“This is a victory for anyone who likes fun and risk activities.”

An attorney for a California amusement park company has called the company’s recent win in a bumper car lawsuit a “victory for anyone who likes fun and risk activities.”  The case involved a head on collision in bumper cars between two amusement park patrons – one of the patrons ended up with a broken wrist.  Of course, low speed collisions are the whole point of the ride.

The California Supreme Court says riders can’t sue over injuries stemming from the inherent nature of the attraction.

The lawsuit was filed by a San Jose, California doctor, Smriti Nalwa, who fractured her wrist while riding in a bumper car with her 9-year-old son. The injury occurred when she braced herself for a head-on collision with another car by placing her arm on the dashboard. Dr. Nalwa alleged that amusement park, Great America, failed to direct its employees to ask patrons to avoid head on collisions. To the joy of kids and kids at heart throughout the state, the court was not buying what the good doctor was selling. The court found that Dr Nalwa’s injury was caused by a collision that was a normal part of the ride and that she had assumed the risk by participating in the ride. Justice Kathryn Mickle Werdegar held:

A small degree of risk inevitably accompanies the thrill of speeding through curves and loops, defying gravity or, in bumper cars, engaging in the mock violence of low-speed collisions. Those who voluntarily join in these activities also voluntarily take on their minor inherent risks.

Perhaps California gets an unfair legal rap?  But then you consider the fact that there actually was a dissenting opinion. Justice Joyce L. Kennard’s dissent complains that the decision makes poor trial judges face “the unenviable task of determining the risks of harm that are inherent in a particular recreational activity.”  I think we could give that task to any 7 year-old and they could handle it.

 

The $4 Million Dollar Exercise Ball?

If you are an exercise ball manufacturer, you may not be overly concerned about huge damages arising from a defective product.  What’s the worst that could happen?  Perhaps a ball explodes and someone falls a short distance to the ground (which might also be padded itself)?  Generally, this litigation is not of the “bet the company lawsuit” variety, of course, the injured person and Plaintiff is an NBA basketball player with a $6 million annual salary.  As we previously noted, that very scenario happened in California, and it resulted in a hefty, confidential settlement.

According to a lawsuit filed by both the Sacramento Kings and forward Francisco Garcia, Garcia was balancing on an exercise ball while simultaneously lifting two 90 pound weights.  Thereupon, the ball allegedly burst, and he fell to the ground.  Garcia suffered a right arm fracture and missed four months of the NBA season.  The Kings paid Garcia nearly $4 million during the off time.

The ball at issue was manufactured by Ledraplastic. The lawsuit alleges such balls were warranted to withstand 600 pounds and to be “burst resistant.”

The Kings alleged that Ledraplastic breach of the manufacturer’s warranty and sought over $4 million in damages for Garcia’s salary.  Garcia sought an unspecified amount of damages for pain and suffering, along with reduced future earning capacity.  Not surprisingly, this case settled out of court and the financial terms of the settlement are undisclosed.

We would have liked to see this one litigate a bit further, actually. New reports did not indicate how much discovery was conducted, but we wonder if Garcia was deposed.  How often had he used the ball while simultaneously lifting weights? Where did he get the idea that the ball could withstand both him and the free weights?   Was there literature suggesting that such usage was appropriate and safe?  What warnings were in play? These issues were obviously a part of the suit (or at least the settlement negotiations), as the Sacramento Bee reported:

As part of the agreement to keep the financial terms of the settlement secret, Ledraplastic, an Italian firm, agreed to circulate a letter informing and reminding all distributors that Gymnic fit balls should be used with only body weight and never with weights, and advising distributors to forward the letter to customers.

Interesting.  If a similar accident occurs in the future, we suspect those letters will be further litigated.  We’ll see.

California Burglar Sues Man He Shot In The Face

Having a burglar break into your home and hold you at gunpoint must be a horrific experience.  Getting shot in the face by the burglar is unimaginable.  Getting sued by the burglar after he shoots you in the face and you return fire from inside your own home?  Well, apparently, that’s just the state of the legal system.  It’s exactly what appears to have happened to one elderly California man.

