![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#211
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 2, 1:49 pm, Jay Honeck wrote:
In your opinion, what merit was there in a woman winning a lawsuit against McDonalds because she burned herself on hot coffee? -- Jay Honeck Here are the facts: 1. Pltf, age 79, ordered coffee that was served in a styrofoam cup. 2. She was passenger in the car; she placed the cp between her legs to hold it whhile sh added cream and sugar. 3. As she removed the lid, the contents spilled on her legs. 4. Her sweatpants absorbed the coffee and held it next to her skin. A surgeon determined that she suffered 3rd degree, full thickness, skin burns over 6% of her body, specifically her inner thighs, perineum, buttocks, and genital and groin area.. 5. She was hospitalized for 8 days, undergoing skin grafting. 6. In discovery, it was disclosd that McD had over 700 previous claims by people burned in a ten year period just before this incident, including 3rd degree burns. This establishd McD's prior knowledge of the extent and nature of the hazard. 7. McD also said that it it intentionally held th temp between 180 and 190 F. 8. They admitted that they had made no effort to study the safety issues of this temperature. 9. Other establishments typically serve it around 135-140 F. 10. McD enforces its rule to hold the temp at 185 +/- 5 deg. 11. McD admitted that it knew that any food substance served at or above 140 F is a burn hazard, and that at the temp they served it, it was not fit for human consumption. 12. They also admitted that they knew burns would occur, but had decided to keep the temp at 185 anyway. 13. An expert on thermodynamics testified that liquids at 180 F would cause full thickness skin burns in 2 to 7 seconds. 14. The evidence also established that as the temp increases over 155, the extent ofthe burn increases exponentially. 15. McD told the jury that customers buy coffee on their way to work, intending to drink it there. However, their own research was brought out that showed that customers intend to consume the coffee immediately while driving. 16. The plaintiff had initially offered to settle for $20,000.00. 17. The jury awarded $200,000 in compensatory damages, but it was reduced to $160,000 due to plaintiffs's own contributory negligence. 18. The jury ruled for $2.7 mmillion punitive damages, which equals 2 days' of McD's coffee sales. 19. The COurt reduced the pun dam tto $480,000, even though characterizing McD's conduct as reckless, callous and willful. I don't have an opinion one way or the other. Those were the facts of the case. 7. |
#212
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Matt W. Barrow wrote: Jose wrote: It should also be noted that one of the purposes of the tort system is to act as a brake against corporations taking unfair advantage of their size by making our lives more risky to the benefit of their bottom line. To that end, it is quite reasonable to take the corporation's attitude into account when deciding on a verdict. His grasp of the tort system is about on par with his other knowledge. And this guy's a teacher? The statement is true but not complete, as are all such statements made to push a position. There's nothing wrong with the concept that proposes protection for the "average citizen" from a corporation's bottom line, but the statement is deceiving if not completed as it actually exists in today's legal system. Actually there is something wrong with it. Consider: 1) Outside of theft, fraud/misrepresetation, or negligence (no, not where they need to be imniscient) what damage could a corporation cause that should be illegal or civil tort? 2) Laws exist for EVERYONE, not just the "average citizen". If everyone's rights, even just Bill Gates and his peers, then YOUR rights are not secure. To wit: "He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself." -- Thomas Paine 3) A companies bottom line is their ultimate profit after expenses are deducted from revenues. Unless those revenues are gotten illegally (a stretch right there, nowadays), what interest does anyone have outside an "arms length" trade? What's missing from the statement, and unfortunately deliberately so in many cases, is that if the system is used as it was MEANT to be used, the citizen has to SEEK OUT the lawyer for protection instead of the other way around. When lawyers seek clients to initiate litigation against large corporations, the formula changes, or at least has a tremendous ability to change, into a corrupt attempt to initiate lawsuits against corporations for a profit motive instead of a protection motive. The kicker in all this are the lawyers. The problem is that if the citizen is dishonest, it is supposed to be incumbent on the lawyer to act as a shield between an honest corporation and the dishonest citizen. A HUGE percentage of the lawyers unfortunately for the country, have chosen NOT to act as this ethical buffer and instead BENEFIT from the dishonest citizen seeking litigation against corporations. The result of this has been a large enough swing from honesty and ethics among lawyers to influence the balance of the legal system away from ethics and into a large amount of dishonesty and unethical practice by lawyers that has literally turned the system into a business for profit. Add to this the dishonest lawyers THEMSELVES initiating action against corporations based completely on their personal dishonest and unethical practice and you have the present legal system of the United States. There are of course lawyers out here who are honest and ethical. You can spot them in 5 seconds. They are poor by the standard of living used to present the average income of lawyers in the United States. I actually can't think of 1 single lawyer (and I know many) known to me personally who is honest and ethical as I would define these terms, who I would consider in the top income level of the legal profession. I agree with all that; but your very premises are steps 4-17 and 1-3 have been deleted. You assert that the "average American" is entitled to more protection that others. That's a "gang" mentality. No one accrues more rights or entitlement to protections by being a member of a group. That's a major facet of collectivism. You might consider this a major factor in how we got to this problem in the first place. |
