
• 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
• 3rd Circuit rules that a couple can sue Google for trespassing on their property while photographing it for the Street View feature. "[T]he Borings have alleged that Google entered upon their property without permission. If proven, that is a trespass, pure and simple." Boring v. Google
• Minnesota judge reduces a jury award of copyright infringement damages against an illegal music file sharer from $2 million to $54,000. "The need for deterrence cannot justify a $2 million verdict for stealing and illegally distributing 24 songs for the sole purpose of obtaining free music." Capitol Records v. Thomas-Rasset
• Special master says Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Sharon Keller's conduct on the day of an execution was "not exemplary," but "she did not engage in conduct so egregious that she should be removed from office." In re Honorable Sharon Keller
• New Jersey appeals court says a female business owner can sue a male customer for refusing to do business with her unless she gave him sexual favors. "The quid pro quo sexual harassment alleged in the complaint, if legally permitted, would stand as a barrier to women's ability to do business on an equal footing with men." J.T.'s Tire Services v. United Rentals
• New Mexico judge says a photographer may be compelled to photograph a same-sex commitment ceremony despite her religious convictions because she "is not being forced to participate in any ceremony or ritual; the only requirement is that she photograph the event." Elane Photography v. Willock
• Tennessee judge rules that the PGA Tour does not have to accommodate a golfer by allowing him to take testosterone shots. Doug Barron "has not shown that the 'reasonable accommodation' he has requested ... is necessary in order for him to continue playing golf in PGA Tour events." Barron v. PGA Tour
• 6th Circuit says two high school basketball coaches did not use excessive corporal punishment in paddling a player. One of the coaches "testified that he only paddled Martin [Nolan] a total of ten times during Martin’s tenure at Hamilton [High School]." Nolan v. Memphis City Schools
• Wrongful-death lawsuit alleges a cell phone company is liable for a fatal auto accident allegedly caused by a customer who was driving while "engrossed" in a cell phone conversation. Sprint/Nextel "failed to warn of the hazard of cell phone use while driving." Estate of Doyle v. Sprint/Nextel

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Restaurant Denies Negligence in Nude Photos Case |
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A McDonald's franchisee had no duty to prevent the misappropriation of nude photos from a customer's lost cell phone, the franchisee argues in a motion to dismiss an unusual negligence lawsuit.
The phone belonged to Phillip Sherman of Bella Vista, Ark., who left it at a McDonald's in nearby Fayetteville. He sued the franchisee, Mathews Management Co., in November, alleging its employees assumed a duty to “protect and secure” the contents of the phone.
According to the complaint, restaurant manager Aaron Brummley told Sherman's mother he had the phone and said he would turn it off and put it in a safe place for pickup the next day. But before Sherman could retrieve it, nude photos of his wife which he had stored in the phone were allegedly downloaded from it and posted on a website.
Mathews contends in its motion to dismiss that it owed no duty to Sherman since “The phone was left at the restaurant solely due to plaintiffs' negligence, and there is no law establishing a duty on the part of a restaurant franchisee to safeguard the contents of a negligently lost cell phone.”
“If anything, the situation this Court faces involves a case of gratuitous bailment,” Mathews says, referring to the legal term for a person's agreement to watch over another's property without compensation.
In his response to the motion, Sherman defines the case as one of “negligent performance of [an] undertaking to render services.”
Mathews “promised and undertook to perform the services of turning the Plaintiffs' cellular telephone off, to place it in the office, and to keep it safe,” he says -- “so much so as to require the Plaintiffs themselves to give their name and a description of the phone before the same would be released and turned on.”
Sherman cites Keck v. American Employment Agency, 652 S.W.2d 2 (1983), in which the Arkansas Supreme Court said an employment agency could be sued for failing to protect a client from the prospective employer who raped her.
“The Restatement of Torts recognizes ... that simply because a third person commits a crime, that does not always exonerate one who created the situation which allowed the crime to occur,” the court noted.
But the defendant in Keck was held liable for the third party's conduct because of “its contractual relationship with Stacy Keck, its ability to foresee some danger to her, and because it had some degree of control over the employers it made available.” Sherman can allege no such “special relationship” between him and the McDonald's.
As for the bailment issue, the plaintiff concedes that “it may be advisable and appropriate for Plaintiff to allege a claim based on bailment in the future after discovery is completed ...” But as Mathews points out, no claim for failure to protect the bailment of his cell phone “would attach in the absence of proof of gross negligence.”
McDonald's has filed a separate motion to dismiss in which it says it does not exercise any control over the day-to-day operations of the restaurant and therefore cannot be held vicariously liable for the employees' actions. A hearing on the motions is set for April 3.
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UPDATE
Washington County Circuit Court Judge Mary Ann Gunn denied both motions to dismiss at the April 3 hearing.
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Other Sherman v. McDonald's Sources
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COMMENT
"Somebody should tell Mr. Sherman to sue McDonalds for public disclosure of private facts, false light in the public eye, and misappropriation” -- Robert A. Sparks, attorney
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By Matthew Heller 2/24/09
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Dancer Strips Club of $100K in DUI Case
A former stripper has won a $100,000 award in an unusual employment law case as a jury found a Birmingham, Ala., strip club liable for allowing her to drive home from work “in a highly intoxicated state.”
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Halliburton Takes Swing at Alleged Rape Victim
Perhaps befitting the former employer of Dick Cheney, KBR/Halliburton has taken the low road in asking the U.S. Supreme Court to bar a former employee from having a public trial of her claims that she was gang raped by co-workers in Iraq.
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Tenant's Gripe Tweet Too Vague to be Libel
A Chicago judge has dismissed the first libel case involving a single Twitter posting, finding that an apartment renter's gripe about her landlord was too vague and imprecise to be construed as defamatory.
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Copperfield Wants U.S. to Keep Evidence From Accuser
Magician David Copperfield has some sharp words for federal prosecutors who have refused to acknowledge that they dropped a sexual assault investigation against him because of the accuser's lack of credibility.
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Hotel Exec Settles Drug Death Case
The former CEO of a luxury hotel operator has quickly settled a lawsuit accusing him of causing the drug overdose death of his girlfriend, On Point has learned –- even though he describes the allegations as “slanderous and bogus.”
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Bingo for "Bruno!" Baron Cohen KO's Verbal Spat Case
A California judge has dismissed a verbal assault case against comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, finding that a woman initiated a confrontation with him during the filming of a scene for the movie “Brüno” and “not vice versa.”
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"No Sex Involved" in Orgy Viewing Case, Hotel Insists
A former manager at the Hilton Minneapolis who claimed she walked in on an orgy at a company sales conference has “sensationalized” what was only “some questionable behavior,” the hotel's owner says in arguing that her sexual harassment case should not go to trial.
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Spears v. Allergan, Inc. Court: Orange County (Calif.) Superior Subject: Botox death
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Plaintiff B v. Joe Francis Date: 2/22/10 Court: USDC, N. Fla. Hearing: Jury trial in sexual abuse case.
CBS v. FCC Date: 2/23/10 Court: 3rd Circuit Hearing: Oral arguments in "Nipplegate" case.
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