January 3rd, 2008

Brother v. Brother in Medical Malpractice Trial

An epic medical malpractice battle that is shaping up in West Virginia has two attorney brothers squaring off against each other. The case involves injury to over 100 patients due to the reckless hiring of Dr. John King without checking his credentials. The doctor, it seems, never actually finished his residency. A jury has already found against the nation’s largest for-profit hospital chain, HCA Inc. on liability.

The battling brothers are Tyler and Todd Thompson of Louisville, Kentucky. The story can be found at their local paper, the Courier-Journal. (hat tip: Kentucky Law Review)

Now here’s the kicker to this story: Dr. King — who falsely boasted that he had been director of spine surgery for the famed Cleveland Clinic and team doctor for the New York Yankees, operated on the limbs and spines of 500 patients in seven months and has 122 suits filed against him — has had his license stripped from him in ten different states. But he is still practicing medicine in Kentucky.

 

August 23rd, 2007

NY Suit Against Naomi Campbell Goes Forward

Model Naomi Campbell lost her bid to have a New York personal injury suit against her tossed out. The allegations of physical and psychological abuse were brought by her maid.

The motion to dismiss was brought before an answer was submitted so, for the purposes of the motion, the claims set forth in the complaint were accepted as true. Only the contract claim was tossed out, for lack of specificity, but the claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress, false imprisonment and punitive damaged were not.

The New York Post reported the story here today.

I’ve procured a copy of the decision: Gibson-V-Campbell.pdf

Update: AP story here.

 

August 2nd, 2007

Medical Malpractice Deposition and Surveillance Videos Surface on YouTube

We’ve seen a doctor live-blogging his malpractice case with Flea. We’ve seen the Charlie Weis malpractice case live-blogged.

Now we see attorneys apparently using YouTube to influence the jury, by downloading segments of depositions and surveillance video to the popular video-sharing website. (This doctor has 122 malpractice cases pending against him, which I had mentioned in Personal Injury Round-Up #21)

According to this AP story (via Kevin, M.D.):

The three-minute video features outtakes from the pretrial testimony, or depositions, of six people suing [former West Virginia doctor] John A. King. Five of the snippets are followed by surveillance-style video or photos that purport to contradict those persons’ claims.

The defendants had apparently shared the footage with a public relations firm. The plaintiffs had also posted information about the case online. [Judge] Spaulding barred both sides from releasing anything further to the media.

“I decided that both sides were trying potentially to influence the public before we went to trial,” Spaulding said Wednesday.

What next? A live-blogging judge?

 

July 16th, 2007

Charlie Weis Medical Malpractice Retrial Now Starting

The medical malpractice trial involving Notre Dame head football coach Charlie Weis is now starting again. When we last left the Weis story on February 16th, a mistrial had been declared when a juror fell ill while Weis was on the witness stand, and the two defendant physicians rushed over to assist.

Defendants’ counsel vainly tried at that time to claim the trial should continue and that the jury had not been unfairly prejudiced by the conduct of the physicians, though I don’t know how they kept a straight face while making that argument.

The story behind the lawsuit is that Weis decided to have gastric bypass surgery in June 2002. He claims that the defendants acted negligently by failing to recognize life-threatening internal bleeding and infection two days after the surgery.

According to this AP story:

In opening statements to the jury, Weis’s lawyer, Michael Mone, said the doctors acted negligently by allowing Weis to bleed internally for 30 hours after the surgery before performing a second operation to correct the complication. Weis was in a coma for two weeks and nearly died.

But William Dailey Jr., a lawyer for Ferguson and Hodin, said internal bleeding was a well-known complication of gastric bypass surgery. Dailey said Ferguson, Hodin and several other doctors who cared for Weis believed the bleeding would stop on its own, as it does in most cases following such surgery.

Claiming a particular bad result is a “complication” of surgery, by the way, is a common defense tactic. The proper response from the plaintiff’s side is asking whether this is an avoidable complication, if proper care is exercised.

This trial, by the way, is being live-blogged by a college football blog, The Wizard of Odds (Hat tip, TortsProf).

OK, now here is the weird part: The live-blogging of the trial will come out of Suffolk Superior Court in Massachusetts. Why is that weird? Because that is the same court that Flea was live-blogging his own medical malpractice case from earlier this year.