#213
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Jose wrote: What's missing from the statement, and unfortunately deliberately so in many cases, is that if the system is used as it was MEANT to be used, the citizen has to SEEK OUT the lawyer for protection instead of the other way around. It used to be that way... at least it used to be that lawyers (and doctors and drug companies) were prohibited from advertising. (Whether by law or by their professional organizations I don't know). The concept of freedom of speech (that it is up to the listener to decide the merits, rather than up to some other agency to decide what the listener may or may not hear) was part of the stated rationale. I remember as a young man coming up through the educational ladder when lawyers were respected members of the community. Lawyers were sought after for opinion and their opinion was considered by almost everyone 9I knew anyway) as delivered through a foundation of honesty and integrity. Lawyers were in fact some of the most respected members of the community. All gone now. Typical of the lawyers in my present community are an entire segment, and I literally mean an entire large office building, almost entirely filled with attorneys specializing in drop and fall, auto accidents, and the vast majority and the most financially rewarded, an entire cadre of attorneys specializing in medical malpractice. One might say it began when lawyers found they could make buckets of money getting criminals, particularly gangsters off from charges. In many cases, they were consultants to gangsters, advising them how to conduct their crimes with the least likelihood of capture or successful prosecution. And no, I don't mean the "bootleggers" and bank robbers of the 1920's and 30's, I'm referring to the gangs of the 1870's and onward. -- Matt Barrow Performance Homes, LLC. Cheyenne, WY. |
#214
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bob Noel" wrote in message ... In article , "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Dec 4, 10:23 am, "Maxwell" wrote: I've pondered that a few times myself Ross, and I think I would have to agree. I think judges do a good job with their experience, but they too often tend to get too anal with the letter of the law and loose a bit of their ability to judge. Seems a trained panel could do a better job of looking at cases from different angles, and reaching the most reasonable conclusion. The way we select juries today can often be a real turkey shoot. Think about the type of people who are not excused from jury duty. Depending on the judge juriors can be excused because they have a lot going on at work, because they have a business meeting etc. The self- employed are almost always excused. Especially in a long trial you end up with welfare moms, state employees, and retirees. Hardly our peers. hmmm, not many people get excused from jury duty in taxachusetts. I sure didn't get excused. He meant "being empanelled" (?), which is actually sitting on a jury. Typically, 50-100 people get called for jury DUTY, but only 12 plus 3 reserves actually sit on a jury. |
#215
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"Matt W. Barrow" wrote: hmmm, not many people get excused from jury duty in taxachusetts. I sure didn't get excused. He meant "being empanelled" (?), which is actually sitting on a jury. Typically, 50-100 people get called for jury DUTY, but only 12 plus 3 reserves actually sit on a jury. I knew what he meant. I've been called to jury duty 4 times in taxachusetts. The first time was when I was self-employed. It didn't get me excused from hearing the case, a 5 day trial. The self-employed get screwed since taxachusetts expects employers to pay employees for the first three days, and then taxachusetts pays some tiny amount for the remainder. -- Bob Noel (goodness, please trim replies!!!) |
#216
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Recently, Doug Carter posted:
