i also believe that the award of two hundred million dollars is a clear case of the current trend in America blaming anybody other than yourself for your actions.
Agree......Personal Responsibility is a thing of the past.
i also believe that the award of two hundred million dollars is a clear case of the current trend in America blaming anybody other than yourself for your actions.
I will bet it gets reduced on appeal...
Any betting people ot there?
How many of these large case $ announcements get reduced and you never hear about it as it doesn't have the attention getting power the original announcement gets.
I will bet it gets reduced on appeal...
Any betting people ot there?
How many of these large case $ announcements get reduced and you never hear about it as it doesn't have the attention getting power the original announcement gets.
Does this give any muscle to those who want to see required training and licenses for operators?
I had a Cessna executive tell me that they could reduce the cost of their piston line by one-third and still make all the profit they are looking for. The extra fifty percent markup is for the legal funds. What's the first thing a newly minted pilot does? He takes three friends up for a flight on a hot summer day. His plane will be overloaded, with reduced performance on a hot day, and he can't get the plane to fly even after using up all the runway. He crashes into the trees at the edge of the airport and kills everybody. Family sues Cessna.
.....
If it weren't for lawyers we wouldn't need lawyers.
note: There is no walk thru from the bow area to the rest of the boat.
The boat was cruising 5 to 7 MPH. It wasn't overloaded. Once water washed into the forward seating area, it had no where to go, weighted the bow even more and enough water came in to wash a kid overboard...
Always more to the story...a little research and just read an article that described a 30 million award against Mastercraft for a similar event.
I would like to know just how many stampings occurred in how many hours of operation, just how much weight the operator allowed forward, just what control and seakeeping was the operator doing at the time...... would have to read transcripts as typical news reports are suspect at best.
The boat was cruising 5 to 7 MPH. It wasn't overloaded. Once water washed into the forward seating area, it had no where to go, weighted the bow even more and enough water came in to wash a kid overboard.
The boat was cruising 5 to 7 MPH. It wasn't overloaded. Once water washed into the forward seating area, it had no where to go, weighted the bow even more and enough water came in to wash a kid overboard.
There was no warning label indicating the boat might nose dive like this.
Is this a poorly designed boat? I don't see how any juror could decide otherwise.
Is the absence of a factory installed label warning that the boat is prone to swamping a good reason for the millions in damages? Again, as a juror, I think I would have come to the conclusion that there should have been one. The amount awarded, however, seems very excessive. With appeals and subsequent negotiations, the family won't get but a fraction of this award, if any.
Plenty of cases of "failure to warn". Rodgers vs Whittaker is imprinted in the brain of ophthalmologists and the medical profession generally here.Thats stupid! Your saying that if something could happen the manufacturer must post a label to that effect? Would be impossible to comply with. In the case of the bowrider it dosent take much to take water over the bow. Something as simple as another boats wake can cause that and if the kid was in the very front looking down at the water the bow could easily go under. without being over loaded. Was the kid properly posted with warning labels?
No, its not the manufacturers responsibility to post labels warning of all possible dangers.
In fact every experience boater has had water over the bow at some time or other due to environmental factors....
You walk through the opening in the windscreen.note: There is no walk thru from the bow area to the rest of the boat.
Plenty of cases of "failure to warn". Rodgers vs Whittaker is imprinted in the brain of ophthalmologists and the medical profession generally here.
In industrial law here, it`s been said the only adequately safety guarded machine is so well guarded it defies use.
Failure to warn often involves operator error. Question is, did was failure to warn causally connected to the operator error.
Totally agree. I remember years ago. the guards on the printing equipment we bought prevented their use. Stupid.
As for this boat accident, first we really need more info, but on the surface I'd side with the boat manufacturer. And the award is just stupid high.
I think before negligence can be determined there should be a process that decides how common it is. Everyone knows the McDonalds hot coffee case. The fact that they sold millions of coffees and 1 person burned their crotch should be proof that the problem was the customer, not McDonalds. I feel the same way about this case. There are lots of people riding around in open bow ski boats that don't kill people.
I think before negligence can be determined there should be a process that decides how common it is. Everyone knows the McDonalds hot coffee case. The fact that they sold millions of coffees and 1 person burned their crotch should be proof that the problem was the customer, not McDonalds. I feel the same way about this case. There are lots of people riding around in open bow ski boats that don't kill people.
I have and i see no fault on McDonalds side. McDonalds did not place the coffee between the ladies lkegs the lady did that. The most often requested item from my customers was to make sure the coffee was piping hot. For some it can never be to hot. The fact is you can't please everyone and no company should have to pay for doing their best to try and please all. In my opinion the lady should not have recieved anythin g as it was she that held the cup between her legs instead of inside the drink holders in her car.Until you know all the facts, you really can't say the suit is frivolous either. I remember the infamous McDonalds hot coffee lawsuit.
First reaction by me and by others. What did she expect? Cold coffee? Was this her first coffee ever? Idiot. See, I didn't hear what the jury did.
Now the facts are McDonalds was aware of a problem as they'd had over 700 incidents and they'd paid money to many. Furthermore, they were extreme and policy kept their coffee hotter than anyone else did. Furthermore, the 79 year old lady offered to settle for $20,000 just to cover her medical expenses and lost work. They never offered more than $800.
The jury heard all the facts and they were outraged. They used terms like callous disregard and overwhelming facts against McDonalds. They were in disbelief that McDonald's had refused to lower their temperatures or even warn customers. They wanted to send a message. Even the $3 million punitive damage wasn't as outrageous as we might think. It was 2 days worth of coffee sales.
Now, the judge reduced the award to around $600,000 and then McDonalds and the lady worked from there. I'd guess the biggest thing McDonalds went for from there was non-disclosure of what they agreed to, a permanent silencing. $600,000 was nothing to them if they only had to pay one person.
However, the lady and many others got what she wanted, a change, recognizing and addressing a problem.
I often criticize the jury system and certainly on technical and contract issues. However, perhaps cases like this are it at it's best, as an advocate for all of us. Sometimes it's there for the little guy. To those of us with businesses, it's a reminder, if it's not absolutely clear cut and it's a customer vs. us we'll likely lose. A tenant advocate I know warned a landlord by asking if he really wanted a jury trial. The warning was "On the jury, how many owners of 10,000 apartment units do you think there will be and how many who have rented apartments?"
Now we also depend on judges and appeals courts to rebalance things. Just remember, the 79 year old lady who sued McDonalds wasn't being frivolous and if you look carefully at the facts you'll agree McDonald's was wrong. $700 and $800 payouts were not getting their attention.
I have and i see no fault on McDonalds side. McDonalds did not place the coffee between the ladies lkegs the lady did that. The most often requested item from my customers was to make sure the coffee was piping hot. For some it can never be to hot. The fact is you can't please everyone and no company should have to pay for doing their best to try and please all. In my opinion the lady should not have recieved anythin g as it was she that held the cup between her legs instead of inside the drink holders in her car.