is it?
Trust?
Speaker 3Okay?
Speaker 2It depends on how will the trust is written.
Now, if the trust meets what the terms of the law, it's iron clad.
It's unless it is sloppily written, unless there are holes.
Speaker 3In it unless there are contradictions in it.
Speaker 2Yeah, so you just want to know how iron clad it depends on the trust.
Just what's the issue here, Sarah, what's the issue here?
Why are you asking?
Speaker 9Well, my mother dad recently interssed the houses to me and my husband, but my brothers and sisters are trying to get part of it.
Speaker 2Yeah, of course they do.
Yeah, that's Sarah.
That's always family.
And if the if the house was owned by the trust, and then I'm assuming that's that they met the rules of the trust.
Otherwise, if the house is not owned by the trust, then then then the trust isn't funded.
Speaker 3There's nothing there.
Speaker 2But let's say it was appropriately put into the trust, and in the trust it says it goes to you and your husband, and that's it.
Speaker 3That's ironclad.
Now, of course people are.
Speaker 2Going to go after it because that's what family does, because they always go after the money.
Speaker 3How much is the house worth, Sarah.
Speaker 9Oh, by eight hundred thousand, All right, Well.
Speaker 3That's enough to have family members go and attack it.
Speaker 2And here's what ends up happening virtually all of the time is if there is a trust that is an ironclad trust, as you put it in other words, properly written, properly funded, no holes in it.
It's just your basic good trust.
Then they go to an attorney, let's say a trust in, a state attorney, who will try to attack the trust.
If it is a good trust, no legitimate attorney will take it.
No legitimate trust and attorney trust in, a state attorney will take it.
The trust in a state attorney will tell the family members who are trying to get the money, hey, there's nothing here, Okay, this is legitimate.
Now there are a state attorneys trust and state attorneys that sue the trust just.
Speaker 3To negotiate and get nuisance value.
Speaker 2Hey give us one hundred thousand dollars when you sell the property and we'll go away right now.
And so I mean that is that's what happens.
That's typically what happens.
If it's a good trust, you should be okay.
And they may file as a lawsuit okay.
And if they do, what ends up happening.
If an attorney is dealing with them for contingency, they're going to get a percentage, which some lawyers do.
Speaker 3There send me no money for that attorney none.
The problem is to defend it.
Speaker 2The trust is going to have to spend some money.
Speaker 3Yeah, you chose you don't spend the money.
Yeah, I know you.
Speaker 2You don't spend You don't spend the money.
The trust does to defend itself trust, Yeah, well you have to find that out.
You got to find that out.
If the house is not in the trust, then it goes.
If the house is not in the trust, then it goes by way of a will had in the trust, then you're fined.
Then you should be okay and tell your family members to go pound sand.
Congratulations having those kind of family members.
Speaker 3This is handle on the Law.
Speaker 1You're listening to Bill Handle on Demand from KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2This is handle on the Law marginal legal advice where I tell you have absolutely no case.
Speaker 3James, Hello James, So, yeah.
Speaker 7Hi, I've got a I live in San Diego.
I got an orchard on my property where my house is fenced.
San Diego Gas and Electric contracts Davy Tree Service to do brush clearing around the poles.
I have two poles on the property.
I have or had a thirty year old Macadamian nut tree there that was a very very good tree, and they basically hacked it apart and left nothing, and so I wanted them to replace it.
The closest replacement I can find is about half the size.
It's also about eleven one thousand dollars.
And they're telling me they're not going to do anything about it.
Speaker 3Of course they're not.
Speaker 2They're saying they're not going to do anything about it.
You know, I mean, welcome to bureaucracies.
So this gets easy that they're responsible for it.
You first of all, you sue both the county or the city as well as the Tree Service.
Now you have to let the city know within six months that you are going to you make a claim instantly to the city for the value.
Speaker 7It's not the city, it's stg.
Speaker 3And it doesn't matter.
So it's still a quasei quasi.
Speaker 2Municipal.
It's considered a municipal authority.
So you're find you make a claim against them, they're going to say no.
You make a formal claim against them, and they're going to say no, and then you assue them.
Speaker 3That's it.
You assue them.
Speaker 2You see both the Tree Service and them, and you get a date and you're going to take it to court.
That's easy, and you go here.
