Heparin

Baxter Issues Urgent Nationwide Voluntary Recall and lists the following adverse reactions:

Adverse patient reactions have included: stomach pain or discomfort, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased or low blood pressure, chest pain, fast heart rate, dizziness, fainting, unresponsiveness, shortness of breath, feeling your heart beat strong or fast, drug ineffectiveness, burning sensation, redness or paleness of skin, abnormal sensation of the skin, mouth or lips, flushing, increased sweating, decreased skin sensitivity, headache, feeling unwell, restlessness, watery eyes, throat swelling, thirst and difficulty opening the mouth.

What has been hidden in the announcement is that the consequences to the reaction this blood thinning product can be serious and life threatening.

The FDA has little budget to check out the drugs it approves and must rely upon the representations given by the very company that is under intense pressure to aquire a quick release of the product. Unfortunately, some states including Texas proclude litigation concerning products with FDA approval. This is an intense legal fight by the attorneys representing victims of dangerous pharmacuticals.

http://www.bailey-law.com/lawyer-attorney-1215852.html


FEMA trailer danger

FEMA has created a perfect storm for the victims it is supposed to be helping. Not only has it failed to move forward with the funding it has to rebuild the coast, it now has been revealed that the agency has covered up the dangers of the trailers it provided as temporary housing. The pressed wood walls and flooring contain formaldehyde which is a known cause of several medical conditions including cancer.

The trailers that were provided as a temporary fix shortly after Katrina are still being used while families wait for the agency to wake from its bureaucratic sleep. The testing done on the trailers was only done on trailers that had been aired out and the testing was only for short term exposure. The conclusion that the trailers were safe was contra to some of FEMA's own experts and certainly flew in the face of known scientific and medical knowledge.

Not only has FEMA not lived up to the compliment of "Good job, Brownie" uttered by President Bush shortly after the devastation of Katrina, now it is obvious that it is unethically exposing the victims to poisons which will surely take their toll. Ironically, if it had just moved ahead with deliberate haste, the exposure to these cancer causing trailers might have been short enough to save some from its more serious consequences.

http://www.bailey-law.com/lawyer-attorney-1215838.html

 

trampoline recall

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) recently announced  that Stamina Products of Springfield Mo. has agreed to pay the government a $105,000 civil penalty because failed to report in a timely manner injuries from defective mini-trampolines. In April 2006, CPSC and Stamina Products announced the recall of about 668,000 mini-trampolines.

Between April 2002 and June 2005, Stamina Products received eight reports from consumers complaining that the trampoline sprang back during the folding/unfolding process causing facial lacerations that required stitches, broken teeth, bruises, headaches, neck pain, broken facial bones, loss of mouth sensation, and blurred vision. 

 CPSC was finally informed of the incidents in July 2005.

Federal law requires firms to report to CPSC within 24 hours after obtaining information that a product contains a defect which could create a substantial product hazard, or creates an unreasonable risk of serious injury or death.

http://www.bailey-law.com/lawyer-attorney-1215486.html

Cefepime

FDA issued an early communication about new safety information and the request for additional data concerning  the risk of death in patients treated with cefepime. The May 2007 issue of The Lancet Infectious Diseases (Efficacy and safety of cefepime: a systematic review and meta-analysis) reported the increased mortality with the use of cefepime, a broad spectrum B-lactam antibiotic currently approved for the treatment of a variety of infections due to susceptible strains of microorganisms. The article describes a higher all-cause mortality in patients treated with cefepime compared to other B-lactam antibiotics. If someone has been prescribed this drug, I recommend that they contact their treating physician to discuss this breaking news.
Read the complete MedWatch 2007 Safety Summary including a link to the Early Communication Sheet regarding this ongoing safety review at:
http://www.fda.gov/medwatch/safety/2007/safety07.htm#Cefepime


Jury Verdict

I recently received a jury verdict for a most excellent client of $21 million in Smith County. Although known for its conservative verdicts, the people of Smith County are capable of thinking in large numbers if the situation deserves it. My client is a young man who served with distinction in Afghanistan and Iraq. He fought back from life-threatening injuries when the defendant did not yield right of way and drove in front of his motorcycle. The defendant left the scene of the accident and a courageous woman stopped her car to render aid. At great personal risk she sat next to him on a dark street to comfort him and pray for him. It was a story too impressive for fiction.

Now we must endure the appeals to keep the jury award from being cut by the appellate courts that will be under pressure from the insurance company to substitute its judgment for that of the jurors who heard the evidence.

Aqua Dots recall

Spin Master Recalls Aqua Dots.  Small colorful beads can be made by children that then are used to construct objects. The idea is attractive and I'm sure many responsible adults bought the product to help their children in creative play. Unfortunately the small Aqua Dots are colorful and just the right size to be candy. The covering of the dots metabolizes into a drug often referred to as the "date rape" drug. It causes the children become confused, then suffer lose of muscle control. Depending on the amount consumed, it can cause amnesia, coma and even death.

