U.S. v. Arizona
Arizona judge enjoins enforcement of a new immigration law's requirement that police determine the immigration status of
every person who is arrested.
McGuire v. United Airlines
Michigan woman says a United Express flight crew locked her in a plane for nearly four hours after it landed because they failed to ensure that all passengers had disembarked.
R.H. v. Schenectady Sch. Dist.
Middle school student says he was suspended for wearing rosary beads because the rosary "is considered a gang-related symbol" and cannot be worn in school.
Fields v. Smith
Judge strikes down a law that bars transgender prison inmates from receiving hormone therapy at taxpayers' expense, finding it amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.
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• Iowa judge says a sheriff denied the applications of a father and son for concealed weapons permits in retaliation for their political activism. "This is a great reminder that the First Amendment protects the sole individual who may be a gadfly, kook, weirdo, nut job, whacko, and spook, with the same force of protection as folks with more majoritarian and popular views." Dorr v. Weber

• 5th Circuit rules that a school district violated the religious freedom of a Native American boy by requiring him to wear his long hair in a bun on top of his head or in a braid tucked into his shirt. The boy "has a sincere religious belief in wearing his hair uncut and in plain view."
A.A. v. Needville Ind. Sch. Dist.

• 11th Circuit denies a challenge to an ordinance restricting handouts of food to the homeless in Orlando parks. "[W]e are unpersuaded that the conduct of simply feeding people ... is expressive for First Amendment purposes."
First Vagabonds Church v. City of Orlando

• Boston judge slashes a jury award in an illegal music downloading case from $675,000 to $67,500. "The award in this case ... lacks any rational foundation and smacks of arbitrariness." Sony v. Tenenbaum

• Iowa Supreme Court suspends a voyeuristic attorney indefinitely for peeping on women through windows. "[W]e cannot overlook the serious, egregious, and persistent nature of [Mark] Templeton’s misconduct and the effect it had on his victims."
Disciplinary Board v. Templeton

• Pennsylvania judge strikes down the state's blasphemy law in a case brought by a film producer who wanted to name his company "I Choose Hell Productions." "'Choosing hell' may be an irreverent choice for a corporate name, but under the Constitution, this fact alone cannot be the basis for its suppression from the public debate." Kalman v. Cortes

• Cancer patient sues Wal-Mart for firing him after discovering that he uses medical marijuana for pain relief. "[N]o corporation doing business in Michigan should be permitted to flout state laws protecting patients who use medical marihuana in accordance with state law." Casias v. Wal-Mart Stores

• 11th Circuit rules that the operator of an Internet porn dorm was engaged in illegally operating a business in a residential zone. "Business objectives are the sole reason individuals are paid to live and engage in sexual activities at the 27th Street residence."
Flava Works v. City of Miami




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Airline Settles "Reckless" Baggage Handling Lawsuit Print

Limiting its liability to a group of only 13 airline passengers, British Airways (NYSE: BAY) has settled a first-of-its kind lawsuit that accused the airline of being “inexcusably reckless” in its handling of passengers' baggage.

The suit was originally filed in September 2007 as a proposed class action on behalf of all adult passengers who traveled internationally on a BA flight between Sept. 5, 2005 and Sept. 7, 2007 and “whose checked baggage was lost, damaged, or delayed.”

According to the Air Transport Users Council, BA loses 23 bags per 1,000 passengers carried -- 60 percent more than the industry average. “Though according to its website 'British Airways takes pride in providing a full service experience' for its passengers, for at least the past two years British Air has instead provided an inexcusably reckless service that fails to protect and deliver its passengers' baggage,” the complaint said.

But the settlement of the case applies only to the 13 named plaintiffs. “The parties agreed to settle this matter without class certification and have executed a Confidential Settlement Agreement,” counsel for both sides said in a letter to the court.

All the plaintiffs described horror stories of lost luggage, with one, a cancer survivor who was flying from New York to South Africa, saying the airline lost her bag containing the pump she uses to prevent lymphatic fluid from building up in her arm.

BA can now put the case behind it –- before the litigation went into discovery and without any public disclosure of damages. As for the plaintiffs, they faced a tough burden of showing BA is reckless in its handling of luggage.

The Montreal Convention, which governs the international air transportation of baggage and cargo, normally limits damages for passenger losses to $1,500. A plaintiff can only exceed that limit by proving that “the damage resulted from an act or omission of the carrier, its servants or agents, done with intent to cause damage or recklessly and with knowledge that damage would probably result[.]”