Ninety year old Jay Leone was at his home in Greenbrae, California, when the plaintiff, 31-year-old Samuel Cutrufelli, allegedly broke into his home in broad daylight.  The plaintiff kicked in his door and held Mr. Leone at gunpoint while he searched for valuables throughout the home.  Unbeknownst to the plaintiff, Mr. Leone had a revolver stashed in his bathroom for personal protection.  Mr. Leone retrieved the revolver after he persuaded the plaintiff to let him use the bathroom.  When Mr. Leone emerged with the gun, the plaintiff shot him in the jaw.  Mr. Leone then fired three shots at the plaintiff, before the plaintiff grabbed the gun from him and put the gun to Mr. Leone’s head.  The plaintiff pulled the trigger, but luckily for Mr. Leone the gun was out of bullets.  The plaintiff then fled the scene.

Police later found the plaintiff in a car close to Mr. Leone’s home and arrested him.  The plaintiff now faces, among other things, an attempted murder charge in connection with the shooting.  Mr. Leone has not been charged with any criminal wrongdoing.

Well, now it is Mr. Cutrufelli who suing Mr. Leone.  Yes, you read that right.  The burglar that is facing attempted murder charges is suing the man he shot in the face.  The plaintiff claims Mr. Leone “negligently” shot him.  He is seeking damages for “great bodily injury, and other financial damage, including loss of Mr. Cutrufelli’s home, and also the dissolution of Mr. Cutrufelli’s marriage.”  Apparently, the lawsuit was filed by the plaintiff’s criminal defense attorney.

It is very doubtful that this case will make it very far.   However, if the facts presently known are all true, the mere fact that a licensed attorney filed the lawsuit in the first place is ridiculous.  To Mr. Leone’s credit, he seems to be taking the suit it in stride.  He told the Marin Independent Journal, “He’s the one who busted my door in. I’ll just countersue him then. That’s what I’ll need to do.”

NBA, Player on Plaintiff’s End of Product Liability Suit

NBA teams pay their players a lot of money. Last season, the league minimum salary was $490,180. With so much invested, team owners don’t like injuries to their star players. Especially when those injuries were caused by an allegedly defective product.

According to a report from The Sacramento Bee, the Sacramento Kings and Guard/Forward Francisco Garcia have settled their claims against Italian exercise ball manufacturer, Ledraplastic S.p.a. Apparently, the federal suit was the result of a fractured forearm sustained by Garcia when the exercise ball on which he was standing exploded while he was lifting two 90-pound dumbbells. The accident occurred in October 2009, shortly after Garcia had signed a 5-year, $29.6 million contract extension. Garcia missed the first four months of the following season recovering from his injuries. The team sought to recover the $4 million in salary they had to pay while their player sat on the bench recovering. While the financial terms of the agreement are confidential, the attorney for Garcia and the Kings indicated the settlement was “extremely beneficial” to his clients. When the plaintiffs are a well-compensated, finely tuned machine and his employer, we expect the attorney’s description was accurate.

Even though Garcia and the Kings’ damages may have been substantial, it would have been interesting to see how a jury would have handled the product liability claims against Ledraplastic. The basis for the plaintiffs’ claims is that the exercise balls warrant that they can withstand 600 pounds and claim to be “burst resistant.” In product testing during the litigation, the exercise balls were shown to burst around the 400 pound mark.

As an initial matter, the manufacturer’s claim to be “burst resistant” is not necessarily a fallacy. “Burst resistant” does not equate to “burst proof.” The ball undoubtedly was resisting explosion at all points up to 400 pounds. Therefore, the claim is accurate, to a degree. Unfortunately, the problems rest with the weight resistance points warranted by the manufacturer.

The fact that the ball ruptured at a point less than 600 pounds is not necessarily a deal breaker. For example, if the ball was being used in a manner outside its intended purpose (i.e. lifting weights while standing on the ball, perhaps), then the original resistance points may be legitimately compromised. However, it does not appear that Ledraplastic ever warned that weights should not be used in conjunction with the exercise ball – a warning that could be helpful when using exercise equipment. In fact, as part of the settlement, the manufacturer has circulated a letter among its distributors advising them that the ball should only be used with body weight.