It is all you have to do is if they did it.
No, I have to prove is the value of the tree?
Now they have to replace the tree and pay for it.
The problem is there's no way that you can replace it because there's no tree that size.
You can't buy a full grown, mature macadamia tree out there.
I'm assuming you can't.
Speaker 7No, you can't.
Okay, you can buy half size one in their very much sensive.
But what do I ask for?
I mean the planting will involve a tractor, and you know, yeah.
Speaker 3You ask for all of it.
You ask for all of it.
You ask for all of it.
You asked for all the planting.
Speaker 7I would have the problem.
Speaker 3Then, Yeah.
Speaker 2The problem is is that small claims court where you're going to go is ten thousand dollars.
Speaker 3That's all you gotta get.
Now, if you want to get.
Speaker 2The value of the tree, let them figure out that it's.
Speaker 3Well, let me ask you.
Let me go the take the other side.
Speaker 2Can you get a nursery to say the value of the tree was twenty thousand dollars?
Speaker 7Yes, I already have yes, Okay.
Speaker 3So that's your damage twenty thousand dollars.
That's it.
That's your damage.
Speaker 2Twenty thousand dollars and you want to leave alone when they say, hey, you can't get a tree, and the best you can only do is eleven thousand dollars, and that's what we're responsible for because it is physically impossible to replace that tree.
And you're gonna argue, that's a twenty thousand dollars tree, and I'm gonna get half of a tree, but you owe me the full amount, and the replacement has nothing to do with it.
Speaker 3And so you're.
Speaker 2Gonna get the cost of taking out the stump, the cost of buying the tree, bringing in the crane, because I had to replace an olive tree once.
God, those are expensive.
And it was the worst fault.
There was a leak going through underneath with some pipe and it just soaked everything.
And you can't have two years of soaking an olive tree a root without a going south.
But man, it was like the tree and it was big and it was ten thousand dollars and they take forever, and it took a crane and all of that, and so those are your damages.
Speaker 5Now.
Speaker 2Anything above ten thousand dollars, you either wave saying okay, I'm only ten, or if it's enough you have to go into Superior Court.
Speaker 3And you're gonna have and they're gonna have it.
Speaker 7Because I didn't want to go ahead, No, you go ahead.
Oh I'm sorry, That's what I was trying to avoid.
I'd rather just they take it.
Speaker 3Than sup for the ten.
Do it and then sue for the ten.
That's it, soup for ten thousand dollars.
Speaker 2And then you walk into court and you claim these are my damages and they're way over ten thousand dollars and that's your claim.
Speaker 7You sound like this will fly?
Or am I wasting my time?
Speaker 8No?
Speaker 2No, I think it's gonna fly.
You come in with enough proof.
I think you're gonna be okay.
You show them that they destroyed it.
You prove that, you show the uh what it's going to cost you to replace it.
Then you can just play a replace and it's only going to be half the size.
So already you've been damaged and it's going to cost the crane, et cetera.
And there your damages.
I mean, it's far greater than ten thousand dollars.
And I don't know what they're gonna say, we didn't do it.
Speaker 3It isn't eleven thousand dollars to place a tree.
Okay, I don't know what their.
Speaker 7Defense is, all right, and this was like a month and a half ago.
Speaker 2It's you've got, you've got, You've got a couple of years.
Speaker 3You have a couple of years to do it.
So I wouldn't worry about that, Dan or Dean, Hello, Dean, welcome.
Speaker 9Hi Bill.
Speaker 5A dog bite case where the dog bit me on the face, okay, And I went yeah, and I went through your network and they referred me to the lawyers.
This all happened in Pennsylvania, and so I got a hold of a lawyer there and through all the month found out that, well, the owner who's renting his house does not have homeowners insurance or rental insurance.
Speaker 6Yeah, okay, So the.
Speaker 5Lawyer's thinking that we don't, we can't get any recovery.
Speaker 3Out of it, right, But I can see that.
Speaker 5What's your question, Well, the question is I was basically on the job but not being paid because it was a truck driving job where you get a mentor to show you the ropes on the road.
And so we stopped by his house to visit his family and then continue on with our arm work.
So I wasn't on the clock, but the company I work for refuses to even acknowledge any connection because it.
Speaker 3Was okay, well here you know, and I can see that.