In April 2009, U.S. District Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis denied the airline's motion to dismiss, finding the plaintiffs' allegations “plausibly suggest recklessness on the part of BA” as a matter of pleading.

Among other things, he said in his opinion, they had alleged BA was aware that “its conduct would result in a substantial increase in the risk of damage to its passengers’ bags -- but that BA consciously ignored the risk in continuing its baggage handling policies.”

But the judge also noted that “meeting the standard of liability under [the Convention] is extremely difficult.”

“At this point,” Garaufis concluded, “the court cannot determine whether or how Plaintiffs will satisfy their high evidentiary burden to show knowing recklessness, nor can it determine whether BA’s actions were nothing more than negligent, or not culpable at all.”

The parties' letter to the judge shows that they agreed to the settlement in January and all the plaintiffs should have received their payments by Feb. 28. Because class certification was not part of the settlement, Garaufis did not have to approve it.

BA argued in the motion to dismiss that because the plaintiffs alleged a baggage loss rate of no greater than 2.8 percent, it could not have been aware that “damage would probably result” from its conduct. Garaufis said the case was not about “whether an individual bag would more likely than not be damaged” but “whether the system as a whole was operated recklessly.”


By Matthew Heller
3/1/10


 
rc_insidestories
  • Sex Harassment Claims Hit Actor Affleck, 'Bones' Star

    A producer of a film about actor Joaquin Phoenix, an extra on the set of the TV show “Bones,” an assistant property master, and a makeup artist are among the plaintiffs in a recent epidemic of lurid Hollywood lawsuits.
    Read more...
  • Jury Goes 'Wild' in Woman's Privacy Case Over Video

    A Missouri jury has gone wild in a case of involuntary nudity, finding that a woman consented to appearing topless in a “Girls Gone Wild” video by playing to the camera before another person pulled her top down.
    Read more...
  • Actress Facing $750K Award to Therapist

    Soap opera star Hunter Tylo may have to pay more than $750,000 in damages and attorney fees to a psychotherapist whom she sued more than four years ago for negligent treatment of her children, On Point has learned.
    Read more...
  • Reporter Sues Hotels Over Peephole Videos

    In an unusual premises liability case, ESPN reporter Erin Andrews has sued the operators of three hotels for allowing a stalker to surreptitiously videotape her naked through peepholes in the doors to her rooms.
    Read more...
  • Students Challenge Rubber Fetus Ban

    The suspensions of seven pro-life students at two Roswell, N.M., high schools for distributing rubber fetuses have given birth to a lawsuit that takes the First Amendment protections for student speech into uncharted territory.
    Read more...
  • Distress Claim Barred in Hotel 'Ménâge à Trois' Case

    A former employee of a luxury Miami Beach hotel who says her billionaire boss invited her to join him in a “ménâge à trois” cannot sue him for infliction of emotional distress, a judge has ruled, finding his alleged behavior, while “obnoxious,” was not “objectively outrageous.”
    Read more...
  • Chuck E. Cheese Settles Molesting Mascot Suit

    A Missouri woman who claimed a Chuck E. Cheese mascot groped her breast has settled her lawsuit against the operator of the restaurant chain, On Point has learned.
    Read more...
RC_OnFile

Stovell v. James
Subject: LeBron's paternity
Document: Complaint

U.S. v. Arizona
Subject: Illegal immigration
Document: Complaint

Rosenberg v. Google
Subject: Negligent navigation
Document: Complaint

Smith v. Hooters
Subject: Weight discrimination
Document: Complaint

City of Ontario v. Quon
Subject: Text-message privacy
Document: Opinion

more

RC_OnTrial

Rosenberg v. Musical Arts Assn.
Court: Cuyahoga County (Ohio) Common Pleas
Subject: Defamation, age bias

Mecozzi v. City of Los Angeles
Court: L.A. Superior
Subject: Police brutality
Verdict: $1.7 million

more


RC_OnTheDocket

Jose Padilla v. John Yoo
Date: 6/14/10
Court: 9th Circuit
Hearing: Oral arguments in human rights case.

Perry v. Schwarzenegger
Date: 6/16/10
Court: USDC, N. Calif.
Hearing: Closing arguments in trial of challenge to gay marriage ban.

more