Addendum:
7/17 — See Battle Lines Are Drawn in Day 1 (Wizard of Odds, after first day of trial).
7/18 — The Return of Weis‘ Hired Hand (plaintiff’s expert testifies it was malpractice to give Weis the blood thinner Heparin post-operatively while he was hemorrhaging) (Wizard of Odds)
7/19 — The Big Guy Takes The Stand (Wizard of Odds)
7/19 — Weis Takes Stand in Lawsuit (AP via Forbes)
7/20 — Team Weis Scores A Major Victory (Wizard of Odds)
7/20 — Doctor: Weis went against my medical advice (Boston Herald via Kevin, M.D.)
7/24 — Hodin Takes Stand, Defends Decisions (Wizard of Odds)
7/24 — Doctors not backing down against Weis in malpractice suit (ESPN)

(Eric Turkewitz is a personal injury attorney in New York)

 

June 25th, 2007

Pants Lawsuit Ends in Victory for Dry Cleaners

Administrative Judge Roy Pearson, lampooned high and low for his ludicrous $67M lawsuit over a pair of pants he claims were lost by his dry cleaners, lost his case today. And it didn’t even matter that he reduced his demand to only $54M.

He didn’t just lose his ridiculous claims for millions of dollars for claims that included emotional distress, he also lost the small claims part of his case for the actual pants themselves.

And he may get socked for sanctions and attorneys fees for engaging in “in bad faith and vexatious litigation.” That seems like an understatement. You can read the decision here: PantsPearsonDecision.pdf

Judge Judith Bartnoff noted at the end of the decision, that:

The issue of the defendants’ claim for attorney’s fees against the plaintiff will be addressed after the defendant’s motions for sanctions and for attorney’s fees have been filed and briefed by the parties.

Pants Pearson can’t be happy today.

Regarding the actual pants, Judge Bartnoff noted that Pearson had not met his burden of proof:

With regard to the alleged missing pants, the plaintiff has not met his burden of proving that the pants the defendants attempted to return to him were not the pants he brought in for alterations. At best, the evidence on that subject is in equipoise. The Court agrees with the plaintiff that the pants in the defendants’ possession do not appear to match the jacket to his burgundy and blue pinstriped suit. The Court also will accept that Mr. Pearson does not like cuffs on his pants. The plaintiff may well believe that he brought the pants to his burgundy and blue pinstriped suit to the defendants, but there also is strong evidence that he did not.

The Court found Soo Chung to be very credible, and her explanation that she recognized the disputed pants as belonging to Mr. Pearson because of the unusual belt inserts was much more credible than his speculation that she took a pair of unclaimed pants from the back of the store and altered them to match his measurements. Mr. Pearson only recently had received four suits back from his son, he brought in several pairs of pants over a period of less than two weeks for alterations, and it certainly is plausible that the pants on the hanger with his blue and burgundy pinstriped suit jacket were not the pants that matched the jacket, even if Mr. Pearson assumed that they were. The Court need not determine what did happen; what it must do is to determine if Mr. Pearson proved that the defendants intentionally misled him and otherwise are liable to him under the CPPA based on the pants. The Court finds that he has not made that proof.

In making its findings, Judge Bartnoff also noted about his prior divorce litigation, that:

[T]he litigation was disproportionately long, despite the relative simplicity of the case, and that Mr. Pearson “in good part is responsible for excessive driving up of everything that went on here” and created “unnecessary litigation.” Mr. Pearson therefore was ordered to pay $12,000 of his wife’s attorney’s fees.

That doesn’t bode well for him for the coming hearing on sanctions and attorneys fees.

What’s the lesson in all of this?

1. We are a nation of 300 million. There are a few nuts out there.

2. Pearson is an administrative law judge. Those who want to strip the right of trial by jury from the citizenry should note that sometimes people get elected or appointed judge and they may not be the type of person you want sitting in judgment. A community, known as a jury, works a whole lot better than being at the mercy of an individual.

Addendum: The American Association for Justice, the nations largest group of pro-consumer trial attorneys (of which I am a member), issued this statement:

“A multi-million dollar lawsuit over a pair of pants was both ridiculous and offensive to our values. Our civil justice system must be reserved for those who seek fair compensation when they are the victim of true wrongdoing or negligence. The court has ruled wisely in this matter. Opponents of our civil justice system should pay heed to this decision — it clearly shows that the system works to deny outrageous and ridiculous claims.”

AAJ has been sharply critical of Judge Pearson’s lawsuit seeking $54 million in damages over a lost pair of pants. In April, AAJ CEO Jon Haber called on the District of Columbia Bar Association to conduct a disciplinary investigation of Judge Pearson for his conduct in this matter. Haber and AAJ President Lewis “Mike” Eidson pledged to support the defendant’s defense fund and encouraged the AAJ membership to also contribute (www.customcleanersdefensefund.com).

News links to Pants Pearson decision:

Blog Links:

(Eric Turkewitz is a personal injury attorney in New York, who understands that when one lawyer does something incredibly stupid, it tarnishes the entire profession in the eyes of some.)