Dennis Wilenchik won a verdict for $700,000 for Randall Martin Homes in a lawsuit for breach of contract as well as the the following appeal. Randall Martin Homes entered into a contract with Evergreen Communities to purchase a piece of raw land in Buckeye, Arizona.
Wilenchik & Bartness wins jury trial against master developer and later appeal
The Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the verdict and award of costs obtained by Wilenchik & Bartness in Saban v. Arpaio.
Wilenchik & Bartness represented Sheriff Joseph Arpaio; his chief deputy, David Hendershott; and Maricopa County in a defamation lawsuit by Dan Saban, a former candidate for Sheriff. In 2007, a jury found in favor of the Sheriff after an 11 day trial and awarded Defendants taxable costs in the litigation.
Wilenchik & Bartness wins at the U.S. Supreme Court.
In 2004 Arizona voters passed Proposition 200, an initiative measure that, among other things, changed the election law to require: (1) proof of citizenship to register to vote; and (2) proof of identification when one votes at the polling place on election day. Several Plaintiffs, including the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Foundation, Intertribal Counsel of Arizona and the Navajo Nation filed suits challenging the new election law. The District Court of Arizona consolidated the actions and denied a motion by consolidated Plaintiffs to enjoin Arizona's election law for the November 2006 national elections. The 9th Circuit overturned the District Court's ruling, granting Plaintiffs an Emergency Temporary Injunction. County and State Defendants applied to Justice Kennedy for a stay of the 9th Circuit decision. On October 20, 2006 the High Court issued a per curium decision overturning the 9th Circuit's decision and preserving the status quo for Arizona's elections. The litigation continues on the merits in District Court. A copy of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision can be found at http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/06pdf/06A375.pdf