8 Years and Counting
June 13, 2018 § 15 Comments
Tomorrow this blog will be 8 years old.
I don’t think when I started out that I thought it would still be around that much later, but here we are, and with 950+ followers to boot. This is the 2,019th post.
I hope you are getting something worthwhile out of this. I am still enjoying it, so you will have to put up with me a while longer.
Judge Primeaux,
Congratulations on hitting the 8 year mark on your blog. It is my go-to when I need an explanation of a statute or help understanding the “why” of so many of the Chancery Court processes.
Your blog has provided me with a ton of relevant case law and great points that have assisted me in legal research. Thanks for helping me to further support the attorneys I assist, in such an easy to follow way.
Learned Chancellor Primeaux –
Happy 8th Birthday and thanks a billion!
Ron Doleac
Congratulations and please continue teaching us how to be better attorneys.
Congrats and thank you for your efforts! Your blog is a great resource and the one that I usually start with when confronted with a Chancery issue.
Happy Birthday to The Better Chancery Practice Blog, and congratulations on hitting this milestone!
I agree with all that this is a supreme source for information. Thanks, again, Judge Primeaux for your dedication to helping make our practice better!
It’s interesting that a couple of the lawyers who have responded favorably to your blog are known to me to be extremely capable. My current secretary, who is the best and, while taking a 25 year break from working for me, worked for a (maybe I should say “another”) great lawyer, turned me onto your blog and told me I would get a lot out of it. I don’t pass it up now. In a way, it reminds me of the teachings of Judge George William Haynes, a long dead and missed Hinds County Chancellor who taught Chancery Practice at Jackson School of Law. As a very intelligent man in the courtroom every day, Haynes saw all the common mistakes, like failing to put a no collusion affidavit on a bill for divorce or getting a waiver of process signed before suit was filed, and he turned out a bunch of night school students who knew some things which were missed by Yale or Harvard grads. Do keep it up.
It is worthwhile. Please continue!
Thank you. Your efforts are much appreciated!
Thank you so much for your efforts. Your blog helps me tremendously.
Judge: please keep this invaluable blog going!! You do not know how much we family law practitioners appreciate all your effort and depend on your insights(and your humor). Jak Smith
Daily CLE for attorneys and an unmeasurable help to secretaries and legal assistants.
Thanks Judge Primeaux for your hard work and insight into the world of chancery court practice in Mississippi!!
Keep writing, please. There are three essential Mississippi family law practice aids. The Debbie Bell book and seminar and the Primeaux blog.
Keep it going Judge. It is a great benefit!
Thank you. Hoping you will continue for at least another 8 years.