Among the many dumb things that were changed (not that there were any reasonable, good changes) was the names of the parties to a case from plaintiff and defendant to petitioner and respondent. Thanks to the power of public records requests, we discovered a little boo boo in the enactment.
S. B. 76-14 Enrolled With Signatures
See it, it's right there. Oh, too hard to see, well I'll quote it.
"Evidence that violates a petitioner's rights may not be submitted unless the respondent waives such rights."(Rule 4(l)(4)).
Under the original, not-nearly-as-messed-up document, the clause read
"Evidence that violates a defendant's rights may not be submitted unless the defendant waives such rights."Aside from, um, getting it wrong, a respondent can now waive the rights of a petitioner.
That's just one more gem from the 76th Session of the Senate, ladies and gentlemen. It's the gift that keeps on giving--that no one wanted in the first place.
No comments:
Post a Comment