Discovery
Civ-Pro
Case Summary |
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3325 Statutes that give next of kin the power to make medical decisions for incompetent patients, do not thereby give them the power to bind the patients to arbitration agreements; ostensible agency is not based on conduct of the purported agent, but on conduct of the purported principal.CitationPAGARIGAN v LIBBY CARE (No Agency) 99 CA4 298 [See: CivC 2300; H&SC 1418.8, 1599.65; Buckner v Tamarin 98 CA4 140, T/AT 6/02] |
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Finz Case Law Summaries (Finz Advance Tapes)
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