One case I have been meaning to write about for a few months is Dickerson v. Longoria, a recent opinion that I think is important for Maryland nursing home patients and their counsel.
The ultimate issue in Dickerson is whether a family member had the authority to bind a nursing home patient by agreeing to an arbitration clause. The Maryland Court of Appeals found that the relative did not.
But the larger issue is whether Maryland law allows the enforcement of a nursing home negligence arbitration agreement. I think it is hard to argue that a waiver signed at admission, even if signed by the patient, is a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of one of our most fundamental constitutional rights: the right to a jury trial.