$25 million verdict for paraplegic in Chicago
As a trucking safety trial attorney in Atlanta, Georgia, I've worked with quite a number of spinal cord injury survivors, and have had some good results. But not as good as the verdict a Chicago jury awarded last week.
In the Cook County case of Chraca v. Miles, an Illinois DOT vehicle collided with another vehicle in an intersection. Both drivers claimed that the other ran the red light, and the local police reconstruction was inconclusive. The private citizen, who was rendered an incomplete paraplegic unable to walk without leg braces and the use of canes or a walker, was represented by Chicago lawyer Martin Healy, Jr. Last week a jury returned a verdict of $25 million.
Paraplegia is a horrific injury. Most people have little idea of the complications that accompany it, including muscle spasticity, pressure sores and autonomic dysreflexia.
This paraplegic's tragedy would have been compounded if the crash had been in Georgia. In a similar case based on the negligence of a Georgia DOT employee in the course of his employment, recovery would have been limited to one million dollars under our State Tort Claims Act, which limits payments to $1 million per person and $3 million per accident. We would have been forced to search for other sources of compensation as the recovery from GA DOT would have been grossly inadequate.
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Isn't it ironic? Tort reform campaign fizzles in rash of higher verdicts in conservative counties.
However, as soon as the bill passed, a few of us began to gather for a series of weekly breakfast brainstroming sessions focused on how to survive and prosper in the new environment. Those sessions helped transform the law practices of several of the participants. Other lawyers around the state began to go through the same sort of process of evaluation and change.
Three years later, we have seen an increase in the frequency and geographical distribution of impressive jury verdicts in injury and death cases. Even counties that had been viewed as black holes for plaintiffs are producing seven and eight figure jury verdicts.
The most recent was a $5 million verdict this week in a hospital malpractice wrongful death case in Gwinnett County. That case involved the death of a new mother due to a fall, as the hospital personnel had not followed fall precautions which were indicated.
Until very recently many of us had simply declined to accept cases in Gwinnett because the juries there were so notoriously hostile to personal injury and wrongful death plaintiffs. I haven't heard how the $350,000 cap on noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases may affect that, if at all. It would not be surprising for an economist to reach a $5 million economic valuation on the life of a promising young adult.
A couple of weeks ago in Fulton County, which used to be a big-verdict venue but in recent years has become much more conservative, there was a $54 million verdict, which was reduced to a mere $10.25 million due to the statutory cap on punitive damages which was enacted in 1987.
Last year we had a $2.3 million verdict in a trucking case in conservative, rural Gordon County.. There have even been million dollar verdicts in some of the small, rural, deeply conservative counties.
The "loser pays" provision of S.B. 3 -- an "offer of setlement" feature in OCGA 9-11-68 which can require a party to pay the other side's attorney fees and litigation expenses if it fails to do 25% better at trial than in trial than in a rejected settlement offer -- was designed to intimidate and oppress plaintiffs. However, it has primarily hurt the defense side. In one medical malpratice case, the plaintiff got some $4 million in fees and expenses added to the compensatory damage award under this provision.
There are quite a few other examples that I have not taken the time to compileon a Saturday morning of a holiday weekend.
Why have we seen an increase in substantial verdicts in Georgia after the tort reformers got everything they asked for in the legislature? Certainly a few minor details of S.B. 3 have been held unconstitutional, but none of those points are substantially involved in these cases.
Another hypothesis is that tort reform has forced plaintiffs' lawyers to work harder and smarter in case preparation. With so many obstacles thrown in our path, we have to work hard in investigation, in selection and preparation of experts, and in all aspects of trial strategy and preparation.
When that enhanced preparation encounters the most democratic of all institutions in American society -- a jury of ordinary people from all walks of life with no political fears or aspirations related to their service on one case -- serious cases can get serious verdicts.
Three years ago, one might have predicted that by now we would be out of business and our clients would be out of luck. Today, however, it's a great time to be a lawyer representing good people with legitimate claims of serious injury or wrongful death of a loved one.
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Employer's cell phone call to driver employee may support employer's liability
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$2,345,940.17 verdict sets new high in Gordon County, GA

Fri., 3/9/07, Calhoun, GA.
In a scene reminiscent of the 1982 Paul Newman movie, "The Verdict," the jury after three hours of deliberation Thursday afternoon sent a note to the judge asking if they were limited by the amount the plaintiff asked for. In closing argument I had asked for a verdict of approximately $1.2 million for our client's permanently disabling leg injury. When we got that question from the jury, my first thought was that I don't drink anywhere near enough to fit the Paul Newman role in the movie.
