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Verdicts & Settlements

$44,210,000 Verdict

Construction Accident - Wrongful Death

Est. of Doreen Browne v. The City of New York, et al. Bronx County Supreme Court Index No. 18285/94 J. Louis Benza
Verdict Rendered 9/11/00. A brick wall down the block from premises under renovation collapsed and killed the plaintiff, a 63 year old home attendant, walking along the sidewalk. Defendant Prime Contracting told the adjoining owner of the potential problem created on the entire block by the weakness in the parapet wall, but the adjoining owner refused to contribute to remediate, so Prime continued to do the work without stopping the job. Plaintiff contended that Defendant Prime had actual notice of the dangerous condition of the wall, and produced evidence that Prime’s field supervisor had made two comments about the wall: the first approximately 3 weeks before the accident, when he stated that the wall was an accident waiting to happen, and the second, 4 days before the accident, when he said that he was surprised that the facade had not yet fallen. The $15,000,000 punitive damage verdict was reduced by the trial judge to $1,500,000, which was unanimously sustained by the Appellate Division at 308 A.D.2d 372; 764 N.Y.S.2d 269


$14,000,000 Verdict

Construction Accident – Labor Law – Negligence

Paul Barraco v. et al. New York County Supreme Court Index Nos. 112247/99 590688/00 J. Karen S. Smith
Verdict Rendered 5/5/06. Plaintiff, a 35 year old construction foreman, was walking on a sidewalk bridge which collapsed, falling approximately 8 feet onto his heels, sustaining severe bilateral calcaneus fractures. He later developed low back symptoms as a result of antalgic gait. The Bill of Particulars was later amended to allege RSD (CRPS), and to increase the ad damnum from $5 Million to $20 Million, was which granted. The defense contended that the low back was completely unrelated to the accident, and that the plaintiff did not have RSD, but only mild myofascial pain. Although plaintiff’s tax returns had showed only about $35,000 per year, his father-in-law was one of the principals of the company he worked for, and it was claimed that he was being groomed for a highly paid position as an estimator, and eventually as a principal of the company. This claim was dismissed by the defense as speculative. Although summary judgment had been granted on Labor Law 240(1) as against the owners, plaintiff proceeded to try liability against Bridgeworks, which had fabricated and installed the sidewalk bridge and the engineers who were supervising the work. There was also a third party action against plaintiff’s employer. The jury found Bridgeworks 90% at fault, the engineers 5%, and plaintiff’s employer 5%. No comparative fault was assessed against plaintiff. The case was settled prior to the 50-B hearing for $11,575,000.


$4,800,000 Settlement

During Trial - Products Liability - Negligent Maintenance of Industrial Machinery

Reinaldo Melendez-Natal v. Maren Engineering, et al.
Supreme Court New York County Index Nos. 102862/04 and 102190/06, J. Shirley Werner Korneich – Settlement 1/30/08, after the first day of trial. – Plaintiff, a 50 year old Spanish speaking porter in a Gristedes supermarket, and an employee of Namdor corporation, slipped while working, and his arm went into a baling machine used to crush the cardboard boxes into neat wired bales. When his arm went into the machine, the ram, which is the part of the machine which actually crushes the boxes, caught his arm on the upstroke, crushing and degloving it to the point where amputation was required at the shoulder level. Defendants contended that plaintiff slipped due to his own comparative negligence, since he was the porter and had the sole responsibility for cleaning the area in front of the machine, and that he should have been aware of safety precautions which could have been taken. Plaintiff sued the manufacturer, Maren Engineering, and several entities who had allegedly serviced the machine. There was a "feeder door" into which the operator fed the cardboard, which could have been closed whenever the crushing ram inside the machine moved up or down, but plaintiff had never been shown how to do this, nor was he ever made aware that the feeder door could actually close. One of the safety mechanisms was a mercury switch, which would break the circuit to the motor when the door was in the open position, preventing the ram from being powered up or down. This switch had been bypassed, together with 2 other safety mechanisms, any one of which would have prevented the accident. Maren claimed that it was not responsible due to the numerous alterations which had been performed on the machine since it left the factory, and Maren’s motion for summary judgment was granted prior to trial. There was an inspection report dated 11 months before the accident which indicated that the “safety” on the baling machine was not working. During the course of discovery, it was brought out that the “security department” was in charge of the maintenance of machinery and the training of the employees in its use, and that the people who worked in the “security department” actually answered to entities other than Namdor. A second action was filed naming these individuals in their personal capacities, as well as various other corporate entities which were clearly distinct from Namdor, plaintiff’s employer. Defendants contended that these individuals who worked in the security department were actually Namdor employees, and were therefore entitled to the benefit of the worker's compensation bar. The individual who completed the inspection report about the safety on the baler received his paycheck and benefits from Namdor, but the only individual he was answerable to, Jack Squicciarini, was an employee of Red Apple companies. Which entity actually employed Squicciarini remained in dispute as the trial began. The plaintiff experienced significant phantom pain, which was demonstrated through a medical animation which "ghosted in" the phantom limb. Very graphic medical illustrations of the amputation were also prepared and exchanged.

