120 results for 'cat:"Negligence" AND cat:"Wrongful Death"'.
J. Sleet finds that the trial court ruled properly in favor of the apartment complex in this wrongful death complaint related to the drowning death of a six-year-old child. The complex did not owe a duty to warn of the river that abuts the property. Affirmed.
Court: Florida Courts Of Appeal, Judge: Sleet, Filed On: May 10, 2024, Case #: 2d2023-0561, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death
J. Eaton finds the trial court properly granted summary judgment to a power company and construction company based on the 20-year statute of repose in this wrongful death and negligence lawsuit filed by the decedent’s estate. The estate alleges the construction company installed the asbestos and the decedent was exposed through her husband, who worked with the power company that caused the decedent’s mesothelioma and death from the asbestos exposure. The upheld the repose finding the last injury occurrence fell outside the period in relation to the Vermont Constitution. Affirmed.
Court: Vermont Supreme Court, Judge: Eaton, Filed On: May 10, 2024, Case #: 23-AP-217, Categories: Constitution, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Gillmor denies summary judgment to the government in a negligence claim for a fatal helicopter crash. Questions of material fact as to the cause of the crash, and whether the Federal Aviation Administration properly oversaw a helicopter company, remain. The government concedes that it did not perform check of the pilot of the helicopter or owner of the helicopter but there is not enough on the record to determine if the government was a substantial factor in the crash.
Court: USDC Hawaii, Judge: Gillmor, Filed On: May 6, 2024, Case #: 1:21cv193, NOS: Airplane - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death, Aviation
J. Wood partially grants the county administrator's, the county's, the ambulance service's and the 911 dispatchers' motions to dismiss a wrongful death and negligence action brought by a widow after her husband went into cardiac arrest and died from an anoxic brain injury. An ambulance did not arrive in response to the widow's 911 calls. The widow's state law claims against the county and other parties in their official capacities are barred by sovereign immunity. However, the widow's claim that the dispatchers deliberately lied in telling her an ambulance would arrive is enough to show an intent to cause harm and a violation of the husband's rights. The widow also sufficiently alleged a causal connection between the supervisors' conduct and the violation of the husband's rights.
Court: USDC Southern District of Georgia, Judge: Wood, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 2:23cv27, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: negligence, Due Process, wrongful Death
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J. Gremillion finds that the trial court improperly found that the Calcasieu Parish Police Jury (CPPJ) was not at fault for a tree falling on a truck and killing the passenger. Dr. Frederick Fellner, an urban forester, submitted an affidavit and deposition that raises a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the CPPJ should have identified the tree as a hazard to the motoring public and thus taken remedial action. Reversed.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Gremillion, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: CA-23-579, Categories: negligence, Experts, wrongful Death
J. Gremillion finds that the chemical company may be liable for a tree on its property falling on a truck and killing the passenger. The company asserts that the tree failed because of brown rot in its trunk that it could not have reasonably discovered. However, the family sufficiently alleges that a lightning strike caused the brown rot and that the missing crown, flat top, unbalanced canopy, precarious lien, lightning scar and gap between the roots and the ground all should have been clear signs that something was wrong.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Gremillion, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: CW-23-379, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death
J. Vilardo rules in part for county officials in claims contending an inmate died from acute respiratory failure for lack of proper supervision because evidence did not indicate that anyone other than a single nurse ordered any actions, that the nurse had a prior track record of failing to follow procedure, or that the county trained medical staff at the holding center with deliberate indifference.
Court: USDC Western District of New York, Judge: Vilardo , Filed On: April 29, 2024, Case #: 1:20cv1689, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Coogler denies the defendant’s motion to dismiss in this lawsuit arising from a fatal shooting outside a club known as “The Strip” in downtown Tuscaloosa, Alabama; the suing estate alleges the defendant negligently and wantonly caused the decedent’s death by bringing the gun to an argument between the decedent and defendant’s friend, who shot the man dead. The defendant argues he cannot be held legally liable for causing a shooting committed by another person, but the court finds he did in fact have a duty of care, and the allegations leave enough room for reasonable difference of opinion for a jury to see the foreseeability of the injury.
Court: USDC Northern District of Alabama , Judge: Coogler, Filed On: April 24, 2024, Case #: 7:23cv1424, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death, Firearms
J. Williamowski finds the lower court properly granted the bar's motion for summary judgment because the depositions of numerous witnesses indicated the drunk driver was not at the business on the night he killed the decedent in an accident, which prevents the estate from proving any liability under Ohio's dram shop laws. Meanwhile, the lower court properly denied the estate's motion to compel forensic analysis of several cell phones because it failed to show there was any definitive proof on the cell phones, some of which had been accidentally destroyed in the two years since the accident. Affirmed.
