November 27th, 2009

Thanksgiving Friday and the Consumer Stampedes (Who Will Get Hurt/Killed? Film at 11)


Every year, like clockwork, businesses put items up for sale on Thanksgiving Friday with the idea of creating consumer excitement.

The cameras roll, the doors open, and the masses go hurtling through the door as if eternal life awaits the first person in the big screen TV aisle. And every year people get hurt. Or, like last year at a Wal*Mart in New York, killed.

Having engineered the stampedes, Big Business has a duty to protect against the consequences of their actions. They can not claim that the stampede took them by surprise, since the stampede is what they want. The stampede is cleary foreseeable and there is a duty to provide effective crowd control measures.

Consumers jockeying for under priced goods makes for good video for the store, which makes people believe that there may be more in store at the store, and helps to build a reputation for good deals. But along with the good comes liability if crowd control is not provided.

Once upon a time Thanksgiving Friday was a delightful holiday with no name. Unless you were in retail or worked in the hospital, chances are you took the day off.

Over the last 10-20 years, of course, Big Business has been hell-bent on building “Black Friday” into a temple of consumerism.

Given the death last year at Wal*Mart, and the annual injuries that occur from reckless merchants that don’t know jack about crowd control, Black Friday has an altogether different meaning for some.

Update:

 

November 25th, 2009

Is the "Independent" Medical Exam Dead?

For many years personal injury attorneys fought back against the concept of “independent” medical exams. We didn’t argue that defendants weren’t entitled to have a doctor evaluate our clients injuries. Rather, we objected to the absurd concept that a doctor hired by one side to do a medical-legal exam is “independent.”

And now that unfortunate label seems to be fading into oblivion. In Rowe v. Wahnow, decided last week by a New York appellate court, plaintiff’s auto case was tossed out based on the “IME” reports of the defendant’s doctors.

But in dissent comes Justice Douglas McKeon, ripping into the concept that such “IME” reports are actually independent. And he does so with support from New York’s Chief Judge, Jonathan Lippman:

…the “independent” prong of the term, has long been winked at by the bench and bar. Few consider the physical examination conducted for purposes of litigation as independent; indeed, one court has described it as part of the “adversarial process” (Bazakos v Lewis, rev’d on other grounds) with Chief Judge Lippman forthrightly observing that “[t]hese exams, far from being independent in any ordinary sense of the word, are paid for and frequently controlled in their scope and conduct by legal adversaries of the examinee (id. at 6 [Lippman, Ch. J., dissenting).

When I was younger I would routinely run my pen through those parts of the pre-printed Preliminary Conference Orders that had the word “independent.” Now the courts were simply looking for dates on when the exams would be done, and when reports would be furnished, but I’d belly-ache about the language. More than a few opposing lawyers and judges would look at me like I was from Mars.

In recent years, however, I get an understanding nod. Enough of us have raised the issue — and this language is important because we don’t want judges referring to these things as “independent” when a jury is sitting in the box — that the language is now being challenged in the highest halls of justice.

So let me be the first to proclaim that the “independent” medical exam is dead. Sure, it may still take a few years to see it buried altogether, but make no mistake about it, it is on an irreversible course to the trash heap of litigation history.

 

August 31st, 2009

The Wife, The Tushy Bone and The Waterpark (Assumption of Risk? Or Not?)

My wife hurt her tushy bone this past week at a water park. Should she sue?

First off, the lede is not a joke. She was at Jungle Jim’s waterpark in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Their largest slide has a particularly sharp drop near the top, causing an injury to her coccyx severe enough to warrant a visit to the emergency room and a supply of Percocets. Whether it is broken or badly bruised didn’t seem important to the ER staff as there was no treatment for it except pain killers.

Two facts seemed particularly important, from the legal end:

First, she was told by someone at the first aide station (where they gave her Tylenol) that sometimes people wrench their back on that attraction; and

Second, no one took her name or filled out any kind of report.

So they have a ride that they know causes injuries and are failing to track the injuries. This means, of course, that if it is their policy not to take reports, and if they are ever sued for an injury and are asked about prior reports to see how dangerous the ride is, they can simply reply that they don’t have any. That’s called turning a blind eye to a problem. And the witnesses are gone.

But also lurking in the liability background is the doctrine of “assumption of risk.” In New York, where I practice, that means that “by engaging in a sport or recreational activity, a participant consents to those commonly-appreciated risks which are inherent in and arise out of the nature of the sport generally and flow from such participation. Participants properly may be held to have consented, by their participation, to those injury-causing events which are known, apparent, or reasonably foreseeable consequences of participation, but not to unassumed, concealed, or unreasonably increased risks.”

That language above comes from last week’s appellate decision in Farrell v Hochhauser, where a high school wrestler contracted herpes simplex I while participating in a wrestling match. The court tossed out the suit because the risk of infection in a sport with close bodily contact is known.

