Strauss v. Horton
Gay couples sue to block enforcement of California's Proposition 8 ban on same-sex marriage, saying it "strike[s] directly" at constitutional rights of equal protection.
Authors Guild v. Google
Google agrees to pay authors and publishers $125 million as part of a "historic" settlement of class action suits involving online access to books through Google Book Search.
Steele v. TBS
Boston-area musician sues Jon Bon Jovi and others for $400 billion, alleging the rocker's song "I Love This Town" is a ripoff of a "love song" he wrote for "his beloved Red Sox."
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• Cookbook author Missy Chase Lapine, allegedly slandered by Jerry Seinfeld, says she has "never felt so frightened and vulnerable as the day my daughter, 7 years old, came home from school and asked, "Mom, what is an assassin?" Seinfeld had joked on the "David Letterman Show" that "if you read history, many of the three-name people do become assassins.” Lapine v. Seinfeld

• North Carolina Court of Appeals refuses to issue an injunction requiring pop singer Clay Aiken to endorse a book about him. "Our courts cannot be used to force celebrities or their family or friends into making endorsements for another person's profit."
Holleman v. Aiken

• Iowa Court of Appeals affirms the liability of a school district for failing to take adequate steps to prevent the physically aggressive behavior of a high-school basketball player. Andrew McSorley struck an opposing player in the head with his elbow during a game in 2004.
Brokaw v. Winfield-Mt. Union Community Sch. Dist.

• Illinois middle school student wants the termination of a teacher who allegedly told other students to slap her for being inattentive "and, in fact, the other students slapped the minor plaintiff in the head."
Torres v. Valley View Community Sch. Dist. 365U

• Florida Supreme Court declines to recognize the tort of false light invasion of privacy. "[T]he benefit of recognizing the tort, which only offers a distinct remedy in relatively few unique situations, is outweighed by the danger of unreasonably impeding constitutionally protected speech ..." Jews for Jesus v. Rapp

• Actor David Duchovny denies having any Californication with a tennis instructor and sues a British newspaper for saying he did. "Daily Mail has caused substantial harm to Duchovny, in complete disregard of the truth and of even a semblance of journalistic integrity."
Duchovny v. Daily Mail

• Kentucky settles a political blogger's free-speech suit, agreeing to only block access to blogs on state-owned computers "if pursuant to a reasonable, viewpoint-neutral standard that applies equally to all websites, whether or not those websites can be described as 'blogs.'" Nickolas v. Fletcher

• News service researching a 1964 auto accident involving John McCain files a Freedom of Information Act suit seeking U.S. Navy hospital records. "The personal history and military career of a Presidential candidate are matters of high importance to the American public."
National Security News Service v. U.S. Dept. of the Navy

• Civil liberties group challenges the new federal law shielding phone companies from liability for cooperating in warrantless wiretapping. "At stake are the privacy rights of every American ..."
In re NSA Telecom Records Litigation

• Louisiana appeals court rules that a marriage between first cousins in Iran "is valid in Louisiana and is not a violation of a strong public policy."
Ghassemi v. Ghassemi

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Judge Backs $2M Award in 4-Year-Old's Mower Death

Prevailing industry design standards are not a defense to liability for a lawn-mower accident that killed a four-year-old boy, a Virginia judge has ruled in affirming a $2 million jury award to the child's family.

The award was one of the largest of its kind, finding MTD Products liable for the death of Justin Simmons at his daycare center in April 2004. The husband of the center's operator drove a 1988 model MTD mower over him as it rolled backwards on an incline.

The defense called it a “nonsense” verdict since no mower is designed to automatically stop its blades when it rolls backward. But Roanoke Circuit Court Judge Clifford R. Weckstein said the jury properly relied on a plaintiffs' expert who testified that technology to detect rearward motion and stop spinning blades was available at the time of the accident.

“[I]t would be a rare court, in an extraordinary case, that would accept 'no one else does it' as conclusively establishing lack of duty,” he said in an opinion (excerpted here) that denied MTD's motions for a new trial or judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Weckstein also quoted Judge Learned Hand as saying that “there are precautions so imperative that even their universal disregard will not excuse their omission.”

The jury awarded $1 million to Justin's brother and $500,000 to each of his parents. The plaintiffs dropped the daycare operator, Roberta Reedy, and her husband from the case during the trial, leaving MTD as the only defendant.

The world's largest mower manufacturer had equipped the 1988 model with a device which prevents the blades from turning when in reverse gear. When Orvil Reedy's mower rolled backwards, the blades continued to rotate because he had his foot down on the clutch.