Unfortunately for Ledraplastic, it had to learn about the need for this extra warning at the hands of a wealthy athlete and an NBA franchise.

First World Problems: Litigating A Really Sweet Pool Table

Several weeks ago, a breach of contract/failure-to-warn lawsuit was filed in California state court against a specialty billiard table manufacturer. The case is Desert Beach, LLC v. Nottage Design Pty Ltd. et al, (Orange County). The complaint alleges that Desert Beach, which is a luxury resort, purchased a futuristic pool table from the defendants that – in my immodest opinion – is really, really sweet. Basically, instead of being covered in traditional green or blue felt, the defendants’ pool table is made entirely of glass. Make no mistake, regardless of the threat of war with Iran or the fact that some jerk-wad from Chicago literally just tried to hijack my bank account (props to Wells Fargo for shutting that down), this pool table represents a future I’m proud to live in.

Here’s the problem: The table is apparently easier to break than Michael Vick, who I’m told is also made of glass. Well of course, you may be thinking. A glass pool table is begging to be broken. That’s what I thought, too. However, the defendants allegedly coat each table in a synthetic known as “Vitrik,” which is supposed to make the table top highly durable. That’s one piece of the equation. The other piece is that only specialty billiard balls are to be used on the table. You could also get the best new pinball machines.

Which brings us to the lawsuit. The complaint alleges that defendants failed to tell Desert Beach about the fact that they had to use specialty billiard balls. So guess what Desert Beach did. They went to the Orange County equivalent of Wal-Mart (which may, in fact, be Wal-Mart, I don’t know) and bought the first set of billiard balls they laid their eyes on. And shot pool with them. And damaged the table so badly that not even Obi Wan could offer any hope.

Desert Beach called the defendants and asked them to make it right. And in a power-move befitting of a company who charges $73,000 for a pool table, the defendants allegedly told Desert Beach to pound sand. Then, again allegedly, the defendants tried to reverse engineer their website and other documents to show that Desert Beach knew they were only supposed to use specialty billiard balls with the table. Desert Beach was not amused by the underwhelming customer service and decided to double-down on the insanity with a lawsuit in California, the land of crazy lawsuits.

The defendants haven’t answered the lawsuit yet, so we don’t know their side of the story. But let’s be honest. The pool table cost $73,000. Did the defendants think that Desert Beach would just walk away from that? I mean, if you’ve got that much money to blow on a pool table, you’ve got that much money to blow on litigation to prove a point.

$1.7 Billion Claim . . . Over Parking Meters

What’s an ear infection, ringing of the ears, and tightness of the neck/back worth?  According to a California woman, it’s worth $1.7 billion.  Yes, you read that right!  That’s billion with a “b,” not million with an “m.”  And the culprit that has caused such grievous injury?  None other than the city’s newly installed “smart” parking meters.

The City of Santa Monica, California recently installed smart parking meters that allow drivers to use smartphones and credit cards to purchase metered time.  The parking meter slots have sensors that will reset a meter when a parking space is vacated.  A local woman named Denise Barton recently filed a lawsuit seeking a mere $1.7 billion plus $1.7 million per month thereafter in damages because the wireless signals emitted from the meters are making her sick.  Apparently, shortly after the parking meters were installed, she developed an ear infection which required antibiotics to treat.  She must have one hell of a doctor, because he was able narrow the cause down to the city’s new parking meters.

The City of Santa Monica claims the wireless emission is at a very low level and extends only up to eight feet from the meter.  Assistant Finance Director Don Patterson told the Santa Monica Daily Press, “The Wi-Fi is very low level and only communicates between the meter and the sensor, about 5 to 8 feet… It’s the same as someone using a cell phone walking on the sidewalk.”  According to the city, the meters comply with all necessary regulations related to wireless communication.