Obviously our regulatory agencies are not providing enough protection for consumers and their children. Hopefully the Administration will not further compromise the last line of defense by what it refers to as "Tort Reform"--a code word for taking away the Constitutional right of consumers to sue for damages resulting from unreasonably dangerous products. 

http://www.bailey-law.com/lawyer-attorney-1215486.html

Advances in cervical disc treatment

The Food & Drug Administration on July 16th approved the first the first artificial cervical disc. According to the developers, the prosthesis simulates the function of a natural cervical disc and provides patients with the ability to move their necks compared to the traditional practice of spinal fusion. The results of the clinical trial show that the disc is strong enough to withstand sudden movement and to support the head, so that patients are able to move their head up and down, and from side to side. The new artificial disc, placed through an incision at the front of the neck, is designed to alleviate neck pain and other ailments associated with disc herniations, spinal arthritis and other spine degenerative conditions. The disc consists of a stainless-steel ball and trough that functions as a joint. It is attached to the vertebrae with screws. The components are designed to act as a pivot point, which may allow the spine to move more naturally.

Chrysler and Honda Recall

A recent article on the internet publication Gadget laid out the danger for consumers: Honda and Chrysler is recalling thousands of potentially unsafe vehicles which are affected by brake problems.Chrysler issued a press statement about the matter and they mentioned the problem as potential braking problems while driving uphill, now that’s something we should worry about and some 300,000 vehicles are affected by this problem.While the Honda Motor Co issued a separate statement that they are recalling 180,000 Civics and they are having faulty Wheel bearing which might potentially make the vehicles wheel less while on road .

Chrysler is recalling 156,000 Jeep Grand Cherokees and Commander SUV’s produced during 2006-2007 .they are also recalling 50,000 Dodge Nitro SUV’s and 90,000 Jeep Wrangler SUV’s produced this year.

The classic test for manufacturers is the balance between possibility and gravity of harm to consumers and the effert and cost to avoid the danger. One would think that Chrysler and Honda have the resources and experience to assure their customers tthe basic safety involved of adequate braking.

Free Enterprise and Trial by Jury

Indivisible injury and joint trial

INTRODUCTION

This memorandum seeks to explain whether a Plaintiff injured in an auto accident , hurts the same area of his body in a second accident, before his healthcare providers have had an opportunity to properly evaluate the injury, can try his case jointly with the defendants having the burden of proof of their percentage of contribution to the injury.

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Laceration by saw

When I first started practicing law in the early 70's safety issues existed concerning circular saws. One would think that products liability lawsuits would have provided enough motivation for manufacturers to use low-tech research and development to assure that their products would not injure consumers.  A new recall has hit the media. See below:

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with the firm named below, today announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed.
Name of Product: Skil® brand Circular Saws

Units: About 811,000

Manufacturer: Robert Bosch Tool Corp., of Mount Prospect, Ill.

Hazard: The trigger switch on the circular saw can be locked on or the switch can be turned on without the use of the safety lock-out. This can cause unexpected operation of the saw, posing a risk of laceration.

Incidents/Injuries: The firm has received five reports of the saw staying on after the user released the trigger. No injuries have been reported.

Description: The recall involves Skil® brand circular saws with model numbers 5650, 5700, 5750 and 5755. The model number and date code are printed on the nameplate located on the front of the saw. The recall includes the following date codes:

28101 - 29231
38101 - 39231
48101 - 49231
58101 - 59231
68101 - 69231
No other models or date codes are included in this recall.

Sold at: Home centers and independent hardware retailers nationwide from January 2002 through December 2006 for between $70 and $80.

Manufactured in: United States

See www.bailey-law.com for law concerning products liability and current product recalls

New treatments for nerve injury

When I was young, sulfur drugs were about all a doctor could offer for a sickness. When I played football and other sports in high school, the operations designed to correct a torn knee or ruptured disc hurt the body more than helped. Today medical science is “star wars” advanced. The problem is that the cost of receiving the miracle treatments now available is astronomical. The possibilities for recovery for tragically injured victims many times depend upon a successful effort to collect from the insurance company of the responsible party. Because the financial stakes are high, the fight by the insurance companies is vicious. The following are some of the breakthroughs now being explored by our elite scientists and doctors:
Medical research in Portugal is exploring the possibility that olfactory nerve stem cells from a spinal cord injury patient may be used to repair the spinal cord injury. The idea behind the procedure is that the nasal tissue has nerve cells that can regenerate.
Research on rats with crushed spinal cords suggests potential for a new treatment protocol soon after injury combining radiation therapy to destroy harmful cells and microsurgery to drain excess fluids significantly increases the body's ability to repair the injured cord leading to permanent recovery from injury. When a midline incision was performed on the spinal cord one hour after injury, followed by localized radiation therapy given for ten days starting on day ten after injury, there was nearly a two-fold improvement in the body's ability to heal the injured cord compared with untreated rats.
The Food & Drug Administration on July 16th approved the first the first artificial cervical disc. According to the developers, the prosthesis simulates the function of a natural cervical disc and provides patients with the ability to move their necks compared to the traditional practice of spinal fusion. The results of the clinical trial show that the disc is strong enough to withstand sudden movement and to support the head, so that patients are able to move their head up and down, and from side to side. The new artificial disc, placed through an incision at the front of the neck, is designed to alleviate neck pain and other ailments associated with disc herniations, spinal arthritis and other spine degenerative conditions. The disc consists of a stainless-steel ball and trough that functions as a joint. It is attached to the vertebrae with screws. The components are designed to act as a pivot point, which may allow the spine to move more naturally.
My thanks to the the Shigley Law Firm in Atlanta for its resource on these treatment topics.