Today we won a $2,345,940.17 jury verdict against a Pennsylvania trucking company in the Superior Court of Gordon County, Calhoun, Georgia. The verdict was broken down as follows: compensatory damages: $1,742,845.70, attorney fees due to bad faith in the transaction, $580,948.57, expenses of litigation $ 22,145.90. Medical expenses were $112,228. The highest offer from defendant's insurance company before trial was $125,000, going up to $400,000 on third day of trial. This was nearly three times the highest previous verdict in the history of Gordon County.
The specificity of the figures, down to the penny, helps to refute any allegation that it was a random verdict by a "runaway jury." These jurors were all deeply conservative northwest Georgia folks who were determined to follow the law and the facts wherever they led, and to do the right thing.
It was a very good week.
Johnson v. Clarendon National Insurance Company, American Trans-Freight, LLC, ATF Trucking, LLC, ATF Logistics, LLC, and Robert W. Carnley, CIVIL ACTION FILE NO. 04-CV-43532
"Super Lawyer" listing still OK in Georgia
However, the Fulton County Daily Report published an article on August 11th reporting an analysis to the effect that, while Georgia’s ethics rules contain proscriptions against comparative advertisements and ads that create unwarranted expectations, the language in Georgia is more permissive than that found in New Jersey’s ethics rules. The New Jersey rule prohibits as false and misleading any advertisement that "compares the lawyer’s services with other lawyers’ services." Under Rule 7.1(a)(3) of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct, the rule against comparisons does not apply if the comparison "can be factually substantiated."
The "Super Lawyers," "Legal Elite," and "Preeminent Lawyers" lists are all based upon periodic surveys of our peers in the legal profession, and cannot be purchased. While the methodology is certainly not perfect, neither is it meaningless or factually unsubstantiated. Therefore, we will continue to include those designations on the web site.
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Claim against GA DOT bounced due to technical flaw in pre-suit notice
Ante litem (before suit) notice is a trapdoor through which many tort claims against government fall to their doom. In Shelnutt v. DOT, decided 3/10/05, it happened again. The plaintiffs, represented by out of state counsel, sent ante litem notice under the State Tort Claims Act to the Commissioner of the Department of Administrative Services (DOAS) instead of the Risk Management Division of DOAS. The court held that wasn't good enough.
As we used to say on the playground when I was growing up, "close only counts in horse shoes and hand grenades." When pursuing a claim under the State Tort Claims Act, a lawyer just has to sit down and diagram the sentences in the statute every single time. For about a decade, I did defense work for state officials and employees as outside counsel when my former firm was hired by DOAS. Since then, I have had several cases against state agencies under the Tort Claims Act that was passed about the time I stopped doing the defense work. Even with that background, I read the entire statute again every time I start working on one of those cases. There is no such thing as being too technical in dealing with that statute.
See the case below:
MARTA not subject to punitive damages claim
Affirming a ruling by the late Judge Rowland Barnes, who was murdered in his courtroom a few weeks ago, the Court of Appeals has held that the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) is not subject to punitive damages. Ironically, the case arose from a brutal assault at the Lindbergh MARTA station, for which the victim sued for MARTA's allegedly inadequate security on the premises. See text below.
Continue Reading Questions & comments 0Fair Business Practices Act, Fraud
In Marrale v. Gwinnett Place Ford, the Court of Appeals helped to clear up some earlier case law that had treated used car sales at dealerships as "private transactions" outside the scope of the Fair Business Practices Act FBPA). Consumers and their lawyers who seek to use the FBPA should carefully review this case, and develop evidence of all advertising, marketing and promotion that led the consumer to enter into the transaction with the defendant, in order to put that transaction in the context of the defendant's activity in the consumer marketplace. See text below.
Continue Reading Questions & comments 2Clarifying "proximate cause" in Georgia tort jury instructions
Two cases decided in November 2004 help to clarify the often befuddling concept legal doctrine of "proximate cause" in Georgia jury instructions. In John Crane Inc. v. Jones, 278 Ga. 747, 604 S.E.2d 822 (2004), the Supreme Court of Georgia held that it is error to charge that each of multiple defendants must have been a "substantial contributing factor" in causation, as any contributing factor is sufficient. Similarly, in Thompson v. Thompson, 278 Ga. 752, 605 S.E.2d 30 (2004), the court held that it was reversible error to use the "dominant cause" phrase to explain proximate cause.
These decisions are significant both in simplifying the often confusing issue of proximate cause for jurors, and perhaps in leading to clarification of jury instructions generally.
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