Close

Articles Posted in Pain And Suffering Claims

Updated:

Appellate Court Outlines Standard of Review for Damage Awards

In civil litigation, the defendant is responsible for the damage caused to the plaintiff(s) when found responsible for causing harm. This damage may be either physical or property damage. If a defendant is found to be at fault, the next question is usually to what extent the defendant is liable…

Updated:

Baton Rouge General Medical Center Slip-and-Fall Case Confirms Hospital’s Premises Liability Standard

Previously on this blog, we have looked at a variety of cases involving premises liability. Most have centered on an injury that occurs when the plaintiff visits a store or other commercial enterprise; in those cases, the defendant faces a heightened “merchant” standard of care under state statute, namely La.…

Updated:

Duty of Care Doctors Owe their Patients and Medical Malpractice

The level of care required of medical practitioners is very high. This is because people put their trust, and sometimes their lives and well being in the hands of a doctor or surgeon. The level of care is high because we must attain the very best from the people who…

Updated:

Springfield Injury Reminds Homeowners to Use Caution Around Power Lines

In several previous posts on this blog, we have explored cases involving premises liability where the plaintiff is injured while visiting a “restaurant”, “store”, or other “business”. But what about a plaintiff who is injured on his own property by a device that is owned by another party but which…

Updated:

Court Upholds Lower Level of Standard of Duty for Louisiana Governments

In many circumstances, state and federal governments are protected by governmental immunity. In some circumstances, e.g. where government acts as a market participant, these immunities are set aside due to the nature of the actions taken by the government. In Louisiana, the Lafayette Consolidated Government (LCG) runs a bus service…

Updated:

Odd, Sudden Emergency Collision Leads to Discussion of Responsibility in Highway Car Accident

In a very recent Louisiana Court of Appeals Case, the Court took a rare action to uphold summary judgment when considering whether the lead vehicle in multi car pileup was negligent. The Court found the lead driver, Martin Lopez, was not negligent because he acted with ordinary care. This idea…

Updated:

Court Discusses Prescriptive Period in Medical Malpractice Case

Regular readers of this blog are no doubt aware that the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act requires that all “claims against healthcare providers be reviewed or ‘filtered’ through a medical review panel before proceeding to any other court.” Also, medical malpractice suits are subject to a period of prescription — that…

Updated:

Court Dissects Nursing Home Wrongful Death Case

Many families in America have had to move their loved ones into a nursing home. Whether the reason is that they don’t have the room to care for the elder, they don’t have the time or money to provide adequate care, or their elder wishes to be in the nursing…

Updated:

First Circuit of Louisiana Allows Lost Chance of Survival Tort Case to Go Forward and Specifies Burden of Proof

In June 2010, the First Circuit of the State of Louisiana Court of Appeal reversed and remanded the case of Lena Hebert et al. v. Plaquemine Caring, L.L.C. due to a legal error committed by the Eighteenth Judicial District Court for Iberville Parish. This legal error proved to be a…

Updated:

Disastrous Results for Plaintiffs that Wait Too Long to File Suit

In Louisiana, there are certain steps that need to be taken in order to file a case for medical malpractice. In order to get a case to trial, a plaintiff must first submit a malpractice petition to a medical review board. The board reviews the facts surrounding a case and…

Contact Us
Live Chat