Speaker 2I can see the company saying, okay, you were on the job, but then you stopped and you went to visit you know someone and not.
But then again, let's say you're going to lunch and you say, hey, I'm not entitled to lunch, and therefore I'm not on the clock.
Speaker 3So I can see both sides.
Speaker 2I would argue that the company is responsible, but no lawyer is going to take personal injury.
Lawyers probably aren't going to take that because that's a work comp case.
If you were a bit now you can sue the dog owner, Okay, that you can do, But there's no insurance there, right, and so where is the lawyer going to make the money?
Speaker 3True?
Speaker 2And that's the problem you have.
So uh, if there is no insurance on that side, all you have is against the company.
And you want to talk to a work comp attorney in uh?
In uh?
Speaker 3Where was this Pennsylvania?
Speaker 5Pennsylvania?
Speaker 3Yeah, you want to.
Speaker 2Talk to work comp attorney in Pennsylvania.
That's who you have to talk to, not a personal injury lawyer.
So at this point, because of that, yeah, you're you're with the wrong lawyer.
I mean, the lawyer looked and he says, there's no money there, thank you.
Speaker 5Yeah, low hanging Yeah, it's.
Speaker 3Not even low hanging fruit, Dean.
It's not even a question of low hanging fruit.
Speaker 2Let's say you're a contractor, right and the customer has no money?
Speaker 3Are you going to do the work?
Speaker 9No?
Speaker 2Exactly, And low hanging fruit means wow, You'll get all the jobs you want for no money.
So it's a work comcase, is what it is.
This is handle on the law.
This is handle on the law.
Marginal legal advice.
Hello David, welcome.
Speaker 10Yes, sir, I've got I've lived on a tennaker farm and I've lived there since nineteen eighty one.
And it was my great aunt and uncles and they the last one died in nineteen seventy seven.
On the indeed, it does have my mom's name.
She had a brother and a sister, and I have lived there since nineteen eighty one.
Speaker 11I've played all the property tax I've taken care of the property, taken care of the house, or models the house, updated it several times.
Can I take this project court.
Speaker 3Well, hold on, hang on, I'm assuming there's no will.
Speaker 5I mean, you're where are you, David, I'm in Tennessee.
Speaker 3Got it a wall a shocker.
Speaker 2I never would have guessed because you sound like you're from the East coast with a hobbed accent.
Okay, all right, so uh there is no will?
Is that correct?
Speaker 10Correct?
Speaker 3Okay?
Speaker 2And now are you the only child or do you how are their other kids?
Speaker 11I've got a brother, but he's willing to I've lived there so long he.
Speaker 10Has no answers to it.
Speaker 2Good for him, by the way, Good for him because he's being at the goal because he has a right to half of it.
I'm assuming that Tennessee law is the same as it is out here, because virtually inheritance laws are the same.
And what happens is parents die, Okay, the last owner of the house dies.
Then it goes down.
It goes by way of intestacy.
No will, first kids, well, first surviving spouse and kids.
That's the way it is in California, and you can look it up.
If there is no surviving spouse, then it goes down to the children, not the uncle, not the brothers, The kids and so it should be.
I mean, you definitely want to get a probate attorney because you want to transfer the property to actually both you and your brother, and at the same time, your brother transfers his portion to you, so you own the property.
I would do the same thing, by the way, if you're my brother and you've paid it for it for a bunch of years, and you've maintained it and effectively you did all the work, you know, I would ethically say no, actually I would, and David, I'd go half of my house.
Speaker 3You'd go pound sand Yeah, but that's me.
Speaker 2In the meantime, you should be okay, but you can call a I'd call a probate attorney and just asked that question.
I think you're going to be fine.
And then the procedure is you've got to transfer the property into your name, because right now it's your who was the last surviving spouse, your mom or your dad.
Speaker 3I forgot.
Speaker 11My mom died.
Speaker 5Seven years ago, okay.
Speaker 3And your dad had already died.
Speaker 11Yes, he died twenty years ago.
Speaker 2Okay, So the property reverted her.
You know, the property could still be in both their names.
You pull title, and I wouldn't be surprised if the property was not in your mom and dad's name, because I'm sure your mom just lived there.
No one is going to try to kick her out, and then when she dies, you move in.
You're paying the taxes, so certainly the county, the state doesn't care.
