I’m originally from a tiny town in Upstate New York. We literally had more cows than people. Growing up, I was great at causing trouble but even better at getting out of it. The law seemed like a natural career fit. Coming out of law school, I knew only one thing about my future career: I would never, ever be a personal injury lawyer. Two things changed that. The first was when a conservative judge I was clerking for explained that the McDonald’s hot coffee case was an extremely meritorious case. That changed my perspective. The second was when I suffered an unexpected and staggering loss of a loved one. That changed my heart. I handle a variety of catastrophic injury cases in the trucking, medical malpractice, auto, and premises spaces. I love what I do, and it is one of my greatest blessings that I’m able to try cases with my incredibly able wife.
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Monte Tynes - Brown v. Keith, et al
$931,875.00 verdict on a $25,000.00 offer on a rear-end collisions case of less than 5 mph with no property damage to either vehicle.Police were not called to the scene and no medical treatment until the next day.Client had significant 10-year history of pre-existing low back injury.
Turning points:
Bob Byrne - Our client was a 36-year-old college professor who was driving her SUV on a four-lane highway with her four kids. She slowed down with traffic. Behind her was a large, commercial dump truck that maintained speed and came upon the slowing traffic. The dump truck swerved and smashed into the side of our client’s car.
Our client was found to be alert and oriented at the scene. She went to the ER, complained of bumps and bruises, and was released that day. She and her family then checked into a local hotel where they stayed for four days. Our client could not bear to get back into a car to drive home, though home was only 30 minutes away.
We contended that our client had a mTBI and PTSD. Our client claimed that her life changed after the crash. She claimed that her teaching was impacted, and some student reviews supported that. But, four months after the crash, she was given tenure and promoted. Two years after that, however, she resigned from her position and took an assistant principal position with a small, private school for children.
At trial, the defense claimed that our client’s problems were due to her long-standing problems with anxiety. Our client had been given medication for anxiety before the crash but was not always compliant. The defense pointed out that she had marital problems before the crash, she had a demanding and stressful job, she was raising kids in a blended and interracial marriage, etc. They pointed to several times before the crash that she had been overwhelmed with life.
The highest defense offer before trial was $125,000. The jury awarded $1.75M plus pre-judgment interest of approximately $471,000, for a total verdict of $2.2M.
Here are the teaching points for the session:
George Moschopoulos & Andrew Ryan - White v. Rockport, et al. Verdict was $1.2M
Case description is as follows: Malissa White was employed as a nurse at nursing home where she was asked to participate in a Medicare fraud scheme. She reported the scheme to her employer and to the state, but her employer took no corrective action. Instead, her employer continued to require her to participate in the scheme. She refused and resigned. She filed suit claiming constructive discharge, or that she was illegally forced to quit. She found a job that paid her more than 25% of her prior salary within two weeks following her resignation. She made claims for non-economic damages only, but had not sought or received any medical treatment. Trial opened on Monday and a verdict was reached by Friday afternoon of that same week.
Here are our teaching points:
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