Plaintiffs' expert Dr. Jeffery Warren, a mechanical engineer, testified that the risk of “child rollover” was a “known, specific hazard” with the mower and, if it had been addressed by a blade brake, the blades would have stopped “in a couple of seconds” and Justin would not have been killed.

No mower has been constructed with such a safety feature, but Weckstein rejected the argument that trade practices should be the standard of care for product manufacturers as they are for doctors, lawyers and other professionals:

As the Arizona Supreme Court stated, trades “will be allowed to create their own standards of reasonably prudent conduct only when the nature of the group and its special relationship with its clients assure society that those standards will be set with primary regard to protection of the public rather than to such considerations as increased profitability.”

The defense argued at trial that the Reedys were to blame for the tragedy. Roberta Reedy was changing another child's diaper inside her house when the accident happened and her husband had never read the manual for the mower, which instructs users not to depress the clutch while going backwards.

MTD attorney Nick Leitch said the company is considering an appeal. “MTD has been a real leader and has literally set the standard for safety for this industry,” he told The Roanoke Times.

UPDATE

  • MTD filed a notice of appeal May 13, 2008 with the Virginia Supreme Court.

  • By Matthew Heller
    3/7/08



     
    'Known Risk' Makes U.S. Liable for Bear Attack?

    The failure of wildlife officials in Utah to warn campers of the “known risk” of a specific bear makes them liable for the fatal mauling of an 11-year-old boy, the parents of Samuel Ives argue in court papers.
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    Is There Room on Web
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    Manager Blames Movie for Use of Racial Slur

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    Dirty Dancer Settles with Town -- to Tune of $275K

    After a six-year legal battle over dirty dancing, a North Carolina town has agreed to pay $275,000 to a woman whom it had banned from its community center because of her “sexual gyrations.”
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    Careless Cart Loading Alleged in Death Case

    Florida premises liability law appears to be generous enough toward plaintiffs that Home Depot could be held liable for the death of a customer who was allegedly struck by an overloaded shopping cart being pushed by another customer.
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    Parents, Hospital Clash over Meaning of Death

    A legal showdown over the meaning of death pits an ultra-Orthodox Jewish couple who believe there is life while the heart still beats against the Washington, D.C., hospital which wants to remove their brain-dead son from life support.
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    Plaintiff in God Lawsuit Appeals to Higher Power

    Despite having no earthly hope of prevailing, Nebraska State Sen. Ernie Chambers has appealed to a higher legal power in his lawsuit against God, which was dismissed because he has not served the defendant.
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    Staring at Breasts Not Harassment, Says Jury

    The former administrator of Grafton, Mass., did not sexually harass his secretary by staring at her breasts, a jury has ruled, apparently agreeing with the defense that his eye movements were “normal mannerisms” caused by a medical condition.
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    Penis Pump Judge's Staff Settle Claims for $340K

    The misconduct of former Creek County District Judge Donald Thompson, who masturbated with a penis pump while presiding over trials, has ended up costing Oklahoma taxpayers $340,000 in settlements of lawsuits filed by two of his employees.
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    No Coddling for Colleges That Coddle Athletes?

    Civil rights plaintiffs have won another victory in a case involving the coddling of college athletes as a judge ruled that a rape victim can sue former Arizona State University football coach Dirk Koetter for putting her in danger she would otherwise not have faced.
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    Priest's Affair Said to Breach Duty as Confessor

    As pickup lines go, “Your presence struck me like a thunderbolt” is passably original. But it was allegedly uttered by a priest who, according to a $125 million lawsuit, exploited the power of the confessional to seduce a female parishioner.
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    Nelson v. American Apparel
    Subject: "Sham" Arbitration
    Document: Opinion

    Ernie Chambers v. God
    Subject: Frivolous Lawsuits
    Document: Order to Formalize Dismissal

    Privette v. Booby Trap
    Subject: Stripclub Injury
    Document: Complaint

    Peacock v. City Press
    Subject: Stripper Defamation
    Document: Complaint

    Kerrigan v. Comm'r of Public Health
    Subject: Same-Sex Marriage
    Document: Opinion

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    On Trial
    Gruver v. Hensley
    Court: Meade County (Ky.) Circuit
    Subject: Ku Klux Klan assault
    Verdict: $2.5 million

    Bowoto v. Chevron
    Court: USDC, N. Calif.
    Subject: Human rights

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    Francis v. U.S.
    Date: 11/19/08
    Court: USDC, Utah
    Hearing: Motion to dismiss fatal bear attack case.

    Jose Padilla v. John Yoo
    Date: 12/5/08
    Court: USDC, N. Calif.
    Hearing: Motion to dismiss terror suspect torture case.

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