Dependable Component Supply, Inc. v. First American Bank of Illinois
Plaintiff:
Dependable Component Supply, Inc.
Defendant:
First American Bank of Illinois
Case Number:
0:2013cv60074
Filed:
January 11, 2013
Court:
Florida Southern District Court
Office:
Ft Lauderdale Office
County:
Broward
Referring Judge:
Lurana S. Snow
Presiding Judge:
Robert N. Scola
Nature of Suit:
Negotiable Instrument
Cause of Action:
28:1332 Diversity-Negotiable Instrument
Jury Demanded By:
Plaintiff
Access additional case information on PACER
Use the links below to access additional information about this case on the US Court's PACER system. A subscription to PACER is required.
Access this case on the Florida Southern District Court's Electronic Court Filings (ECF) System
- Search for Party Aliases
- Associated Cases
- Attorneys
- Case File Location
- Case Summary
- Docket Report
- History/Documents
- Parties
- Related Transactions
- Check Status
Search for this case: Dependable Component Supply, Inc. v. First American Bank of Illinois | |
---|---|
Search News | [ Google News | Marketwatch | Wall Street Journal | Financial Times | New York Times ] |
Search Web | [ Legal Web | Google | Bing | Yahoo | Ask ] |
Defendant: First American Bank of Illinois | |
Represented By: | John W. Keller, III |
Search News | [ Google News | Marketwatch | Wall Street Journal | Financial Times | New York Times ] |
Search Finance | [ Google Finance | Yahoo Finance | Hoovers | SEC Edgar Filings ] |
Search Web | [ Legal Web | Google | Bing | Yahoo | Ask ] |
Plaintiff: Dependable Component Supply, Inc. | |
Represented By: | James Alexander Stepan |
Represented By: | Juan Ricardo Serrano |
Represented By: | Jonathan Alexander Ewing |
Search News | [ Google News | Marketwatch | Wall Street Journal | Financial Times | New York Times ] |
Search Finance | [ Google Finance | Yahoo Finance | Hoovers | SEC Edgar Filings ] |
Search Web | [ Legal Web | Google | Bing | Yahoo | Ask ] |
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.