July 4th, though best known as an occasion for grilling out, visiting the beach or lake, and watching the fireworks, is unfortunately also notorious for its high incidence of accidents and injuries. Many incidents, especially vehicle and boat accidents, are related to alcohol use. The Louisiana Highway Safety Commission recently…
Articles Posted in Wrongful Death
Understanding Prescriptive Time Periods When Filing a Lawsuit
Time is of the essence when it comes to filing a suit to address a grievance. If too much time passes, one may be barred from filing a lawsuit. The time period for filing a lawsuit is known as the “prescriptive time period.” For example, a lawsuit for personal injury…
Court Confirms: Daycare Center’s Liability has Limits
Under Louisiana jurisprudence, daycare workers and other temporary custodians of children are required to exercise the “highest degree of care” toward their charges. However, they are not “insurers of the children’s safety” with unlimited responsibility. Rather, the law requires custodians to follow a standard of care that is appropriate for…
Louisiana Supreme Court Dismisses Plaintiffs’ Case Based on Failing To Show Good Cause For Untimely Service of Process
After filing a lawsuit, plaintiffs are required to notify defendants of the impending suit so that they may defend and respond to the claim. Without notice that a lawsuit has been filed against them, defendants’ due process rights may be violated if an unfavorable judgment is entered or rendered without…
Thirty Years of Asbestos Exposure Leads to Death
Over the past two decades, America’s working class has suffered the impact of exposure to asbestos. Before it was known that asbestos could lead to serious illness and death, people worked around the material without hesitation. Problems with exposure arise due to the fact that the fibers of asbestos, once…
Contractor Not Liable for Electrocution Death in St. Tammany Parish
The U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit upheld a District Court ruling in early 2011 allowing a contractor out of a negligence suit following a tragic incident in which a young man was electrocuted while trimming trees. The Court held Defendant Contractor Camp Dresser & McKee, Inc. (CDM) did not…
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…
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…
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…
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…