Fire

It is an unusual day if there are not products being recalled because of their unreasonably dangerous risk as a fire hazard. One would think that fundamental product research and development would catch such problems before a manufacturer exposes consumers to dangers of fire without extreme cost or delay. The balance test between danger to the public and, on the other scale, cost and effort to avoid the risk is violated all too often, creating the need for continual recalls of such products. For every recall there are many unheralded stories of  a fiery tragedy caused by defective products flying under the radar of federal regulators. 

The law of products liability is designed to force duty on the manufacturer and a remedy for the injured consumer. http://www.bailey-law.com/lawyer-attorney-1215486.html

Some press releases of recalls by the Consumer Product Safety Commission are posted below:

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Lead poisoning for children

It is time to consider an international tribunal for product safety. As the author of The World is Flat points out, we now are a truely golbal economy. Until the day comes that our societies come to grip with that reality and address in an effective way human issues such as ecology, human rights, product and consumer safety we must resort to our court system to force compliance with at least minimum standards for us and our families. It is hard to believe that this many years since the deadly dangers of lead poisoning, especially for our young, that products can still be purchased containing this evil.

NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs Washington, DC 20207

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 5, 2007
Release #07-232 Firm’s Recall Hotline: (800) 929-0006
CPSC Recall Hotline: (800) 638-2772
CPSC Media Contact: (301) 504-7908


Children’s Metal Jewelry Recalled by Future Industries Due to Lead Poisoning Hazard
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with the firm named below, today announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed.
Name of Product: Essentials for Kids Jewelry Sets

Units: About 20,000

Importer: Future Industries, of Cliffwood Beach, N.J.

Hazard: The recalled metal jewelry sets contain high levels of lead. Lead is toxic if ingested by young children and can cause adverse health effects.

Incidents/Injuries: None reported.

Description: The recalled jewelry sets include a necklace, bracelet and pair of earrings made of green, blue or pink plastic beads. The necklaces have painted metallic pendants in the shape of shoes, girls, blackboards with “ABCD,” or school buses. The other recalled jewelry sets include a necklace and seven pendants, one for each day of the week. The pendants are shaped as sandals, purses or butterflies. “Essentials for kids” is printed on the packaging.

Sold at: Gift stores, dollar stores, and small discount stores nationwide from August 2005 through April 2007 for about $1.

Manufactured in: China

Remedy: Consumers should immediately take the recalled jewelry away from children. Return it to the store where purchased for a full refund, or contact Future Industries for information on receiving a full refund.

Consumer Contact: For additional information, contact Future Industries at (800) 929-0006 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday.


Paid vs incurred

The Texas law seems to be that if a medical bill is $1000 but the plaintiff's insurance company bargains the bill down to $500, then the triers of fact only get to consider the amount paid by the insurance company. The insurance company has a right of subrogation, so medical bills are a wash for the plaintiff. Also, the jury gets a distorted picture of the probably future bills that might be incurred. Our governor vetoed a bill with almost unamious bi-partisan support to correct this disadvantage to the injured party. The truth is that the injured party has paid more than the amount of the bill to his/her insurance company that must pay the bill or bargain it down in a way a regular individual can not do. So how can the injured party's attorney fight this? What sort of a record can be made to argue the inequity of this situation? I suggest the following:

 

 

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Preemption pharmacuticals

Preemption: Pharmaceuticals

For thousands of years humans have carried forward information about plants that have medicinal value. This intelligence has helped us survive and populate the earth. About 100 years ago the first efforts at manufacturing drugs to fight disease and promote well being began. When I was born the only medicine doctors really had at their disposal was sulfur drugs. Now new drugs are born continuously. Pharmaceutical companies are under intense pressure to create the next “blockbuster” before the patent on the last expires.

Now we rely upon the FDA to monitor the natural motivation of the industry giants to get their products in the market with a kickoff of massive consumer advertising. The FDA doesn’t have the budget to do its own testing and must rely upon the representations of the very companies that stand to gain from a quick approval.

The problem with these new drugs is that they are not born with the intelligence and communication abilities the cells in our bodies possess. If you take an antibiotic it kills the good bacteria as well as the bad since it doesn’t know how to “talk” to the white blood cells that know the difference. We end up eating yogurt for a couple of weeks after the killing takes place. Unfortunately the downside of taking many of the new drugs is much more significant than having to eat some yogurt.

Once on the market consumers are exposed to advertisement calculated to motivate them to suggest the drug’s use to their treating physicians. Pharmaceutical reps have already met with the doctors and deposited free samples. Success! Now it is merely a matter of routine prescription renewal to lock in the market share.

