An Arizona appellate court ruled Tuesday on legal issues involving physicians and landlords embroiled in disputes involving
medical marijuana. To void dispensary leases "because they involve lawful distribution of medical marijuana under state law could make (the Arizona medical marijuana law) futile and undermine the policy behind it," Court of Appeals Judge Donn Kessler wrote. The rulings were the latest in a serious of disputes and questions since Arizona voters approved a ballot measure creating a medical marijuana program in 2010. One ruling by the Court of Appeals said a physician can't be sued by a user who was dropped as a patient for acting against the doctor's advice and getting certified to use medical marijuana. In the physician case, a man who was dropped as a patient after getting certified as a medical marijuana user sued the doctor and his pain-management practice.
Court rules on medical pot issues involving doctors, leases
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State OKs 1st medical pot regulations
Would-be large cultivators would pay a one-time application fee of $20,000, an initial $180,000 license fee if approved, and $200,000 annual renewal fees thereafter. COLUMBUS — The stage was set Monday for the first set of rules to take effect under Ohio's fledgling
medical-marijuana program. The products must be entirely grown, tested, processed, and sold by those licensed by the state of Ohio. Mr. Patton argued the language should flatly state there would be no disqualification after five years. The committee's role was limited largely to deciding whether the rules overstep the agency's authority or conflict with other rules or legislative intent.
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