On 2007-12-04, Neil Gould wrote: In the US, primary education is not a national priority, nor a state-level priority, and in many if not most communities, not a local priority. On a national level,... Regardless of priority, the presumption that U.S. education is underfunded is a persistent myth as is the belief that funding levels and results (educated students) are causally related. http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa126.html To begin with, I did not write that "education is underfunded" in the sense that you are suggesting or that your cited reference uses. If you wish to make such an argument, it would be a good idea to quote my entire paragraph so that others can see how you have intentionally distorted its meaning. To support your conclusion based on the article, which IMO is suprisingly poor for the CATO institute, one has to determine how much of the funding actually reaches the individual student, as it is only "per pupil" if the pupil directly benefits from it. The article was written in 1990, and basically supports the NEA statement that there was a 31% increase in government spending "for education" during the prior decade. What do we know about that period of time that might raise questions about the actual value of that money? How much did your car or your house cost in 1980 vs. 1990? I can tell you that my 1984 vehicle cost about 1/3 of what the same make and model cost when I replaced it in 1991 (and the cost of the same make and model was almost 60% more when it was replaced in 2001). Also, expenditures that were typical in 1990 were non-existant in 1980, for example purchases of personal computers. So, to me, that 31% increase is not positively impressive. Even so, my point was not about the *amount* of money, it was about the PRIORITIES, in particular how that money is spent. In our community, we spend more per pupil than all but one other community in the state, but we are not getting that kind of return on our investment. I (and the state auditor FWIW) attribute it to a top-heavy school system. So, on what do you base the relevance of your "Regardless of priority..." as an argument for our lack of success in educating these youth? -- Neil |
#217
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I don't have an opinion one way or the other. Those were the facts of
the case. THANK YOU for sharing the facts of the case. They are very enlightening. None of the facts, IMHO, pin ANY blame on the folks who brewed the coffee. McDonald's was wronged, plain and simple. I'm curious to know: Did the woman's hired guns go after the Bunn Corporation, makers of the coffee brewing equipment that McDonald's used? Clearly their equipment is brewing coffee that is too hot? How 'bout the makers of the stryofoam cups? How about the lid manufacturer? How about the driver of the car who must've jerked suddenly to make her spill the coffee? Where does this end? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#218
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ross wrote:
It is not a jury of our peers. It is a selected jury. And, the side that does the best selection will probably win the case. Sometimes I think we should have professional juries; ones trained and have some smarts. And you can have it right now in some types of cases and some jurisdictions. The "professional jury" is a judge. Of course both sides have to go along with it and the other side probably won't want to for the same reasons you want to. |
#219
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
How 'bout the makers of the stryofoam cups? How about the lid manufacturer? How about the driver of the car who must've jerked suddenly to make her spill the coffee? Where does this end? -- You forgot the car manufacturer who designed a vehicle with brakes that allow sudden stops or turns which caused the coffee to spill. |
#220
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert M. Gary wrote:
On Dec 4, 10:23 am, "Maxwell" wrote: I've pondered that a few times myself Ross, and I think I would have to agree. I think judges do a good job with their experience, but they too often tend to get too anal with the letter of the law and loose a bit of their ability to judge. Seems a trained panel could do a better job of looking at cases from different angles, and reaching the most reasonable conclusion. The way we select juries today can often be a real turkey shoot. Think about the type of people who are not excused from jury duty. Depending on the judge juriors can be excused because they have a lot going on at work, because they have a business meeting etc. The self- employed are almost always excused. Especially in a long trial you end up with welfare moms, state employees, and retirees. Hardly our peers. -Robert That is the fault of the judges and in some cases the legislatures. We have a judge around here that if you are called for jury duty you can pretty much plan on being there because unless a close family member is expected to die during the trial you will be up for selection and even then you will probably be required to show up with a death certificate after they do at which point you will be next up. He doesn't let anybody off. When I was on the panel I saw him tell the CEO of a LARGE company who had just explained that he had a stock holder's meeting scheduled that, "I know your number 2 guy and he is more than qualified to handle the meeting and luckily the trial will probably only last half a day." This is the same judge that when after the jury pool was asked if we new any of the lawyers or principles in the case and I answered "Yes, your honor, I play golf with the defendant's lawyer as I often play with you." He said, "Yes, Mr. Giacona, I've seen you allegedly play golf and I've seen you lie on a score card but you weren't under oath so I won't hold that against you." |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
British Aircraft to be used for Skydiving in Iran! | [email protected] | Aerobatics | 0 | September 7th 07 06:40 PM |
British Aircraft to be used for Skydiving in Iran! | [email protected] | Simulators | 0 | September 7th 07 06:39 PM |
Lycoming Sued | jls | Home Built | 0 | February 13th 04 02:01 PM |
Glider/Skydiving Crash | dm | Soaring | 0 | September 27th 03 05:13 PM |
WOW - Shots fired at skydiving plane in NY... | Buff5200 | Piloting | 15 | July 14th 03 06:37 PM |