Law School

The Law Office of John R. Nelson, P.A.

In 2013 had a dream of attending law school. More importantly, I wanted to be a lawyer by the time I turned 50 – August 12, 2017. I applied to a number of schools and was accepted at all but one. However, my applications were driven by my ability to commute, work, and manage my family.

Finally, I finished law school, right near the top of my class. And, I passed the Bar exam.

At first, I did not practice law. However, in the spring of 2018, I went to work with a law school friend and found myself learning estates, trusts, and probate. I also started studying for the patent bar.

Today, I own my law firm and practice as “Of Counsel” in New Smyrna Beach. I handle patents, copyrights, trademarks, bankruptcy, estates, wills, and probate. I can be found at 418 Canal Street, New Smyrna Beach, FL 32168. I can be reached via phone at 386-256-8537.

Remove DRM from Kindle Books

I recently found myself in a bind for law school – I have to read 150 pages by Monday of a novel for a class.  I was driving to Georgia over the weekend and realized 8 hours in the car would be perfect.  However, I struggled to get the book I needed downloaded and converted.  I have a Windows machine but am a Linux user.  I needed to get the Kindle de-DRM functions working in Linux so I could listen to the book I purchased.  By the way – I now own the paperback ($14), the Barnes and Noble version ($12.99) and the Kinde version ($12.99).  I have $42 invested and feel ensuring I can listen to this book is well justified.

The following instructions are for Calibre and Linux.

Linux.
1) Install Calibre.  Choose software updater in Linux and install Calibre.
a) Open Calibre and ensure all looks OK.
2)  Go to Alf’s Apprentice Blog and download the latest DRM tools
a) Download the zip file and unzip it.
3) Install Wine on the Linux machine —https://wiki.winehq.org/Ubuntu
a) If your system is 64 bit, enable 32 bit architecture (if you haven’t already):
sudo dpkg –add-architecture i386
a) add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-wine/ppa
b) apt-get update
c) apt-get install wine1.7
d) Launch Wine Configuration
e) Follow the prompts: Wine configuration setup will ask to install the missing Wine dependencies in order to complete its setup to configure wine on the system. Most probably it requires wine Gecko installer and wine Mono installer.
f) Run “Configure Wine”, which will set up the default ‘wineprefix’
5) Run winetricks, select the default wineprefix and install component vcrun2008
6) Follow the following Linux instructions below:
——————————————————————————————–
Download all of the following to a folder
a) Download Kindle for PC
b) Adobe Digital Editions 1.7.x from http://helpx.adobe.com/digital-editions/kb/cant-install-digital-editions.html.  (Adobe Digital Editions 2.x doesn’t work with Wine.)
c) ActivePython 2.7.X for Windows (x86) from http://www.activestate.com/activepython/downloads
d) PyCrypto 2.1 for 32bit Windows and Python 2.7 from http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/modules.shtml#pycrypto (PyCrypto downloads as a zip file. You will need to unzip it.)
7) Run the mis-named “Uninstall Wine Software”, which also allows installation of software.
 a) Install Kindle for PC. Accept all defaults and register with your Amazon Account.
 b) Install Adobe Digital Editions. Accept all defaults and register with your Adobe ID.
 c) Install ActiveState Python 2.7.x. Accept all defaults.
 d) Install PyCrypto 2.1. Accept all defaults.
8) Don’t do anything yet — we did the easy part.  Now we need to run the script to get the Kindle Key
Hidden away in the Help button of the keys under customize plug is this information.
a) Open Calibre
b) ChoosevPreference
c) Choose Plugins
d) Choose File Type Plugins
e) Choose DRM —
f) Click Customize Plugins and click help to see this text:
First, choose Preferences, then plugins.  Click File Input,
Linux Systems Only
Generating decryption keys for Adobe Digital Editions and Kindle for PC. If you install Kindle for PC and/or Adobe Digital Editions in Wine, you will be able to download DRMed ebooks to them under Wine. To be able to remove the DRM, you will need to generate key files and add them in the plugin’s customisation dialogs.

