At all times, Landrum & Friduss has matters pending in Georgia’s appellate courts, and in the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit (the federal intermediate appellate body for Georgia, Florida, and Alabama). Public officials and entities law is often times largely judicially driven, and thusly Landrum & Friduss’ attorneys find themselves on appeal far more often than most other law firms.
Landrum & Friduss attorneys not only represent their own day-to-day clients on appellate matters, they have also historically served as appellate counsel at the request of other attorneys, insurance companies, local governments, and individuals.
Click an attorney to be taken to their bios:
Phillip M. Landrum, III
Phillip Friduss
Ellen Ash
Click here to view list of cases handled on appeal by Landrum & Friduss attorneys.
Related Publications
Phillip E. Friduss & Ellen Ash f/k/a Gendernalik, Update Fourth Amendment Search Cases: The New and Confused Framework, 28 THE URBAN LAWYER: THE NATIONAL QUARTERLY ON STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT LAW 679-700 (1996).
Phillip E. Friduss & Ellen Ash f/k/a Gendernalik, Justices Give the War on Drugs a Significant Boost: The Year in the Fourth Amendment, 29 THE URBAN LAWYER: THE NATIONAL QUARTERLY ON STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT LAW 787-93 (1997).
Phillip E. Friduss, Ellen Ash, & Elaine Poon, The King Can Do No Wrong! State Law Tort Claims Against Georgia Counties, Cities and their Public Officials, (January 2008)
Phillip E. Friduss & Russell E. Owens, Racial Profiling Hits the Courts, For the Defense, DRI, October, 2000.
Phillip E. Friduss, State Supreme Court Refuses to Create Exception to At-Will Employment Doctrine, Georgia County Government, September, 2004.
Phillip E. Friduss & Cynthia Matthews Daley, Making Sense of Georgia’s Offer of Settlement Statute. WITH UPDATED NOTE
Holly L. Palmer, Jennifer L. McKernan, & Phillip E. Friduss, Sexual Discrimination - “Liability for Acts of Supervisors: Strict Liability.”
Phillip E. Friduss, The Good the Bad and the “What?” Continuing Violations in Employment
Cases After Morgan.
Phillip E. Friduss, Police Pursuit Liability.
Phillip E. Friduss, ADA UPDATE: Supreme Court Rejects “Ability to Perform Job Tasks”
Standard in Favor of Focusing on a Claimant’s Ability to Perform Activities of “Central Importance to Daily Life.”