This system gives rise to over half of the medicines approved by FDA later requiring stronger warnings for patients or being removed from the shelf altogether.

Ironically, the cause for many of the more dangerous drugs being reexamined is brought about by plaintiff’s trial lawyers who take up the cause for their clients. The department with FDA in charge of follow-up of approved drugs has little or no power to enforce its determinations. Since fighting a technical battle with some of industry’s largest giants is too much for the common man, the lawyers are handling the litigation on a contingent fee and are covering the costs up front. If the lawyers are wrong, they eat the cost and receive no fee.

Now the last vestige for protection outside of efforts by the out-gunned FDA is under attack by legislation preempting litigation if the drug is approved by FDA, even if it is proved that the approval was based on false and misleading data presented by the manufacturer to FDA.

We must not allow this to happen.

Medical malpractice bunk

I am a personal injury trial lawyer in Texas. My client’s access to the courts and their ability to fight large corporate interests, including insurance companies, depends upon their ability to contract with me on a contingent basis. In other words I don’t get paid unless I win their lawsuit. From a pure economic reason I have always been reluctant to take on an expensive, complicated case unless I determine it has strong merits. This has always been the case in medical negligence cases since they are time-consuming and will demand large amounts of cash outlay.

Sometimes insurance companies argue that they are put in a hot spot if the injured patient makes an offer because they fear that a jury might give much more than the case is worth. The reverse has been my experience. Defendants normally win their cases and juries are much more likely to award a conservative amount than an excessive one. Many times good cases settle for less than their value because the injured patients are less able to afford the risk of trial than a large insurance company.

I decided to represent injured parties who need a champion in the court room because it seemed to be such a noble cause. I also felt I could do a public good by acting as a check and balance to encourage reasonably safe products, prudent conduct on the roads and workplace and conscientious professionals. Certainly formidable interests such as insurance can afford political gravity and advertisement to sway the public regardless of the facts, but trial by jury I felt should be the great equalizer.

Some argue that special protection for medical providers is necessary to avoid a diminishing of the doctors needed for our care and outrageous medical costs. But on what could anyone exercising intellectual integrity base such an outlandish claim?

There is no creditable national study showing a decrease in doctors. The doctor population is increasing impressively. According to the 2004 AMA report, the number of physicians practicing in the U.S. grew 203% from 1965 to 2003—four times faster than the population growth. The number of high risk practices grew dramatically during the same time period. Applications for residency training positions by medical school seniors hit a 20 year high in 2006 according to an American Association of Medical Colleges’ press release.

President Bush said in a speech in 2004 that lawsuits were “driving docs out of business,” yet it is undisputed that malpractice costs amount to only .0062 of our nation’s health care costs, (less than 2/3’s of a penny of a health care dollar). Ironically, the insurance industry tries to prove there is a crisis by citing the huge premiums it charges doctors and hospitals without any statistical basis justifying their rates. Historically, states that pass “tort reform,” including Texas, have not been rewarded by lower insurance premiums.

President Bush’s own Mark McClellan, (appointed by the President to head the Food and Drug Administration), wrote an article postulating that doctors practice “defensive medicine” which drives up health care costs. This theory was necessary since less than 2/3’s of a penny of the health care dollar could not justify taking away victims’ rights. It is interesting to note that McClellan’s report stands alone and the Congressional Budget Office and Government Accountability Office dismiss the theory and refuse to take it into account for making cost estimates.

I suppose the insulation industry practices “defensive installation” by not using asbestos and Ford Motor Company practices “defensive auto design” by moving the Pinto’s exploding gas tank because of lawsuits seeking damages to our citizens; but I don’t necessarily think that such fear of being brought to task is a bad thing.

My opinion is shared in the May 11, 2006 issue of the New England of Medicine by George J. Annas, J.D., M.P.H.: “And more liability suits against hospitals may be necessary to motivate hospital boards to take patient safety more seriously.” In the same issue a study entitled Claims, Errors, and Compensation Payments in Medical Malpractice Litigation, concluded payments of claims found by the study not involving error occurred less frequently than non-payments for claims involving error. Claims the study found not involving error caused 13%-16% of the total monetary cost of defense.

The lack of economic impact of medical negligence cases is not a new revelation. Harvard Medical School ran an extensive study in 1990 and determined that only a very small percent of negligence causing injury to a hospital patient in New York State resulted in any recovery. It found that 8 times more patients suffered injury or death from negligence than filed a lawsuit and 16 times more patients suffered injury or death from negligence than received compensation.

Texas has been no exception to the national experience. The Tonn study in 1992, financed by the Texas Trial Lawyers Association, Texas Medical Association and the Texas Hospital Association, finding there to be no medical malpractice crisis, (“. . . changing the medical professional liability system will have minimal cost savings impact on the overall health care delivery system in Texas”).

Most recently, a study reported in the July, 2005 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies entitled Stability, Not Crisis: Medical Malpractice Claim Outcomes in Texas, 1988-2002, concluded that there was an overall picture of stability which did not justify legal reform in Texas.

