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Articles Posted in Pain And Suffering Claims

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Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government Ordered to Pay Damages, Costs to Injured Bus Passenger

The plaintiff in this case, Eileen Laday, was a passenger on a bus owned by the Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government. The bus had been donated to the City-Parish in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. When the bus was donated, it was missing a plexiglass shield that was designed to keep…

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Appellate Court Affirms Small General Damages Award in Minor St. Landry Parish Accident

In a prior post, we saw that the trial court is afforded considerable deference in the setting the amount of general damages in tort cases. More than 30 years ago, the Louisiana Supreme Court stated: “[T]he role of an appellate court in reviewing general damages is not to decide what…

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Court Rules High School Football Stadium Bleachers Are Not Unreasonably Dangerous

On the evening of October 29, 2004, Jeanine Pryor, then 69, attended a football game between Barbe High School and New Iberia High School at Lloyd G. Porter Stadium in Iberia Parish. Pryor, who was there to see her grandson play, was recovering from hip surgery and required a cane…

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Appellate Court Reverses Factually Unsupported Judgment in Car Wreck Case

In previous posts on this blog, we have discussed the elements that the victim of a car accident must prove in order to recover from an at-fault driver. Whether the defendant’s negligent conduct caused the accident and the victim’s injuries is a question to be resolved by the fact-finder. This…

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Disabled Man’s Death Demonstrates Slipper Slope of Malpractice Claims

Gleason v. Louisiana Dept. of Health and Hospitals is a Medical Malpractice case arising out of the unfortunate death of a 47-year-old severely mentally challenged man, Donnie Gleason. Donnie had been a resident of Northwest since December of 1974 and was nonverbal and incapable of self-medicating, arranging or monitoring his…

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The Impoverished Plaintiff and the Assessment of Court Costs

The Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure generally affords the trial court wide discretion in assessing the costs of litigation to one or more of the parties. “Except as otherwise provided by law, the court may render judgment for costs, or any part thereof, against any party, as it may consider…

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Court Vacates Jury’s Award in Rapides Parish Lost Chance of Survival Case

As we have explored in numerous prior posts, a doctor or other healthcare provider owes his or her patient a duty to meet the standard of care applicable to the patient’s situation. The failure to follow the standard of care points to the doctor’s negligence which, in the case of…

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No Future Expenses Awards for Ouachita Woman Who Suffered Injuries in Accident

The tort law system is designed to make whole those who have been injured. Since medical science is both an imperfect art and an imperfect science, money is most often the cure for what ails plaintiffs. In each case the jury must decide how much money it takes to remedy…

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Product Safety a Concern? Check Out This Government Website

For those wishing to be kept abreast of the latest products to receive governmental warnings regarding the safety surrounding their use, feel free to check out SaferProducts.gov. With a list of incident reports from other consumers, this effort by the government hopefully will help enable people to make conscious decisions…

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Prescription Runs on Ouachita Parish Medical Malpractice and Wrongful Death Survival Action Claim

The plaintiff in this case, Suzanne Hammond, was the mother of Latousha Tillman and the grandmother of her stillborn child, Ladaizya Tillman. On March 31, 2004, Ms. Tillman arrived at the St. Francis Hospital emergency room complaining of pain, nausea, and vomiting. She was 25 years old and 23 weeks…

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