$4,500,000 Settlement

Fall from Ladder –Labor Law § 240(1)

Thomas Smith v. Cari, LLC, Supreme Court, Kings County Index No. 8697/05
Plaintiff, a 42 year old fire sprinkler mechanic, was making a repair to a gravity tank on the roof of a building when the loops at the top of the ladder he was climbing came out from the tank, causing him to fall and sustain bilateral calcaneus fractures with operative reductions. A medical animation was made showing the operative reduction [Link to Animation]. Defendant contended that the plaintiff himself was supposed to repair the ladder, so his use of the ladder without repairing it constituted sole proximate cause, at the very least, barring plaintiff from obtaining summary judgment on his Labor Law claim, but summary judgment on § 240(1) was granted by the trial court. On interlocutory appeal, the order was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division, Second Department 4/15/08 at 50A.D.3.d.879. Plaintiff had a federal drug conviction, and although he was earning a substantial amount of money in the years before his accident, he had never worked outside the family business. Settlement agreement was reached during deliberations after two weeks of trial.


$2,750,000 Settlement

During Trial – Products Liability

Arsenio Leiva v. Marietta Trucking, et al. - New York County Index No. 16501/91 – J. Martin Schoenfeld
Settled 12/8/2000 after two weeks of trial. Plaintiff, a truck mechanic from Paraguay, was totally blinded in one eye when a truck battery manufactured by Exide Corporation exploded. A disgruntled former Exide employee was found who testified that there had been numerous explosion cases involving the same battery and similar models, which formed the basis for a claim of punitive damages, which was sustained upon interlocutory appeal to the Appellate Division. Plaintiff’s allegation was that it was known that the vent caps which were being used were subject to clogging, which would prevent gasses normally generated by the battery cells from escaping. These gasses accumulated, creating an inordinate risk of explosion when the vehicle was first started after a period of disuse. During discovery, it was ascertained that he defendant , Exide Corporation, had internally developed an alternative design of vent cap well before the accident which was permeable by gas, but not by liquid, rendering clogging impossible. This was successfully adopted as plaintiff’s “alternative design” theory on trial. Despite the minimal cost of doing so, Exide did not retrofit the batteries it had in stock, and the battery which injured plaintiff was shipped out with the old design.


$2,000,000 Settlement

after liability verdict finding 100% against defendants. Construction Accident – Labor Law § 241(6)

Anthony Acevedo v. City of New York, et al., Supreme Court Kings County Index No. 3560/02, J. Mark I. Partnow Settlement on 5/26/06, several days into the damages trial. Plaintiff, a 42 year old sheet metal installer, tripped on a metal stud which was embedded in the floor, injuring his back and his knee. His first documented low back complaint was approximately 2 weeks after the accident; he subsequently underwent an L4-5 laminectomy, and had arthroscopic surgery of the knee approximately a year later. Plaintiff attempted to go back to his former employment, but was unable to do so, and had also attempted minimum wage type employment with limited success due to his physical limitations. Defendant’s vocational rehabilitation expert was called and cross-examined on plaintiff’s case. Plaintiff contended that the stud had been there for significant period of time, which was corroborated by an electrician who had worked on the jobsite. The job superintendent and the labor foreman, together with a third defense witness, testified that they had come over to the scene immediately after the accident, and that their inspection revealed no studs or any other protrusions from the floor. The job superintendent claimed to have taken photographs but could not find them. One of plaintiff’s co-workers had taken photographs with a disposable camera a few days after the accident, but they were of extremely poor quality. Forensic enhancements of these photographs were made and introduced into evidence, which helped plaintiff’s case, but they were by no means dispositive. The jury found 100% responsibility on the part of the defendants.


$950,000 Settlement

against $1,000,000 total available insurance coverage. – Motor Vehicle

Norma Lawrence-Mayne v. Daniel L. Masten & Eastern Express, Inc., Supreme Court, Bronx County, Index No. 13101/03,
settled 3/12/07 – Plaintiff, a 52 year old nursing assistant, was driving her vehicle when she was sideswiped by a tractor-trailer truck on I-95 in Mamaroneck, New York. Defendant driver claimed that plaintiff had sideswiped the left rear of his truck as he was merging into the lane in which plaintiff was driving. Plaintiff claimed that she hit her knee on the console on impact. She sustained a meniscal tear, chondromalacia, and aggravation of pre-existing degenerative arthritis in her knee. Defendants claimed that plaintiff’s knee injuries were all longstanding, pre-existing and completely unrelated to trauma. Defendant’s vocational expert opined that plaintiff was employable at her pre-injury salary. Defendants offered $950,000 of the $1,000,000 total available insurance coverage prior to trial.


$850,000 Settlement

Motor Vehicle - Queens Supreme Court, April 2007

Due to confidentiality agreement, names of parties and index number cannot be disclosed, but defendant was a major rental car company.
Plaintiff, a 38 year old real estate broker, was involved in an intersection accident controlled by 4 stop signs, and his vehicle sustained very minimal property damage. Plaintiff stopped treating after 3 months, but shortly thereafter resumed treatment and had an L4-5 laminotomy and facetectomy. His lost wage claim was heavily disputed as speculative, and due to the minor nature of the impact, defendant’s accident reconstructionist/biomechanics expert was prepared to testify that the force plaintiff was subjected to was minimal and could not have possibly caused traumatic disc herniation. Settlement reached after jury selection.



The above is not legal advice. That can only come from a qualified attorney who is familiar with all the facts and circumstances of a particular, specific case and the relevant law. See Terms of Use.

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