To generate the key files you will need to install Python and PyCrypto under the same Wine setup as your Kindle for PC and/or Adobe Digital Editions installations. (Kindle for PC, Python and Pycrypto installation instructions in the ReadMe.)Once everything’s installed under Wine, you’ll need to run the adobekey.pyw script (for Adobe Digital Editions) and kindlekey.pyw (For Kindle for PC) using the python installation in your Wine system. The scripts can be found in Other_Tools/Key_Retrieval_Scripts.Each script will create a key file in the same folder as the script. Copy the key files to your Linux system and then load the key files using the Adobe Digital Editions ebooks dialog and the Kindle for Mac/PC ebooks dialog.

9) So….easiest thing to do is go to the folder within your DRM zip folder and copy the kindlekey.pyw script over to your Wine Python folder.  Home/your name/.wine/drive_c/Python27/
a) Drop the kindle key in that folder
b) Choose “Open Folder in terminal”
c) Type wine python kindlekey.pyw
d) Take the key file that is generated and copy it back to your DRM folder.
10) Open Calibre, if closed from above, and go to plugin customization, choose Kindle for PC and Import Data Key.  Choose the key.
11) Close Calibre
12) Go to Kindle for PC – log in and sync your books.  You will see the .azw files under My Documents\My Kindle Content
13) Open Calibre
14) Choose Add Books and browse to the kindle folder to import the books.  Next, choose Convert Books and convert to epub format.
15) I then open the calibre path and cut and paste the converted books to my dropbox.  Now, they are available on my android and I can pull them into Moonreader.

Torts 1 – Barry University Studying for Finals

I did well on my Torts final exam.  These are my study notes.

Download a Copy Here

Intentional Torts….

Intent requires an actor’s (1) purposeful desire of a given outcome or the actor to know with substantial certainty the outcome will occur.

Battery is an act with an intent to touch and intent to harm or offend that results in a touching and harms or offends.

Offensive contact is that contact that offends a reasonable sense of personal dignity.

Assault is an act with intent of a harmful or offensive touching that results in the apprehension of an immediate battery.

False imprisonment is an act with intent that results in confinement to a bounded area where the victim is harmed or aware.

For transferred intent it is enough that the actor intends to produce some effect upon some other person whether or not that person is the plaintiff.

The defendant intends a tort on one person, but commits it on another person.

The defendant intends one tort, but commits another tort.

Property….

Trespass to land is intent to enter land and results in entering land of another. Intent to enter land can be with purpose or substantial certainty.

Conversion of chattels is intent to exercise substantial dominion over chattel and results in an act seriously interfering with plaintiff’s right of possession.

Trespass to chattel is intent to act on chattel that causes interference with chattel and results in dispossession, lost use, or harm to chattel or plaintiff.

Defenses….

Self-defense is a privilege to use reasonable force to defend against unprivileged acts reasonably believed about to be inflicted.

Defense of property is a common law privilege to defend property by reasonable force.

To satisfy the shopkeeper’s privilege there must be a reasonable belief the plaintiff took goods, a proper purpose for detention, and a reasonable manner of detention.

Necessity defenses only apply to property torts…

To satisfy the defense of public necessity where an act is for the public good the defense is absolute.

To satisfy the defense of private necessity where an act is of private benefit, the defense is qualified and the defendant must pay damages.

 

 

Negligence….

Negligence is overt conduct that creates an unreasonable risk of harm that a reasonable person would avoid. CUHRA (Conduct/Unreasonable Harm/Reasonable Avoid)

Risk of harm is unreasonable when (1) a reasonable and prudent person would foresee the harm and (2) would avoid conduct that creates the risk.  FH-AC-CR (Foresee Harm/Avoid conduct/Creates risk)

Reasonable person has the same physical traits as the defendant, average mental ability, and the same knowledge as an average member of the community. (PT/IQ/Knowledge)

To establish the prima facia case for negligence the plaintiff must prove that (1) the defendant owed plaintiff a legal duty; (2) the defendant by behaving negligently, breached the duty; (3) plaintiff suffered damages; (4) Defendants negligence was an actual cause of this damage; and (5) the defendant’s negligence was a proximate cause of this damage.

Duty is the general duty of care a reasonable person under the same circumstances would meet.

Breach of duty occurs when defendant’s conduct falls below the standard of care and thus puts foreseeable plaintiffs at risk. (DC/B-SOC/FPR)

Actual damages are the injuries suffered by the plaintiff.

Actual cause can be shown by the “but-for” test of causation, “But for Defendant’s Negligence Plaintiff would have avoided injury.”