There have been no other complaints over health issues caused by the meters, except those of Barton.  Although the dangers of wireless radiation have been widely disputed, the studies usually focus on holding a cell phone to your head for long periods of time.  The studies don’t access the dangers of walking past someone sending a text message.  Then again, we’re sure Barton’s attorneys have some great new studies because we all know an attorney would never file a frivolous claim.  However, if that’s the case, why on earth isn’t she suing the cell phone carriers for her health issues?  Perhaps those mammoth companies don’t have deep enough pockets for her $1.7 billion claims?

iPhone 4 Screen Lawsuit Tossed in California

The iPhone 5 is set to be released soon, and as per usual, it appears that it will be another in the long lines of wins for Apple.   It will arrive in stores just as Apple wraps up a lawsuit over broken iPhone 4s.  A federal judge in San Jose, California, recently threw out a class action lawsuit from iPhone 4 owners who claimed that Apple misrepresented the strength of the phone’s glass screen. The case is Williamson v. Apple, Inc., No. 5:11-CV-00377 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 4, 2012).

In the lawsuit, the complaint alleged that Apple’s claims that its phone’s  glass screen was “20 times stiffer and 30 times harder than plastic” were misleading, citing a study that the glass on the iPhone 4 breaks at a rate 82 percent higher than previous iPhones.  District Court Judge Edward Davila disagreed.  In his order dismissing the case, he stated that “it is a well known fact of life that glass can break under impact” and ruled that Apple did not breach a warranty or violate consumer protection laws.

I’ll admit that I have noticed a large number of of people walking around with cracked iPhone screens lately.  Are the screens really up to snuff as described in Apple’s marketing materials?  I could certainly see an argument that the ads might lead you to believe that the odds of breaking the glass are very low.  Especially when the materials appear to tout the glass screens as stronger than plastic screens, which rarely shatter.  However, the judge based his decision on the fact that Apple never stated that the iPhone 4 was “resistant to normal wear and tear, that the glass housing would never break or crack under normal use, or that the phone might not be damaged if it was dropped.”

So, it appears all of you iPhone 4 users rolling around with cracked screens aren’t going to hit the jackpot this time.  It might just be time to just pony up for that shiny new iPhone 5 with a fresh screen. Good luck.

 

Austin Powers and the $1 billion Apple Verdict

When I saw the above referenced headline on CNN’s Tech website, I had two, nearly simultaneous, reactions.  First, I had to re-read the headline.  A jury in Caifornia just awarded Apple a BILLION dollars?  With a “b”?  Yes, kids, that’s “billion.”  With a “b.”  My next, less professional, reaction was to cite a string of my favorite quotes from the movie Austin Powers.  Oh, that Dr. Evil! (We’ll wait for you here while you go watch the movie clip for yourself.).

We have been tracking the Apple-Samsung worldwide feud for months now; last November, we blogged about Apple’s victory in Australia in the so-called “tablet wars” – a federal court in Australia granted Apple an injunction against Samsung, preventing Samsung from selling its tablet device “Galaxy Tab 10.1″ in Australia.  Apple alleged that Samsung infringed on “two of its patents relating to touch screens and the gestures that control them.”  Samsung faced similar troubles here in the United States.

This recent verdict was awarded in California federal court over the companies’ respective smartphones – Apple’s iPhone and Samsung’s Galaxy.  The jury determined that Samsung was guilty of “willful” violations of Apple’s patents.  It started out even bigger, but was reduced by $2.5 million when some inconsistencies surfaced in the jury’s award.  Apple had put an even bigger number “up on the board,” so to speak – $2.7 billion.  I am sure that the lawyer writing that closing had to say that figure, out loud, many times to keep it from absolutely catching in his or her throat.  Could you imagine asking a jury for that amount?  With a straight face?  But, I digress.

It is not surpristing that this award represents the largest patent infringement verdict in history.  Still to be decided is the issue of injunctions, and whether Samsung will be able to continue to sell its phone in the United States.  We’ll be watching for that decision, for sure.  In the meantime, we leave you with the quote that partially inspired this post:

Number Two: Don’t you think we should ask for *more* than a million dollars? A million dollars isn’t exactly a lot of money these days. Virtucon alone makes over 9 billion dollars a year!

Dr. Evil: Really? That’s a lot of money.

[pause]

Dr. Evil: Okay then, we hold the world ransom for… One… Hundred… BILLION DOLLARS!