Texas malpractice legislation is a classic example of power over reason, castrating the protection of Article I Sec 3 of our state constitution mandating that no individual or group of individuals be allowed special rights or privileges over other citizens and Article I Sec 15 guaranteeing the right to trial by jury.

Texas, as in other jurisdictions, tries to make a victim whole by allowing money damages if it is found that a doctor or hospital breached the recognized standard of care and foreseeably caused injury to the patient. The damages allowed in a medical negligence case are the same for which each of us is accountable if we negligently hurt someone, such as in an automobile accident.

One category of damages is economic. It can be figured by an accountant gathering some data and making projections of earnings, or earning capacity, and medical expenses.

The other category is “human damages,” or, as the insurance industry wants to call them, “non-economic loss”. Human damages are pain, anguish, disfigurement, physical impairment or the loss of a relationship with a close family member killed or profoundly injured. Under the current malpractice law in Texas this is capped at $250,000 in almost all cases. This cap doesn’t stop frivolous lawsuits. Its effect is on the meritorious ones with overwhelming human damages. The net good is for the insurance industry.

Some argue that money can’t replace quality of life and should not be considered. Yet compensation for the cost of burying your child wrongfully killed, and nothing else, does not meet the sense of justice that courts should provide. Certainly the right to trial by jury should not be inhibited without compelling state or national interests. Where is the evidence that there is a crisis that justifies this attack on our civil justice system? Why should doctors and hospitals be afforded more protection than the rest of us?

Statistics show the disingenuous nature of the lawmakers, but it is the individual examples that explain the impact of the wrong. True life examples such as a child transformed into a rag doll due to septic shock resulting from untreated infection at an IV site; a woman who loses her arm because of an inappropriate administration of Phenergan; and a mentally disabled woman raped by a nurse’s assistant in a nursing home, are limited to a minimal recovery because of the preponderance of human damages.

If a new medical malpractice client came into my office and I determined she was one of the people who deserved a day in court, I would have to hire an expert in the same field of expertise as the defendant and provide 60 day notice before even being allowed to file a lawsuit or conduct discovery. After a lawsuit is filed I must provide a detailed expert report within 120 days from the date of filing, armed with a maximum of two depositions. Peer review at a hospital of a negligent act of a doctor—regardless of how egregious—is forever secret. The doctor or hospital will automatically have colleagues who will assist in the defense. My fees and expenses must come out of the victim’s recovery and can not be mentioned to the jury.

The professionals being driven out of the arena are not the doctors but competent attorneys who have the ability to represent someone injured in a sophisticated case. Many of my fellow attorneys refuse to look at any case if it is post tort reform medical malpractice case. Although I never have carried a large medical negligence case load, currently I have none.

Do the vast majority of doctors who practice competently and ethically really want the last vestige of check and balance taken out of the system? The Texas Board of Medical Examiners is at best lax in weeding out the doctors who should not be practicing. Of doctors in Texas found to have provided substandard care, incompetence or negligence, 3% received a revocation or suspension of their license according to a July 2002 press release by consumer watch dog, Public Citizen. It also reported that some Texas doctors committing bizarre violations such as writing prescriptions for sexual favors were allowed to keep their licenses.

In the 2003 campaign causing the passage of the Texas medical malpractice tort reform, insurance campaigners promised a 17% to 19% reduction in premium costs. What wasn’t pointed out was profits of the insurance companies went up 225% between 2002 and 2003. After its passage Governor Perry bragged about Texas Medial Liability Trust reducing its premiums 12% but neglected to mention the previous 140% increases it pushed past the Texas insurance commissioner.

The function of insurance premiums is dependent on investments the insurance companies are making and the political power they have with the state insurance commissioners. The effect of law suits comes in a poor third. The insurance commissioner in Texas has been a cash cow for the industry and has no idea about what numbers support its premiums. Call him up, (1-512-462-6169), and ask.

After the passage of medical malpractice caps the various insurance companies attempted to raise their rates again, flying in the face of their promise for a premium reduction if the measure passed. The Texas Medical Liability Insurance Underwriting Association sought a 35.6% increase and GE Medical Protective filed for a 39% increase. It wasn’t until after the new president of the Texas Medical Association, Bohn Allen; Dan Gattis, a Republican from Georgetown and vice chairman of the House Civil Practices Committee, (its “not a win for our doctors”); Dan Lambe of Texas Watch, (“Rates are higher, health care costs are up . . and the only beneficiaries are the special interests who bankrolled the campaign. …”); and others raised unmitigated hell, did premiums get reduced marginally. The appearance of reduction was helped by taking some of the coverage off the table with such things as “risk purchasing groups.” If you talk to Texas doctors, they will probably tell you their premiums went down all right, but so did their coverage. Be assured that the rates will rise once the furor is over.

Now the federal politicians have been persuaded by doctor, hospital and insurance groups to violate the equal protection and right to trial by jury provisions of the 7th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution by preempting what is left of rights of injured patients in favor of doctors and hospitals. That’s the bad news. The good news is that patient rights have been so devastated in Texas by state law; there isn’t really anything else that can be done to hurt a victim of medical negligence by federal pre-emption.