Proximate cause is established by showing the defendant is responsible for the type of harms within the risk and that the plaintiff was within the class of persons at risk.

If an intervening cause is within the scope of the original risk, it is not a superseding cause and original tortfeasor is still liable.  A superseding cause will cut off the original tortfeasor’s liability.

 

Doctrines…..

Negligence per se is the violation of a criminal statue where the statute protects the plaintiff’s class of persons and statute is meant to protect against the type of injury the plaintiff suffered.  Negligence per se is to conclusively establish the first two elements of a cause of action:  the defendant owed the plaintiff a legal duty and defendant breached that duty.

Res Ipsa Loquitor means the fact of an accident raises an inference of negligence to establish a prima facia case. The plaintiff will prove the (1) injury was probably the result of negligence and (2) it was probably the defendant who was negligent.

Under the Rescue Doctrine the rescuer can recover from the defendant whose negligence prompted the rescue attempt if the rescuer had a reasonable belief the victim was in peril.

Under the Last Clear Chance Doctrine courts allow the negligent plaintiff a full recovery when the plaintiff was left in a helpless position by his own negligence and the defendant, who had the last clear chance to avoid injury, negligently inflicted it anyway.

 

 

 

 

Negligence Defenses….

In some cases the defendant may share the liability of negligence with others, either other defendants or the plaintiff.

When the plaintiff may be partially liable plaintiff’s negligence is considered contributory or comparative.  Contributory negligence was the traditional common law defense and would bar a plaintiff from recovery.  Under the modern theory of comparative negligence the plaintiff’s comparative negligence is a defense to willful, wanton and reckless conduct.

When the defendant shares liability with other defendants it is either severally liable or joint and severally liableSeveral liability means no tortfeasor is liable for more than his fair share whereas under joint and several liability a plaintiff can enforce against any tortfeasor and other tortfeasors would contribute to the first.

There are four types of assumption of risk: Express or with consent, Traditional implied, and sports risks; primary and secondary.

If proven by the defendant Express assumption of risk is a complete bar to recovery for the plaintiff.  Express assumption of risk is generally contractual and is a viable defense.

Traditional assumption of risk recognized when the plaintiff, knowing of the risk, chose to confront it.  Traditional assumption of risk is a common law doctrine generally discarded in favor of comparative negligence.

In sports there are two doctrines of assumption of risk. The primary assumption of risk states there is no duty where inherent risk exists.  The secondary assumption of risk is limited to avoid reckless acts.

 

Negligence of Landowners…

An invitee is any person on the land for a pecuniary benefit of the landowner or is a public invitee.

A trespasser has no legal right to be on the land and enters the land without the owner’s consent.

A licensee is on the land with permission, but with a limited license to be there.

Under common law a landowner owes to an invitee a duty of care; to a trespasser and licensee a duty to avoid willful, wanton and reckless misconduct; and to a discovered trespasser a duty to warn.

Landowner Doctrines….

By the attractive nuisance doctrine a possessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm to children trespassing thereon and caused by the attractive nuisance and raises the duty to a duty of care.

Under the open and obvious doctrine landowners are not liable for harm caused by any activity or condition whose danger is known or obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.

 

Short Definitions to Memorize…

Negligence – CUHRA

Conduct Unreasonable Harms Reasonable Avoids

Risk of harm – FHACCR

Foreseeable Harms Avoid Conduct Creates Risk

Breach – DC/B-SOC/FPR

Defendants Conduct Below Standard of Care Foreseeable Plaintiffs Risk

Actual Cause – But for

Proximate cause – DR (1) THWR (2) PWCPR

Defendant Responsible Type Harm Within Risk Plaintiffs Within Class Persons Risk

Torts 1 Outlines Barry University – Professor Koons

I have uploaded my notes from my Torts 1 class.  I did well, although I did not book the class I managed to get the second highest grade.

Over view of all of our cases here..

My high level outline I used to study is here.

Outlines:

Intentional Torts

Negligence – Duty

Negligence – Breach

Negligence – Factual Cause

Negligence – Proximate Cause

Faults of the Plaintiff

Assumption of Risk, Property Torts

 

 

Law School – Barry University

Last fall I started law school. There will be much more to come on this topic as I am writing a book about my experiences going back to school as a part time student.

However, this is the first post in a series of posts to put my notes online and help others who may be struggling as 1Ls.