Critical Thoughts on Depositions of Asbestos Plaintiffs

We recently ran across a blog entry regarding the death of an asbestos/mesothieloma plaintiff whose lawyers and doctors contend that a 25-hour deposition sought by the defendants killed him. The blog quotes this disturbing L.A. Times column by Michael Hiltzik, entitled, “Mesothelioma victims deserve better than wasteful legal maneuvers.”  Here’s the relevant portion of Hilztik’s piece:

Here’s the horrific question now: Did asbestos industry lawyers deliberately drive Johnson to his death by putting him through a brutal series of depositions so their clients would save money?

That’s what his family, his doctor and his lawyers assert. Despite affidavits from his doctor stating that 12 hours of depositions over a few weeks would be about as much as the 69-year-old’s health could stand, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge allowed the companies he was suing a total of 25 hours.

Johnson put off returning to the hospital so he could appear at every session, including the last, on Jan. 23. His face contorted in pain, he gasped out answers to questions from the last of the dozens of defense attorneys in attendance. Less than 40 minutes later, he collapsed.

The very next day he died at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. With him died his family’s claims for pain and suffering, mental anguish and bodily disfigurement, reducing their potential recovery in or out of court by as much as 70%, in the assessment of his attorney, Roger Worthington. What’s left are chiefly claims for medical bills and lost wages and for his wife’s loss of his companionship.

Johnson’s family, his lawyers, and his doctor have no doubt that the defense lawyers stretched out the legal process through what the family contends in court were “delay tactics and stalling,” in the expectation that he would die before he reached the finish line.

This is a very serious allegation, and the column in question, in suggesting that the conduct of the defense attorneys may have played a role in the death of the plaintiff, did not provide a full context of mesothieloma products liability cases and the litigation thereof. The column – which notes that California allows 20 hour depositions in asbestos cases – suggests that the default rules in federal court (7 hours) may have been more appropriate.  However, the default rule is exactly that – a default – which can and should be modified when necessary.  A civil case involving a single plaintiff, a single defendant, and a single trauma merits less discovery – and shorter depositions – than one in which a plaintiff’s entire career history must be explored in detail.  To offer context, we must explore why asbestos depositions merit more time than those in other, simpler cases.

First and foremost, a typical asbestos plaintiff sues dozens and dozens and dozens of product manufacturers.  (Hiltzik does note that the plaintiff in question initially sued 65 companies in his products liability suit, a number which was later reduced to 44 defendants). Sometimes, these plaintiffs also sue outside contractors who would have worked at plants where they, the plaintiffs, once worked.  All of these defendants are different – – they are makers of entirely different products, and on many occasions, their products are similar enough to where questioning is needed to distinguish which products a plaintiff actually worked with or near.  It goes without saying that each defendant in a case is entitled to explore the allegations against it in any lawsuit brought by a plaintiff.  However, this task is made very difficult in asbestos cases because of the nature of the claims being made.

It is critical to note that asbestos plaintiffs often claim that they were exposed to asbestos over the course of a multi-decade career.  It is not unusual for a plaintiff to allege that he was exposed to products over a 40 or 50 year career during the span of his life.  (Hitzlik reports that the plaintiff worked “as a carpenter, auto mechanic and plumber from 1961 until 1990.”). Because each work site during a plaintiff’s career is the potential exposure site, those sites must be explored in detail.  Further, because many of these plaintiffs typically worked at manufacturing or energy production plants, even if they worked for a single corporation during a long span of time, they often worked at many different plants and facilities owned and operated by their former employers, and each plant or facility may house or contain very different products. This information is critical to defendants because it may be that at a particular time at a particular location their products were unavailable or non-asbestos containing. Obviously, when there are 20 to 30 to 40 defendants, and each defendant has a different set of questions to ask about a different set of products, a deposition will be lengthy.  First, the counsel taking lead on the deposition will survey the plaintiff’s entire career to determine where he alleges he was exposed to asbestos.  That lead counsel will typically ask specific questions about the products his client manufacturers and leave to the other lawyers the task of asking about their own client’s products.  Once the lead lawyer completes his examination, the other lawyers take their turn.  Cutting off the deposition at seven hours would leave many lawyers without the opportunity to ask any questions whatsoever despite the fact that their clients have been sued.