Trial by jury is the American right Thomas Jefferson held in higher esteem than the right to vote. It is a right that exists only if there is a sense of fairness for all who come to our courts to be heard. Courts resolving issues of human suffering must be given the power to grant justice for all individuals and not just for the powerful.

Finding insurance for permissive user


When analyzing a potential claim, we must always look at the "big four":

  1. Breach of duty
  2. Foreseeable causation
  3. Damages
  4. Ability to pay (insurance)

Many times the forth consideration just isn't there when one otherwise has a perfect case.  Sometimes lawyers overlook insurance that follows the auto because the driver isn't following the guidelines of its owner.  What happens if a contractor sent to clean up a dealership car uses it for personal reasons?  Can he be covered under the large corporate umbrella policy? It takes little time to dream up many scenarios.  Here is my take on the law: 

Under Texas law, a person who deviates from the permitted use of a car will still be covered under insurance policy if the deviation is minor or immaterial. Old Am. County Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Renfrow, 130 S.W.3d 70, 73 (Tex. 2004). The factors to be considered while determining whether the deviation was minor or material are “extent of deviation and actual distance or time”… “purposes for which vehicle was given and other factors”. Id. at 72. If permission to given to a person to use a car, he may use the car for the purpose the car is given to him, and he is not excluded from insurance coverage because of a minor deviation from the purpose the car is given. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Smith, 471 S.W.2d 620, 624 (Tex. App. 1971). When a person has permission to use a vehicle and if the person uses the vehicle with minor deviations, it is still considered to have been done with permission. Coronado v. Employees Nat. Ins. Co., 577 S.W. 2d 525, 529 (Tex. App. 1979), aff’d 596 S.W.2d (Tex. 1979). If a car owner does not object to the use of the car by another person, such non-objection may be considered as implied consent to use of the car. United Services Auto. Ass’n v. Stevens, 596 S.W.2d 955, 957 (Tex. App. 1980). Whether consent is given for the use of the car may be inferred from the circumstances of the case, relationship between the parties and from the lack of objection by the owner of the car for use of the car. Tristan v. Gov’t Emp. Ins. Co., 489 S.W.2d 365, 367 (Tex. App. 1972); Royal Idem. Co. v. H.E. Abbott & Sons, Inc., 399 S.W. 2d 343, 345 (Tex. 1966), rev’g 392 S.W.2d 359 (Tex. App. Austin 1965).

In Truck Ins. Exch. v. Ballard, 343 S.W.2d 953 (Tex. App. 1961), an individual was employed as an automobile salesman to sell new and used cars. Id. at 954. The first day he reported for work, he took a used car and while driving the car had an accident. Id. The individual was neither given permission to take the used car nor had been denied such permission. Id. The individual testified that, since he had a prospective purchaser for a used car, he took the car to determine whether it was suitable for sale and to go to his home for lunch. Id. The court noted that an employee can act within the scope of his employment, although he is at the same time accomplishing his own purpose. Id. The court held that since evidence demonstrated that he was driving the car to test it in furtherance of his employment and the fact that he joined with such purpose some of his private business, i.e., going to lunch, would be immaterial and the appellee is covered under insurance policy as employee. Id. at 956.

In United Serv. Auto. Ass’n v. Stevens, 596 S.W.2d 955 (Tex. App. 1980), the insured left the vehicles for sale, the sales manager, during the course of his employment, was expected to show the vehicles to prospective purchasers and the prospective purchasers were expected to drive the vehicles before buying. Id. at 956. The court held that since at the time of the accident the prospective purchaser’s daughter was driving the vehicle and the prospective purchaser was seated in the front seat of the vehicle, it is sufficient to support a finding that the prospective purchaser and his daughter, even though an unlicensed driver, were using the vehicle with implied consent of the insured at time of accident. Id. at 959.

In Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Behringer, 419 S.W.2d 651 (Tex. App. 1967), Aiken lived in the home of Pepper’s parents. Id. at 652. Aiken was Pepper’s boyfriend, he went on dates using her car. He had driven her car by himself when he wanted to go to the store to get things for Pepper, her family and also for himself and Pepper never objected to the use of the car by Aiken. Id. 652. On the day of the accident, a kid asked Aiken to take him for a ride in the car. Id. Pepper told Aiken that he should not take the car for a drive; however, Aiken did not listen to Pepper and took the kid for a drive in the car. Id. Pepper made no effort to take the keys away from Aiken and made no further effort to stop Aiken. Id. at 653. When they went for drive Aiken meet with an accident. Id. The court held that since Aiken always uses Pepper’s car and Pepper in that instant did not make any effort to prevent Aiken from taking the car for drive, Aiken was driving the car with the permission of Pepper. Id. This case seems quite similar to the present. The dealer knew that Phillips drove the car on unapproved trips. They did nothing to stop him. Behringer, 419 S.W.2d at 653.

