Lohan v. E-Trade
Actress Lindsay Lohan alleges a TV ad featuring a "milkaholic" baby named Lindsay used her name and personality for advertising purposes without her consent.
Irvin v. Mustafa
NFL Hall of Famer Michael Irvin files a countersuit against a woman who accused him of rape, alleging she is a "morally-bankrupt individual" who is trying to ruin his career.
Robbins v. Lower Merion SD
High-school student accuses a school
district of spying on him and other students
by remotely activating webcams contained in school-supplied laptops.
Peterson v. Grisham
10th Circuit finds John Grisham did not defame three Oklahoma law enforcement officials in a book about the wrongful convictions of two men for a rape-murder.
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• Owners of Who Dat?, Inc. sue the NFL and the New Orleans Saints for trademark infringement, seeking to protect the mark that "has become one of the most recognizable in all of America and quickly became well-known around the world."
Who Dat?, Inc. v. NFL Properties

• Army bomb disposal expert sues the makers of "The Hurt Locker" for plagiarizing his life story. The film is "nothing more than the exploitation of a real life honorable, courageous, and long serving member of our country’s armed forces, by greedy multi-billion dollar 'entertainment' corporations."
Sarver v. The Hurt Locker

• Former patient sues the Cincinnati hospital where he was sexually assaulted by a transgender nurse. The nurse's "employment while masquerading as a member of the female gender in a hospital environment involved an unreasonable risk of harm to others."
Evans v. University of Cincinnati

• Federal judge enjoins the City of Phoenix from enforcing a noise ordinance against "sound generated in the course of religious expression," finding the right of churches to ring bells outweighs "the City's interest in preserving the peace and tranquility of its neighborhoods."
St. Mark Roman Catholic Parish v. City of Phoenix

• 5th Circuit says a Texas city's junked vehicle ordinance applies to a cactus planter made out of wrecked Oldsmobile 88. "Irrespective of the intentions of its creators ... the car-planter is a utilitarian device, an advertisement, and ultimately a 'junked vehicle.'"
Kleinman v. City of San Marcos

• Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols notifies a federal judge that he has gone on hunger strike, saying he is "prepared to die if necessary because he is done allowing his body to be defiled by [ ] refined and dead foods."
Nichols v. Federal Bureau of Prisons

• Texas judge finds the makers of a film about Rin Tin Tin did not infringe on the trademarks of a breeder of German Shepherds. "Defendants['] title 'Finding Rin Tin Tin: The Adventure Continues" is a fair use of the term 'Rin Tin Tin.'"
Rin Tin Tin, Inc. v. First Look Studios

• Illinois appeals court says the contact sports exception to negligence liability does not apply to the case of an athletic trainer who was struck in the eye by a hockey puck while refilling water bottles. Michael Weisberg "suffered injuries as a result of alleged conduct that was not inherent to the sport of hockey."
Weisberg v. Chicago Steel




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Bride's Wedding Fiasco Suit Really Takes the Cake Print

Sandra Newsom's wedding disaster lawsuit may -– literally –- take the cake. The New York woman has sued a cruise ship operator for ruining her wedding reception by serving a coconut-containing cake to which she had an allergic reaction.

The complaint against Carnival Cruise Lines, which was filed in Miami, does not allege the catering staff of the Carnival Freedom knew Newsom was “severely allergic” to coconut before she had her on-board wedding reception on Feb. 28. Things got so bad that her husband spent his wedding night “caring for an ill bride.”

Newsom attorney Paul M. Hoffman of Boca Raton, Fla. -- a specialist in cruise ship litigation – says she can still recover at least $75,000 in damages for negligence because her injury flowed naturally from the failure of the Carnival Freedom to provide her with the “white cake with vanilla frosting” she had ordered.

“In substituting a cake without telling her, Carnival is liable for all the consequences of its breach of duty even if the particular consequences are unforeseeable at the time of the negligent act,” Hoffman tells On Point.

The Florida courts, however, have warned against attaching tort liability “for results which, although caused-in-fact by the defendant's negligent act or omission, seem to the judicial mind highly unusual, extraordinary, bizarre, or, stated differently, seem beyond the scope of any fair assessment of the danger created by the defendant's negligence.” Stahl v. Metropolitan Dade County, 438 So. 2d 14 (1983).

One allergy information website says coconut allergy is “a relatively rare cause of food allergy” -- compared to, for example, peanut allergy –- with “few cases of allergic reactions from eating coconut products” having been reported.

Newsom had her reception on the first night of an eight-day Caribbean cruise. She describes her injuries as “an aggravation of a pre-existing condition” and both she and her husband, who is the co-plaintiff, allegedly “suffered a loss of enjoyment of the cruise and the cost of the wedding reception and party, which was ruined.”

According to Hoffman, the catering staff gave Newsom a choice for her wedding cake of “vanilla or chocolate cake with vanilla, chocolate or butter cream frosting. Because she was not told that coconut cake was a possibility, she did not feel she had to disclose her allergy.”

The suit also suggests an attempted coconut coverup. After the Newsoms complained about the coconut cake, it says, the staff misrepresented to them that “there was no coconut cake on board when subsequently on the cruise, a coconut cake was served to dinner guests in the main dining rooms and on the dinner menu.”

Hoffman's theory of liability tracks Florida case law which states that to satisfy the “proximate cause” element of negligence, "there must be a natural, direct, and continuous sequence between the negligent act [or omission] and the [plaintiff's] injury that can reasonably be said that but for the [negligent] act [or omission] the injury would not have occurred.”

Assuming the alleged facts are true, Newsom would not have been injured “but for” being served the wrong cake. But the apparent rarity of a coconut allergy may allow Carnival to argue that her injury was not a “natural and probable consequence” of its alleged negligence.

A “natural and probable” consequence – as distinguished from only a “possible” consequence -- has been defined as one “which a person by prudent human foresight can be expected to anticipate as likely to result from an act, because they happen so frequently from the commission of such act that in the field of human experience they may be expected to happen again.”

In a somewhat similar case, a Virginia man with an allergy to tomatoes, onions and pickles recently sued a Burger King restaurant for serving him a sandwich that included those ingredients. Foreseeability is also an issue in that case because tomatoes, onions and pickles are not ingredients “to which a substantial number of the population are allergic.”

Unlike the Burger King plaintiff, Newsom does not include a claim for breach of contract in her suit.

UPDATE

  • Court papers filed July 20, 2009 show the case was settled. Click here for On Point's story on the settlement.


  • This story linked by:


    By Matthew Heller
    6/18/09


     
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