9 results for 'casenum:"1:22cv397"'.
J. Kobayashi partially grants summary judgment to the U.S. Navy in for part of negligence claims against it by military families who became sick after jet fuel leaked into the water system. The families did not provide sufficient causation evidence for their special damages claim related to medical monitoring and testing for the risk of future health effects. However, summary judgment is denied for claims of fear of future injury.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: April 10, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Government, Water
J. Kobayashi partially excludes reports and testimony from a doctor and toxicology expert who assessed military families who are bringing claims against the U.S. Navy for jet fuel water contamination. The doctor’s opinions on the contamination causing the families’ short term medical issues are admissible as long as they do not rely on studies done exclusively on animals. The doctor cannot testify as to the long term effects, however, as he does not establish specific causation to the jet fuel.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: April 9, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Evidence, Government, Water
J. Kobayashi partially excludes reports and testimony from three psychologists who assessed military families who are bringing claims against the U.S. Navy for jet fuel water contamination. Testimony from two of the doctors are admissible, as they did conduct full interviews of their patients, including the minors. Information gathered from the parents about their children is admissible as first-hand knowledge when minors are involved is not required. A third doctor is not a physician or military medicine expert so portions of his testimony are excluded, but his testimony on the families' trauma is admissible.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: April 8, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Evidence, Government, Water
J. Kobayashi partially denies dismissal on part of a claim against the government by military families regarding the military’s handling of the Red Hill fuel leak and subsequent water crisis. The government must face part of a negligence claim that accuses the government of not following protocols for flushing the fuel contamination from the families’ homes, as the government did not establish how following the protocols may have implicated other policy concerns. On the other hand, because the government did show how its failure to remediate constituted a discretionary decision under an exception under the Federal Torts Claims Act, that tort claim is dismissed with prejudice.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: March 21, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Government, Tort, Negligence
J. Kobayashi partially dismisses a negligence claim regarding a jet fuel leak at the Navy’s Red Hill Facility that compromised military families’ drinking water. The Navy testing water samples for carbons, but not specifically jet fuels due to on-island laboratory capabilities, was discretionary and a legitimate policy consideration, granting the military sovereign immunity from a portion of the families’ negligence claims. A remediation claim requires more briefing before a ruling.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: February 14, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Government, Tort, Negligence
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J. Pitman dismisses a putative class action brought by male migrants against Governor Greg Abbott and other officials alleging they were “channeled into a separate criminal system” after being arrested for criminal trespass as part of Operation Lone Star — Texas’ state operation to counter human and drug smuggling — rather than being processed “through the normal state jail system.” The migrants said they sometimes “waited for weeks or months” for a defense attorney and were “detained for extended periods of time after they were eligible for release.” The migrants’ claims fail for a number of reasons, including because they have failed to show “direct involvement” of state officials in allegedly unconstitutional policies and because higher courts have rejected their arguments that they could seek injunctive relief despite no longer being in prison.
Court: USDC Western District of Texas , Judge: Pitman, Filed On: February 5, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Government, Immigration
J. Kobayashi partially dismisses failure-to-warn claims in a suit brought by military families who became sick after drinking water contaminated by jet fuel leaking from the Navy’s Red Hill storage facility. The lack of a water advisory after the fact constituted misrepresentation under the Federal Tort Claims Act, barring those claims. The failure-to-warn element of the families’ negligence claim survives since, under Hawaii law, a property owner has a duty to warn of any potential hazards to their lessees.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Kobayashi, Filed On: January 11, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Government, Tort, Water
J. Mansfield declines to sanction the government for the loss of text messages from two Navy captains regarding the water contamination by jet fuel from the military’s Red Hill storage facility. The text message evidence as to when the military knew of the contamination was lost in a reset of the phones prior to the litigation, but can be recovered from other parties, which the government has taken steps to preserve and hand over to those affected by the leak. There is no proof that key text messages about the contamination between the two captains of different commands exist and that the loss was anything but inadvertent.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Mansfield, Filed On: December 14, 2023, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Environment, Evidence, Government
J. Laplante partially grants a large software company’s motion to dismiss a smaller company’s claims against it for poor performance and misrepresentation in its recommendation and implementation of new software at the smaller company. The smaller company’s contract, bad faith, negligence and part of its fraud claims are dismissed, while its New Hampshire Consumer Protection Act claim and part of its fraud claim are not, because the smaller company sufficiently supports the latter claims with facts.
Court: USDC New Hampshire, Judge: Laplante, Filed On: August 15, 2023, Case #: 1:22cv397, NOS: Other Contract - Contract, Categories: Fraud, Consumer Law, Technology