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Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

1019 Congress
Houston, Texas 77002
7137555183

Harris County Law Library

Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

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Ex Libris Juris - HCLL Blog

Trans Legal Aid Clinic Houston: November 19 & 21, 2020

November 13, 2020 Heather Holmes

For the transgender community, updating one's identification and other legal documents is an important and necessary step to achieving a complete transition. Finding the right resources to help transgender individuals navigate the Texas court system can be a challenge. Fortunately, Houston has a vibrant and supportive LGBTQ+ community, providing access to organizations such as the Montrose Center, which partners with the Trans Legal Aid Clinic to offer services to transgender individuals seeking to change their names and/or gender markers on their legal documents.

The Trans Legal Aid Clinic Houston will be hosting two virtual clinics next week on Thursday, November 19, at 6:00 pm and on Saturday, November 21, at 10:00 am. Additional details are available on the Clinic’s Facebook page, where you will also find a link to the Intake Form required for registration. All assistance is provided for free, and funds are available for those who need help in getting the proper documents needed to file.

For additional resources useful to the transgender community in Texas, please read our previous blog posts on this topic.

  • GENDER MARKER AND NAME CHANGE RESOURCES FOR TRANSGENDER INDIVIDUALS IN TEXAS

  • GENDER MARKER AND NAME CHANGE RESOURCES IN TEXAS

  • LATEST & GREATEST – TRANSGENDER PERSONS AND THE LAW, 2ND EDITION

In Access to Justice, Events, Featured Resources Tags Transgender persons, Legal Aid

Upcoming Free Vendor CLEs - On Your Computer!

November 12, 2020 Guest User
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If you’re like us, you have probably missed our free live Legal Tech Institute CLE programming! Sure, our free video CLEs are fantastic, but they necessarily have different dynamics than a live class format where students can interact with the instructor.

In order to help our patrons meet their CLE requirements in a live format without spending any money, we are hosting several upcoming vendor “visits.” These webinars are hosted exclusively for the Harris County Law Library community, whoever you are, wherever you may be riding out the pandemic.

This afternoon, we are hosting one free hour of Texas CLE credit from Westlaw. Our trainer will walk participants through remote log-in options for Harris County Law Library users while our physical space is closed, and go through the best way to conduct your legal research through the platform. Click here for all the details.

On November 19, our Lexis trainer will be offering one free hour of CLE on combating bias within the legal profession, your individual practice, and even the way you conduct legal research. Click here for more information.

On December 17, our Westlaw trainer will be back, this time to provide one hour of free CLE as the class explores what is new on Westlaw. Click here for more information.

In Featured Resources, Legal Tech Institute Tags CLE, Legal Tech, Lexis, Westlaw

Free Virtual Legal Aid for Texas Veterans All Week

November 10, 2020 Guest User
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Tomorrow is Veterans Day. One hundred and two years ago, at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, a cease fire was called between Germany and the Allied nations in World War I. That “armistice” held for seven months, until the Great War formally ended on June 28, 1919, outside Paris at the Palace of Versailles. Later that year, President Wilson declared November 11 a national commemoration of the armistice. In 1938, Congress established it as a federal holiday to honor the brave American veterans of that “war to end all wars.” However, after subsequent wars created new veterans, the holiday’s scope was expanded to all American veterans in 1954.

Texas has the second-largest population of veterans in the nation, and approximately 8,000 of them receive legal aid each year.

TexasLawHelp.org is promoting and running special legal aid programs for veterans all week. Please check out their impressive array of offerings by clicking here.