So what are the potential remedies if a plaintiff is too ill to be deposed? Typically, the plaintiff himself is the only individual who can testify with some level of certainty as to where he worked and when.  It’s hard to find witnesses who can testify about products used at a facility decades and decades ago. So, how would defense counsel learn that information if not directly from the plaintiff? Plaintiff’s counsel could alleviate this issue by being more specific in the complaint and discovery responses drafted on behalf of their clients.  Unfortunately, many state court – and even federal court – complaints in asbestos cases simply list each defendant and then generally allege that at some point during the plaintiff’s career and/or life he was exposed to products manufactured by those defendants.  The complaints rarely  allege which products manufactured by those defendants the plaintiff worked with or near, nor do they generally list the specific time frames or locations where a particular defendant’s products are at issue.  This leaves the defendants without much information to investigate the claims against it. Further, the plaintiff’s written discovery responses are typically unhelpful, as well.  Again, written discovery may allege the type of product manufactured by a corporate defendant which the plaintiff worked with or near – a valve, a boiler, a gasket, a sealant, or something of that variety – but it still typically does not provide any more specific information than that (including the years that the plaintiff would have worked around that type of product). As another way to shorten the need for a lengthy deposition, plaintiff’s counsel could sue fewer defendants – perhaps they could sue the defendants whose products they know may have been at issue rather than those they simply suspect do.

It may be that the plaintiff does not know the particular model or brand of the products they worked with or near; but many asbestos plaintiffs’ firms have done a bit of research into these issues and typically represent clients who worked at the same locations.  It seems as if plaintiff’s firms prosecuting mesothieloma asbestos cases either have to high a volume or to enumerate a specific products at issue or maintain a philosophy of suing everyone and then the defendants prove their way out.  Either way, the only way that a defendant can learn whether its products were at issue is to ask the plaintiff directly.

So, as noted above, there are many, many reasons why asbestos depositions last longer than more traditional ones. Perhaps, Plaintiff’s counsel in these cases could provide a bit more information about the allegations in their complaints earlier in the process to obviate the need for extensive questioning, but if present trends continue, that certainly seems unlikely.

(Hat Tip: Max Kennerly).

Family Sues Funeral Home Over Switched Bodies

Once upon a time, I represented a funeral home on a claim for negligent embalming.  At least they had the right body!

The L.A. Times recently reported that Mercedes Adilia Rodriguez had specific instructions for her funeral, including a closed casket and burial in her hometown in Nicaragua, rather than in Southern California.  Shortly after her death, the funeral home allegedly admitted it had made a mistake and that Ms. Rodriguez had been confused with someone else.  The family sued, alleging in their complaint against the funeral home that Ms. Rodriguez went through another woman’s funeral, in an open casket, dressed in the other woman’s clothing, and buried in a cemetery marked with the other woman’s name. The L.A. Times further reported that the family has alleged that while the funeral home refunded the funeral costs, they claim damages for being “forever haunted by the vision of how a complete stranger’s family and friends mourned, touched, kissed, and cried” over Ms. Rodriguez’s body.  While there have probably been other cases like this in the past, we were particularly interested in the online comments offered by the story’s readers.  The funeral home accepted responsibility, refunded the cost of the funeral, and apologized.  Based on these readers’ comments, the plaintiffs are going to have a tough time making their case.

“This lawsuit is wrong on so many levels.  It’s interesting they can put a price on their emotional turmoil.”

“It does make you wonder how bereaved they are if they can manage to file a lawsuit.”

“What a bunch of slimy money-grubbers.”

“Disgusting that the family of this woman would capitalize on this mistake . . . ambulance-chasing scum attorneys.”

“Another moneymaker for bottom-feeding lawyers.  This mistake is nothing more than an excuse to get a little extra cash.”

“Go earn money instead of trying to make it on the backs of others.”

The Rodriguez family will probably want to strike most of these readers from any potential jury pool.