In Tull v. Chubb Group of Ins. Companies, 146 S.W.3d 689 (Tex. App. 2004), Shaffer was driving a pickup truck owned by her employer. Id. at 691. Shaffer during the accident was not at work for her employer but was with her boyfriend. Id. Following the accident, Shaffer was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated. Id. The court held that Shaffer’s use of the truck while being intoxicated and after office hours, which resulted in collision, was a material deviation from her permitted use of the truck. Id. at 696. In Old Am. County Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Renfrow, 130 S.W.3d 70 (Tex. 2004), rev’g 90 S.W.3d 810 (Tex. App. Ft. Worth 2002), the employee used the company vehicle after work to visit his friend and took her with him to a location which is 40 miles from employer’s office. Id. at 71. The court held that the employee materially deviated from the permission granted by the employer for the use of the company vehicle and was thus not covered under employer’s commercial auto liability policy. Id. at 72.

Knowledge of an agent can be imputed to the principal. Poth v. Small, Craig & Workenthin, L.L.P., 967 S.W.2d 511, 515 (Tex. App. Austin 1998) citing Wellington Oil Co. v. Maffi, 150 S.W.2d 60, 63 (Texas 1941). It therefore seems reasonable that the dealer’s employees’ knowledge of Phillips’ deviations can be imputed to the dealership. Poth, 967 S.W.2d at 515. A minor deviation such as driving the car in a different direction then the owner’s address, is immaterial for the purpose of insurance coverage. See Coronado, 577 S.W.2d at 529. Moreover, the deviation appears to be “minor” if the actual distance and the time the car was taken was not long enough to term the deviation material. Cf. Tull, 146 S.W.3d 689; Old Am. County Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 130 S.W.3d 70. If an agent drove the car for doing his job and joined with such purpose some private business it would not amount to deviation and the accident would still be covered under insurance policy. See Truck Ins. Exch. 343 S.W.2d at 956.

False propaganda about jury awards

Shame on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Watch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h85j1vNxd8A

Instead of entering into a reasoned discussion about the effect of litigation on business, the Chamber choose to buy a full page ad in the Wall Street Journal falsely claiming that lawsuits force each family to pay $3,520 per year, (quoting junk economics in a report by Tillinghast, a insurance industry consulting firm). The report has phantom numbers in it to trump up its results such $218 billion for “administrative expenses”, $128 billion for “tort transfer costs”, $36 billion for “deadweight costs”, etc. The bias report has been roundly criticized by many scholars such as Fordham University’s professor Daniel Capra and even conservative jurist Richard Posner.
This begs the question, however. Lawsuits don’t create costs to the system. The acts of negligence or manufacturing of unreasonably dangerous products create the costs long before a law suit is contemplated. Our judicial system, filled by conservative jurists and jurors, protect the insurance industry without the unethical help of the Chamber. One only need glance at the Wall Street Journal to see how much of our premiums convert into insurance industry profit rather than payment for damages suffered by the innocent.


Areas of Law Practice

Personal Injury Trial Law

Injury can occur as a result of someone's negligence, for example, a drunk driving a car or truck. Anyone violating traffic law or being reckless can be the fault of injuries to another. The law recognizes damages for pain, anguish, physical impairment, loss of earning capacity, medical expenses and disfigurement. Also, in the event of death or serious bodily injury, family members have the right to recover for the loss of the love and support caused by the fault of another. I am board certified in personal injury trial law and have tried close to 200 jury trial to verdict.


Products Liability

A specialized area of personal injury trial law involves products that are unreasonable dangerous by the nature that they are designed, manufactured or marketed and cause injury to a consumer or bystander. This is a complex area of litigation that requires an attorney capable of building a technical case against corporations well equipped to avoid their legal responsibility. Products can range from pharmaceuticals to automobiles. All manufacturers owe a duty to make their products reasonably safe especially if any defect is not one easily recognizable by the consumer. Many times companies worry too much about beating competition in getting out a new product and worry too much about marketing and profit to take the time they need to properly explore potential dangers or risks to which their customers might be exposed. One only needs to look at the recalls posted by consumer groups to realize this is a current and on-going problem.


Constitutional Law

The United States Constitution guarantees rights that are common to all citizens. Discrimination based upon race color or creed is against our national laws and our courts protect individuals who have been victims of such practices. Also, certain statues such as the American Disabilities Act provide protection for those of us who have handicaps. Large employers must provide work duties to those who have become disable if they exist. Laws protect workers who are discriminated against because of age.


Toxic Pollution and Disease

Companies that emit pollution in the air, water or soil can cause serious injury and disease. Not only can workers be exposed to emissions at work, but neighbors can as well. The most vulnerable, pregnant women, children and the elderly have been sacrificed in the name of profit and production. The right to be free from toxic waste is one that should be guarded and a handful of lawyers have fought for these rights. The federal government is sadly too under funded and the task falls, many times, on the families exposed to fight back. This requires a lawyer willing to undertake such a monumental task on a contingent fee basis. Some companies add to their profits by using private and public land and waters rather than take responsibility for the costs of disposing of the wastes from their production. Landowners discover that under their land or in their streams lies storage for the worst pollutants the companies simply chose to let run free. Many of us become unwitting garbage collectors of wastes that will remain on or under our land for centuries. The law has remedies for these transgressions both for disease caused and desecration of the private and public lands we own.