In Access to Justice, Tech Tuesday Tags Legal Aid, Veterans

Stop TX Eviction

November 9, 2020 Lori-Ann Craig
Final Notice by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images

Final Notice by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images

StopTXEviction Partners.PNG

Despite efforts to help renters remain in their homes during the pandemic, including a CDC moratorium, evictions continue throughout the state and country. Here, in Texas, there is some help. With generous support from the Texas Access to Justice Foundation, Texas’s three main legal aid providers, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Lone Star Legal Aid, and Legal Aid of Northwest Texas, have teamed up with the Texas Legal Services Center to create StopTXEviction.org, a web portal designed to help renters living in Texas. Stop TX Eviction provides renters with access to information about the eviction process and their rights, rental assistance, and other resources, including documents that can be used in a court proceeding. Qualified renters can also use the portal to apply for legal assistance in their area and chat with a lawyer about any questions they might have about eviction.

To get help, simply click on the Get Started button. Users choose the topic about which they would like more information, including evictions in Texas, commercial evictions, and foreclosure. (Note that while Stop TX Eviction has information about commercial evictions and foreclosures, the portal is designed primarily for renters in Texas.) Subsequent pages take the user through the eviction process and explain the types of defenses that may be claimed, some steps that can be taken before the hearing, and some things that can be expected at the eviction hearing. The web portal also addresses what happens after the eviction hearing and discusses three options that tenants have after an unfavorable ruling in Justice Court.

Users can also learn about the Texas Eviction Diversion Program, a new program established by the Supreme Court of Texas to enable landlords and tenants to come to a resolution of nonpayment of rent issues and thus reduce the number of evictions. The program was begun in October in certain Texas counties, but will expand to all of Texas on November 9.

Desalojos continúan por todo el estado y país aunque hay esfuerzos para ayudar a los inquilinos que se queden en sus hogares durante la pandemia, incluyendo la moratoria de los CDC (CDC moratorium). Aquí en Texas existe ayuda. Con el generoso apoyo del Texas Access to Justice Foundation, los tres principales proveedores de asistencia legal en Texas – Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Lone Star Legal Aid, y Legal Aid of Northwest Texas – han colaborado con el Texas Legal Services Center para crear StopTXEviction.org. La cual es un portal web diseñado para ayudar a los inquilinos que viven en Texas. Stop TX Eviction ofrece a los inquilinos acceso a información sobre el proceso de desalojo y sus derechos, asistencia para el alquiler y otros recursos, incluyendo documentos que pueden entregar en un procedimiento judicial. Los inquilinos que califican también pueden usar el portal para solicitar asistencia legal en su área y para conversar con un abogado sobre cualquier pregunta que tienen sobre el desalojo.

Para recibir ayuda, simplemente haga clic en el botón que dice Empiece. Los usuarios eligen el tema sobre el que les gustaría obtener más información, incluyendo los desalojos en Texas, los desalojos comerciales y la ejecución hipotecaria. (Tenga en cuenta que Stop TX Eviction tiene información sobre desalojos comerciales y ejecuciones hipotecarias, pero el portal esta diseñado principalmente para inquilinos en Texas). Las paginas siguientes guían al usuario en el proceso de desalojo y explican los tipos de defensas que pueden reclamar, algunos pasos que pueden tomar antes de la audiencia, y que se puede esperar en la audiencia de desalojo. El portal web también da atención a lo que sucede después de la audiencia de desalojo y analiza tres opciones que tienen los inquilinos después de perder en el Tribunal de Justicia (Justice Court).

Los usuarios de este portal web pueden saber más sobre el Programa de Desvío de Desalojos (Texas Eviction Diversion Program), un nuevo programa establecido por la Corte Suprema de Texas (Supreme Court of Texas) para ayudar a los propietarios e inquilinos que lleguen a una resolución de los problemas por no pagar el alquiler y así reducir el numero de desalojos. El programa comenzó en octubre en ciertos condados de Texas, pero se expandirá a todo Texas el 9 de noviembre.

