Close

Articles Posted in Class Action

Updated:

The Plaintiff’s Burden in Proving Special Damages

Under Louisiana jurisprudence, special damages are the category of damages that can be “established to a reasonable mathematical certainty.” Myers v. Broussard. Special damages include awards for past and future lost earnings, since a plaintiff’s forgone income can be numerically calculated by the court. Given the relatively high level of…

Updated:

Medical Malpractice Suit Dismissed in Hospital Error Involving Sponge

The Louisiana Court of Appeals rejected an appeal filed by an unhappy patient regarding her medical malpractice claim against the Women and Children’s Hospital Lake Charles and her doctor. The patient, who will be referred to Jane Doe for privacy purposes, underwent a weight loss procedure known as a lap…

Updated:

Lake Charles Casino Resort Security Guards Found Not To Have Used Excessive Force

It is not uncommon in casinos for patrons to become intoxicated to the point that they are unsuitable for public. For this reason, casinos implement security procedures to deal with intoxicated patrons. Most of these procedures involve cutting the patron off from alcohol and, in some cases, even removing the…

Updated:

Inadequate Medical Care and the Legal Ramifications Capable of Causing Life-Changing Problems

Everyone expects adequate, timely, and complete care from medical professionals in hospitals. However, unfortunately, times come when the expected level of care fails to come to fruition, and an action for medical malpractice arises. In March of 1993, a Tallulah, Louisiana, resident began a series of trips to doctors in…

Updated:

Plaintiff Learns Painful Lesson About Treating Injuries Without Delay

Early in the morning of August 25, 2006, Angela Brignac visited a McDonald’s in Baton Rouge. While she was stopped at the drive-thru’s menu board, her car was struck from the rear by a truck operated by Brian Mumphrey. The collision occurred because Mumphrey’s foot slipped off the brake pedal…

Updated:

Court Explores Standard of Review in Baton Rouge Car Wreck Case

On August 7, 2002, James Wilson was driving his car southbound on Essen Lane in Baton Rouge. When he attempted to make a left turn onto the on-ramp for I-10, Wilson pulled into the path of an oncoming car driven by Barbara White northbound on Essen. The crash left Wilson…

Updated:

Louisiana Wrongful Death and Punitive Damages Award in Oil Refinery Release (Part II)

The Bailey case, as discussed, was determined based upon the precedent set forth by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Bulot v. Intracoastal Tubular Services, Inc. The focus here is on two causes of action, Whether a plaintiff can file both, and receive punitive damages for, a wrongful death and survivorship…

Updated:

Louisiana Wrongful Death and Punitive Damages Award (Part I)

The Bailey v. Exxon Mobil Corporation case finds its conclusion based on the precedent set forth in Bulot v. Intracoastal Tubular Services. The focus is on the application of a statute, and differentiating events that take place prior to the statute’s enactment, and how the Court will analyze events that…

Updated:

Trial Necessary to Determine Jones Act Applicability (Part 2)

Not all employees furthering a vessel’s mission are seamen. They can provide short-term or even land-based support. If so, they aren’t seamen under the federal Jones Act. Whether Kerry Becnel was a seaman when he was injured was the issue considered in Becnel v. Chet Morrison, Inc., No. 2010-CA-1411 (La.…

Updated:

Lawsuit Alleging Medical Malpractice Against Nurse Highlights Cap Limitation Elements

This post serves as a concluding piece on the Oliver Medical Malpractice case reviewed in our previous two entries: The higher burden in a medical malpractice case requires that the state show that the discrimination furthers a legitimate governmental interest. The Taylors argued that by including nurses in the categories…

Contact Us
Live Chat