Hmm...how did you get to the judge over the phone?
Judge sent both parties an email asking us to call him and we all had conference call . Court if Philadelphia.
DG
Wow, sounds like something new, phone e-mail, I wonder what's next?
Judge sent both parties an email asking us to call him and we all had conference call . Court if Philadelphia.
What if I want to hire a lawyer who is has been my lawyer since last 5 years but he lives in my country.
Got it sir. I also assume the court will be giving the defendant the right to defend himself....then that lawyer is likely to be familiar with the laws of your country, but not necessarily those of another country.
However, any court may admit an attorney on a _pro hac vice_ basis - i.e. for the purpose of that particular case, so long as that attorney associates with an attorney admitted to that court. For example, I have represented parties in New York, Florida, Utah, California, Maryland, and other places on that basis. The local counsel is responsible for making sure that the local procedural rules are followed.
I also assume the court will be giving the defendant the right to defend himself.
The fundamental elements of due process are Notice and Opportunity To Be Heard.
Now, what might constitute an adequate opportunity to be heard can depend on a lot of things. There are, of course, entire courses on the subject.
No, a court in the US will not fly you in from England to argue your case. However, the first stages of a lawsuit deal with preliminary motions that are conducted primarily on paper, and indeed courts permit telephonic appearance in some situations.
The first question, when sued in a remote forum, is whether the exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant in this court is appropriate. If I am in some remote location, but conducting business by means of the internet in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, or if my activities are somehow designed to target an entity in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, then yes, I can be sued there.
Mere accessibility of a website, however, is not enough to obtain jurisdiction over the operator of the website. But there is no one-size-fits all answer to the question of "Can someone in England be sued in Pennsylvania", because the answer is sometimes yes, and sometimes no.
Just as an update...justice has pervailed! :yes:
. But there is no one-size-fits all answer to the question of "Can someone in England be sued in Pennsylvania", because the answer is sometimes yes, and sometimes no.