The practice of marking parked car tires with chalk has been common with enforcement officers since the 1920s. However, that practice could be coming to an end due to a recent Sixth Circuit decision.
May 29
The practice of marking parked car tires with chalk has been common with enforcement officers since the 1920s. However, that practice could be coming to an end due to a recent Sixth Circuit decision.
Of course, as a legal practitioner, it is always good practice to read a statute closely, learn it and follow its language. This lesson was reiterated recently in Mesa RHF Partners, LP v. City of Los Angeles (Ct. App. 2d, March 29, 2019).
In Mel R. Bravo v. RADC Enterprises, Inc., the parties executed a two-page arbitration agreement covering “all disputes” arising from their employment relationship. The agreement incorporated a choice-of-law provision which set forth: “This Agreement shall be governed by and shall be interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State of California.”