Court: Ohio Court Of Appeals, Judge: Williamowski, Filed On: April 22, 2024, Case #: 2024-Ohio-1538, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death, Discovery
J. Stadtmueller rules in part for the estate in wrongful death and negligence claims. The mother may only proceed without legal representation if she is the sole beneficiary of the decedent's estate, and she must file proof with the court to demonstrate such. Meanwhile, negligent medical care claims must be dismissed since they were not timely filed.
Court: USDC Western District of Wisconsin, Judge: Stadmueller, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 2:24cv348, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Procedure, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Foschio rules in part for police and corrections officers in claims contending police falsely arrested a drug addict and failed to prevent him from committing suicide while detained, even though he had expressed suicidal ideation, as corrections officers failed to place the detainee in special medical housing under close monitoring. However, evidence did not indicate the decedent provided support or services to surviving family in order to justify pecuniary or compensatory damages, or that any officer intended to interfere with the decedent's familial relationships.
Court: USDC Western District of New York, Judge: Foschio , Filed On: April 11, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv766, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Gonzalez finds that the lower court improperly ruled over what liability a hospital has over the death of a patient who, after appearing in an emergency room with pain in her left shoulder, was not properly diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis and died shortly after. Her estate sued the hospital, claiming it was liable for not properly diagnosing her condition, but the lower court found it was not responsible. However, under state statutes, whenever a hospital offers emergency services, it creates a "nondelegable duty" of care that the doctors are then charged with carrying out. While the doctor is there to help carry out that duty, the hospital cannot escape liability by delegating that duty to them entirely. Reversed.
Court: Washington Supreme Court, Judge: Gonzalez, Filed On: April 11, 2024, Case #: 101745-6, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death
J. Boyle partially denies a real estate broker’s partial motion to dismiss allegations of state vacation rental law violations brought by the administrator of the estate of a minor who drowned after he snuck into a swimming pool unsupervised. The broker argues that because it’s not a landlord, it isn’t beholden to any building or housing codes. However, the administrator correctly argues that under vacation rental law, the broker negligently maintained the property, exposing the minor to a drowning hazard.
Court: USDC Eastern District of North Carolina, Judge: Boyle, Filed On: April 1, 2024, Case #: 4:23cv101, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Property, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Hendrix denies, in part, a detention center operator's motion to dismiss a son's claims arising from the death of his father, a detainee. He has sufficiently pleaded certain wrongful death and survival claims.
Court: USDC Northern District of Texas , Judge: Hendrix, Filed On: March 20, 2024, Case #: 6:22cv70, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death
J. Dimke partially denies summary judgment to the family for their complaint that the school district's employee did not prepare an adequate emergency care plan for their child's asthma, which allegedly led to his death after 18 days on life support following a severe asthma attack. While it is undisputed that the school district had some knowledge of the child's asthma from previous school years, a dispute remains as to the extent and timing of this knowledge.
Court: USDC Eastern District of Washington, Judge: Dimke, Filed On: March 15, 2024, Case #: 4:19cv5038, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Education, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Winchester finds the court of civil appeals improperly reversed the trial court's summary judgment in favor of the swimming pool owner. The mother seeks recovery from her child's drowning by a fall into her neighbor's pool. Though the trial court found the owner to have no duty of care, the appeals court concluded the question of whether or not the swimming pool was an attractive nuisance was for the jury to decide. The swimming pool is not defined as an attractive nuisance being there was no hidden or unusual element of danger in or near it. A genuine issue of material fact remains, though, as to whether the owner breached a duty owed under premises liability. Vacated.
Court: Oklahoma Supreme Court, Judge: Winchester, Filed On: March 12, 2024, Case #: 119,569, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death, Premises Liability
J. Crabtree rules an estate administrator may pursue wrongful death claims against a nursing home. The estate administrator sufficiently showed in court that nursing home employees failed to prevent her father from walking without assistance, falling, and suffering fatal injuries.
Court: USDC Kansas, Judge: Crabtree, Filed On: March 6, 2024, Case #: 2:22cv2385, NOS: Personal Injury - Medical Malpractice - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: Health Care, negligence, wrongful Death
J. Stiles finds that the trial court properly ruled in favor of the residential facility owner in a mother's suit over the shooting death of her minor son by gang members 40 days after he voluntarily left the facility. The mother did not show the facility owner had a duty to "physically restrain" the minor from leaving the facility or to protect him from the risk he encountered upon his departure. Affirmed.
Court: Louisiana Court Of Appeal, Judge: Stiles, Filed On: March 6, 2024, Case #: CA-23-664, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death
J. Jewell finds that the trial court properly ruled in favor of the sporting goods store in a father's negligence suit stemming from his daughter's suicide that occurred after she bought a gun at the store. The store established the affirmative defense of suicide as to the claims since it "complied with the applicable legal standards," and there was no evidence it "failed to act as a firearms seller of ordinary prudence." Affirmed.
Court: Texas Courts of Appeals, Judge: Jewell, Filed On: March 5, 2024, Case #: 14-23-00234-CV, Categories: negligence, wrongful Death, Firearms