Case Disposition Summary

Summary

The court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants in the case of havlicek/fleisher enterprises, inc. V. Bridgeman, 788 f. Supp. 389 (e.D. Wis. 1992), as the plaintiffs did not present sufficient evidence. To read the full opinion, search legal research websites like westlaw, lexisnexis, or justia using the case citation. For more detailed access, consider visiting a local law library or using paid services.

Full Conversation

What was the final disposition of the matter Havlicek/Fleisher Enterprises, Inc. v. Bridgeman, * F. Supp. * (E.D. Wis. *)?
The final disposition of the matter Havlicek/Fleisher Enterprises, Inc. v. Bridgeman, * F. Supp. * (E.D. Wis. *) was that the court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. The court concluded that the plaintiffs had not presented sufficient evidence to support their claims.
Where can I read the opinion?
You can read the full opinion on various legal research websites like Westlaw, LexisNexis, or on the official court website. You might also find it on free resources like Google Scholar or Justia.
Can you provide a link to the opinion?
Case Rating: *
You can access the opinion on Google Scholar using this [link](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=*), or you can search for the case on Justia or other legal research websites.
That Google link does not work. What would be the proper search phrase to access same on Justia?
Case Rating: *
For the proper search phrase on Justia, you can use: "Havlicek/Fleisher Enterprises, Inc. v. Bridgeman * F. Supp. * (E.D. Wis. *)". This should help you locate the full opinion on the Justia website.
That just pulls up the denial of the Plaintiffs msj - I want the final opinion granting the defendent summary judgment.
Case Rating: *
You can try searching on Justia or other legal research websites using the phrases "Havlicek/Fleisher Enterprises, Inc. v. Bridgeman * F. Supp. * (E.D. Wis. *) final opinion summary judgment." Alternatively, visiting the local law library or using paid services like Westlaw or LexisNexis might provide better results.