General Civil Litigation

Attorneys can resolve disputes by filing or defending civil lawsuits. The type of lawsuits besides civil is criminal. Lawyers with different specialties try criminal cases in which the State is seeking penalties for a criminal violation. Besides personal injury litigation, the courts are used to resolve other civil disputes. Examples are: contract disputes; failure of an insurance company to pay its insured for a loss; consumer protection if a product or service doesn’t live up to its warranty.

One notable experience consumers have is suffering damage to their home or business because of a storm or fire, yet the insurance company that has taken premiums over the years takes no interest in putting their insureds back as they were before the loss. Many times, because of financial hardships and just plain weariness, the consumer gives up and the insurance company wins.

Sellers of cars and other expensive items call the shots many times for consumers and get away with not providing the quality product or service they promise.


Railroad Law (FELA)

Special federal law entitled Federal Employer's Liability Act. Employees of the railroad are protected by law that is more liberal than local state law regarding injury or death. If the railroad’s negligence is at fault at all in the injury then it is liable for damages. This law was first created in the early years of the industrial revolution when many railroaders were killed or maimed without any hope of compensation for them or their families. The unusually dangerous nature of railroad work has been offset to some degree by this law providing financial security for the workers.


Medical Malpractice

Doctors, nurses and other health care providers owe the same duty to be prudent. Bad outcome does not necessarily equal bad medicine, but when it is proven that a health care provider violated the trust a patient has given them, they should be responsible for the damages. Unfortunately, the Texas legislature and Texas Supreme Court has crippled the ability of those with legitimate claims from receiving a recovery that will protect them from the harm that was done. Most trial lawyers won’t handle Medical Malpractice claims because of the expense in bringing an action and the limitations on recovery. A few lawyers still review these claims as a matter of principal and refusal to dismiss the rights of an injured person.


Business Litigation

Business litigation covers many areas of law. Businesses find themselves in dispute that cannot be resolved without litigation. Issues of fact and law can reach dizzying complexity. The tools used by a personal injury lawyer can give a business an advantage. Plaintiff’s trial lawyers are used to going against multi-billion dollar insurance companies while representing a client with little or no resources. Dogged discovery and trial experience prepares him for the conflict between large and small businesses. Contracts, licenses, territories, patents, copy writes, representations…the list is endless of the issues that a company may find itself in need of a litigation specialist.


Appellate Law

This refers to legal research and argument in higher courts. In Texas courts a decision by a district judge can be appealed to the Court of Appeals and then to the Texas Supreme Court. If a case is in federal court, a decision by the federal district court can be appealed to the 5th Circuit and then the United States Supreme Court. Blake Bailey is licensed to practice in all of these courts. It is a distinct advantage for the trial lawyer to also be schooled in appellate law. This gives him the advantage of trying a case while carefully avoiding error that might get a judgment reversed on appeal. It also puts him in position to keep the opposing counsel from improperly presenting his or her argument.


Maritime Law

The law concerning negligence causing injury. Maritime law covers seamen while assigned to an ocean going ship. This becomes complicated since some offshore drilling rigs qualify as ships. The law for sailors is similar to that of FELA for railroad workers. Work on ships can often be even more dangerous than railroad work. Like FELA this type of litigation has its own unusual terminology and unique law so many attorneys are not well equipped to handle such cases.


Pharmaceutical Deaths or Illnesses

The lawsuits have been in the public consciousness more of late. Most recent news describes how the Federal Food and Drug Administration is under-funded and can not possibly keep up with all the new drugs being pushed to market by the giant pharmaceutical companies such a Merck and Pfizer. Because it is so under-funded and understaffed, it must rely upon the companies pushing the drugs to do the basic research to determine effectiveness and safety. The FDA also has no effective way to follow-up on the drugs once on the market. So, if a dangerous drug is pushed through the FDA approval process, then begins to harm patients, there is really no governmental response.

But for the efforts of plaintiff’s trial lawyers many of the dangerous drugs would continue to harm patients.

Even if a drug is one that has a reasonable use, patients and their doctors must be warned of side-effects and dangerous characteristics. All effective drugs have their downside. The companies reaping the profits of their drugs are not motivated to tell the world of all the complications and the government is impotent to do so. Patients must look out for themselves; keep up with the latest news and consult with their doctors.

If someone gets sick from the medicine that is suppose to help them, they should seek the advice of a trial lawyer who is sophisticated in the science of pharmaceutical litigation.


Nursing Home and Elder Abuse

Taking care of our parents and, someday, us is a big industry. Nursing Homes are health care providers so are protected by the outrageous legislation protecting insurance companies, hospitals, doctors and nursing homes who commit negligent acts, but the rights of a nursing home patient can still be protected by a lawyer willing to fight the system.

The right of the elderly to rely upon the management and staff of a nursing home is as important a right as there is. There should be no compromise in protecting the residents of nursing homes and no nursing home should ever feel it has a license to treat the most vulnerable of us as it wishes.