8 results for 'cat:"Tort" AND cat:"Negligence" AND cat:"Premises Liability"'.
J. Fischer finds the trial court improperly granted summary judgment to the property owners in this suit brought by parties injured in a dog attack occurring on their property. Though the property owners are not owners of the dog for purposes of certain state and federal laws, disputed issues of fact concerning whether the owners breached their duty preclude summary judgment as to common law theory of liability. Affirmed in part. Reversed in part and remanded.
Court: Oklahoma Courts Of Appeal, Judge: Fischer, Filed On: October 19, 2023, Case #: 117997, Categories: tort, negligence, premises Liability
J. Navarro grants Lowes’ motion for summary judgment in this personal injury suit brought by the disabled veteran onto whom several wooden panels fell as he moved them to inspect their condition. An employee who left the veteran to inspect the panels himself told him that he would return after helping another customer. The veteran’s injuries were not caused by the action of any Lowe’s employee, and he fails to establish that a genuine issue of material fact exists.
Court: USDC Nevada, Judge: Navarro, Filed On: August 15, 2023, Case #: 2:20cv773, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: tort, negligence, premises Liability
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J. Gesner grants a car dealership its motion to dismiss a negligence and personal injury claims after a customer tripped and fell on uneven rugs, hitting his face and hurting his shoulder and left knee. Because the customer did not file his claim until almost the very end of the statute of limitations in which to do so, his delay unfairly prejudiced the dealership.
Court: USDC Maryland, Judge: Gesner, Filed On: June 8, 2023, Case #: 1:22cv1487, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: tort, negligence, premises Liability
J. Schiltz dismisses the minor and her mother’s suit related to burns the minor sustained when a minivan in a Walmart parking lot caught fire and the fire spread to a car where the minor was sleeping. The retailer’s policy of allowing travelers to sleep in its lots does not turn its parking lots into “recreational camping areas” under a Minnesota law regulating such areas, and the minor and her mother have not shown that doing so created a nuisance or that the burns were the result of the retailer’s negligence.
Court: USDC Minnesota, Judge: Schiltz, Filed On: May 25, 2023, Case #: 0:22cv1584, NOS: Other Personal Injury - Torts - Personal Injury, Categories: tort, negligence, premises Liability