In Access to Justice Tags Eviction, StopTXEviction.org, Texas Eviction Diversion Program

Saxophones and Jazz

November 6, 2020 Lori-Ann Craig
Image by Rafael Zajczewski from Pixabay

Image by Rafael Zajczewski from Pixabay

Don’t play the saxophone. Let it play you.  – Charlie Parker

Perhaps the greatest saxophonist of his time, Charlie Parker, who would have turned 100 on August 29, left a lasting mark on American jazz during his short life. Credited with the development of a new style of music known as bebop, Parker revolutionized American jazz with his complex harmonies and rhythms. Of course, none of Parker’s virtuosity would have sparkled were it not for the invention of the saxophone. First patented in 1846 in Paris by Belgian-French musical instrument maker Adolphe-Joseph Sax, the saxophone, a single reed instrument noted for its flexibility and penetrating sound, became a favorite of the masters of jazz improvisation. If Oscar Wilde was correct in his assessment that “imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” then Sax should have indeed been pleased that his invention gained such popularity. Unfortunately, Sax spent decades embroiled in lawsuits defending against creators of reproductions before his patent expired in 1866, losing many profits along the way.

Those patent lawsuits were not the last time that the saxophone, or more specifically, the music in which it was so prominently featured, became the subject of legal disputes. Lawsuits involving jazz music and dancing typically focused on their characterization as public nuisances. A court in California even based its determination on “the effect that jazz music ha[d] on the health and comfort of residents.” Jazz was also the source of marital discord, prompting a music-loving wife to seek a divorce from her husband. As one would expect, copyright also played a role in some of the litigation surrounding jazz. The characteristic improvisations of jazz presented some unique challenges for the musical style in gaining copyright protection. The style was not viewed as particularly original and deemed to be more derivative, and therefore not entitled to such security.

From a societal standpoint, jazz was no stranger to the discrimination and racism that was so prevalent during the Jazz Age of the 1920s and beyond. Despite their appeal and popularity among Blacks and whites alike, jazz musicians faced discrimination from those outside the jazz community. From the required, but revocable, cabaret cards in New York City to the prohibition on becoming members of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP), African-American musicians and composers were prevented from performing in clubs, deprived of copyright protection for their original works, and divested of well-deserved royalties. It’s no wonder then that jazz was at the forefront of the Civil Rights Movement.

America was not the only place where jazz flourished. In Europe, in the years leading up to and during World War II, jazz managed to survive boycotts of all things from “enemy” nations, bans on dancing, and life within the German concentration camps. In fact, jazz music boosted the morale of both prisoners and soldiers, served as camouflage for illegal meetings among prisoners, offered the possibility of avoiding the gas chamber to those in the camps, and acted as a means of propaganda and distraction for the government.

Jazz has a rich and colorful history, one that would not have existed were it not for the invention of the saxophone. So, on this National Saxophone Day, we commemorate not only the birth of Adolphe-Joseph Sax, the inventor the saxophone, but also those great jazz musicians who made that instrument sing and the masses dance.

Further Reading and Listening

Tell Tchaikovsky the News: Trade Dress Rights in Musical Instruments - Robert M. Kunstadt and Ilana Maggioni, 94 Trademark Reporter 1271 (2004) (available remotely through HeinOnline)

Possession is Nine-Tenths of the Law: The Story of Jazz and Intellectual Property - Aleksey Nikolsky

Saxophone History Timeline - Steve Stusek

The Soul of the Saxophone - Library of Congress

Jazz Research at the Library of Congress

The Law Police Used to Discriminate Against Musicians of Color - Jazz Night in America - NPR

Songs of the Civil Rights Movement - NPR

In Feel Good Friday Tags Saxophone, Jazz, Civil Rights
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What’s behind the name? “Ex Libris Juris” is Latin for “from the books of law” and much of the information here will relate to the legal information collected and curated by the Law Library. Additionally, “Ex Libris” has long appeared on bookplates – labels appearing inside the front cover of books – and has acquired the connoted meaning “from the library of” to show ownership of the book. Using this connotation, the phrase becomes “from the library of law” and better describes the posts about digital resources, event announcements, and research tips that will regularly appear here.

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