And in another recent New York appellate decision, the court tossed the suit of a skydiver that was injured. The lower court had permitted the matter of Nutley v. Sky Dive the Ranch to go forward, but a panel of the First Department reversed. This case was the subject of extended discussion and commentary, at John Hochfelder’s New York Injury Cases Blog. The court wrote:

Here, the risk of the main parachute failing to open during a tandem sky dive was perfectly obvious. Indeed, plaintiff was given a reserve parachute. Plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact as to whether the injury-causing event resulted from defendant’s negligence, creating unique and dangerous conditions beyond those inherent in the sport.

By contrast, an unusual Little League suit resulted in a $125,000 settlement after a kid was badly injured sliding into second. It sparked much comment at Overlawyered and an article in LawyersUSA Online where I was quoted on the subject. It seems apparent to me that the usual hurdles of the assumption of risk doctrine were overcome based on that case’s particular fact pattern and an issue with the bases that were being used.

So, returning to my wife’s tush, it would appear that (under New York law) this would be a particularly troublesome case to bring due to assumption of risk. Except for that part about Jungle Jim’s failing to track the injuries that take place on the attraction. The failure to track makes it impossible to determine if this attraction at Jungle Jim’s has more injuries than others.

Most people, I think, when going on a roller coaster or water park type ride, make the assumption that it is the fear of injury and death that provides the fun, and assume that actual injuries pertain mostly to those with cardiac conditions or pregnancy. There is also some jostling to be expected, and the odd bruise here and there.

But if the ride repeatedly causes injuries, is that something “commonly-appreciated” or a danger that is readily apparent from the sport or recreation? This could, conceivably, crack open the liability door, though that could take substantial work if records aren’t being kept.

And what is the law in Delaware where this event happened? While I assume it is similar to New York, I’m not a particularly litigious person, notwithstanding my career choice, so I’m not going to find out. I assume anyway that after a few weeks my wife will be fine. Even if the liability door was open, I would reject the case based on these injuries.

On a final note, when searching for tushy graphics to use on a blog, it is advisable to turn on the SafeSearch feature of Google.

 

August 17th, 2009

Minivan Mom Tasered in Syracuse

A mom with two kids in her car in Syracuse was pulled over by a cop for allegedly talking on her cell phone. But she wasn’t. And because this is easy enough to prove with records, the cop was obviously pissed.

So he did the next logical thing, claiming he was going to give her a ticket for going 50 in a 45 mph zone. Because that is just the sort of thing that police do every day.

The mom at issue, Audra Harmon, said she wanted to see “the tape” from the cop’s radar gun and got out of the car. Bad move. Deputy Sean Andrews told her to get back in the car. She complied.

Then he demanded she get out again. I’m not making this up. Finally he yanked her out, and while she stood there in the most inoffensive manner possible, no more threatening to the officer’s safety than a butterfly, he tasered her. Twice.

Let’s roll the videotape, which you can see with the full story here (because I’m unable for some reason to embed the video here.)

I usually leave the stories of cops tasering people without good cause to Scott Greenfield. But I’m back from a tranquil beach vacation and this jumped out at me.

She will sue, of course. As she should. And with any luck at all Deputy Andrews will be flipping burgers someplace where an assault with a spatula will be less likely to do harm.

One last note: This comes to light in August, but it happened in January. Local officials say the matter is under review. That’s a long time to review a simple incident, if you ask me, and isn’t exactly a credit to the investigating authorities.

Links to this post:

flustered cop turns taser on syracuse mom
a stun gun making an electrical arc between it… you are not going to believe this video! i was alerted to it by a post on attorney eric turkewitz’s blog. eric practices personal injury law in new york city, but “minivan mom tasered in
posted by Jim Reed @ August 24, 2009 11:45 AM

 

June 9th, 2009

NY Ct. of Appeals: Code Violation Is Insufficient In Dog Case


The New York Court of Appeals today tossed out a personal injury case premised on a violation of a local leash law. (Petrone v. Fernandez, June 9, 2009)

The dog in question here did nothing wrong. Rather, the defendant’s rottweiler was lounging on the unfenced lawn of its owner and the plaintiff, a mail carrier, made a bee-line back to her car in panic. She broke her finger trying to leap through the window to safety. The dog never barked or attacked and returned to its owner when called.

Plaintiff wanted to prove negligence against the owner by virtue of the unleashed dog, as being unleashed was a violation of a local ordinance. But New York’s high court tossed that out, since a suit based on personal injury from an animal rests solely in strict liability. The rule of strict liability is simple. It is premised on “harm caused by a domestic animal whose owner knows or should have known of the animal’s vicious propensities.” So sayeth the court.

And what of the leash law violation being evidence of negligence? Irrelevant. According to the court:

[D]efendant’s violation of the local leash law is “irrelevant because such a violation is only some evidence of negligence, and negligence is no longer a basis for imposing liability”

The pictured pup, by the way, is our own. And he’s very friendly. Unless you fear being licked to death.