I mean, as long as it's being paid.
I mean, it's up to you to do the transfer.
They don't give a damn as long as and if there's a mortgage, as long as a mortgage company is being paid.
Speaker 3So it's up to you to do the transfer.
Speaker 2And that's easy, and you may want to go to a probate attorney, but it's not going to cost you very much.
I mean, you and your brother owned the property, and your brother's willing to give it to you.
Speaker 3You're going to be fine, okay, all right?
Speaker 2And if you have and if uncle and cousins wherever go after it, you know what, you tell them to go pound sand.
And you guys all have shotguns down there anyways, don't you.
Speaker 3Of course you do.
That's Tennessee.
You know they go hunting for squirrels and whatever the hell else they do down there.
Hey, Lucy, you welcome to handle on the law.
Speaker 5Yes.
Speaker 2So.
Speaker 8Twenty five years ago I worked as a tutor in a school district.
One of my assignments was to help a group of students developed stories, do their own illustrations and book covers, et cetera.
These stories were submitted to the district for a story writing competition.
One of the stories one first place, and it was display all over the district.
About two to three years later, the story was replicated in a movie, same storyline, even the same name.
We have never received any royal story a king.
Speaker 3All right, Lucy, Now, students wrote this or did you write it?
Speaker 6Wrote?
Speaker 8No, I helped the student develop the story.
Speaker 3And how do you prove that.
Speaker 2How do you prove that, five years ago you help the student develop the story.
Speaker 3How do you prove that?
Speaker 8Well, I was in the group and she won first place.
Speaker 3I understand, No, I understand.
Speaker 2How do you prove that it was you developed the story with her that you're entitled to at least half of the royalties if there were any How do you prove that?
Speaker 8She would have to testify that that's what happened.
Speaker 3That's correct.
Speaker 2Now, you would have to say it was Lucy who came up with the idea.
Speaker 3Thirty years ago.
Speaker 2And why didn't you file a lawsuit two years after the fact.
Why did you file a lawsuit twenty eight years ago when it was made into a movie.
Speaker 8Because I didn't understand, I didn't know nothing about the law.
Speaker 3Was very nice, Lucy.
Perhaps, Yeah, Lucy, it doesn't work that way.
Speaker 2First of all, proving that it was your idea, proving that it was only your idea, or you worked with her and there couldn't be anybody else.
I was, for example, Apple, the rights bought by the movie company.
Did anybody receive royalties?
Probably not.
So they came up with this movie.
They're gonna say, we came up with this independently.
Uh, it is is word for word?
Is how how general the idea is?
Or is it specific?
I mean really specific?
Speaker 3Where you can argue they took on idea.
Speaker 8Mister handle if you saw the story and the movie and compare them, they're almost identical.
Speaker 3Yeah, but you can't.
Speaker 2But Lucy, you can't prove that even was your idea.
Speaker 8The STUDI, even if I don't get any royalties, is the is the student entitled I've lost No?
Speaker 3No?
Speaker 2Not it was a published work.
No, Now that doesn't work.
Speaker 3That way.
Speaker 2I mean, I've had plenty of ideas that have turned into movies and I can't install that.
Speaker 3Uh, that doesn't that doesn't work.
Speaker 2All right, Before we take a break, let me tell you about handle on the Law dot Com.
As I tell people, when you do need a lawyer, and you don't have to pay for a lawyer.
In personal injury cases, it's always contingency, which means that any money that is either settled or goes to court, that goes to you, the lawyer merely takes a percentage of.
And there are a lot of lawyers out there that specialize that do personal injury.
I mean, look at those billboards out there, listen to the commercials here on KFI, look at the print ads.
Well, how do you know which ones are good?
I mean, you don't, bottom line.
And so this is why I created handle on the Law dot Com.
Some of them, by the way, are excellent, but you don't know.
Handle on the Law dot Com is a referral service that tells you about lawyers who are good and they are vetted, and if there's a problem, I make the phone call to the lawyer.
So that's why I'm suggesting if you've been injured, either in a car accident, a motorcycle accident, maybe a slip and fall, and it's not your fault.
Let me suggest you contact Handle on the law dot com.
Handle on the law dot com.
This is Handle on the Law.
You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show.
Catch my show Monday through Friday, six am to nine am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
