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Broken arm and injured knee lead to slip-and-fall suit against Archdiocese of Phila. by Aramark employee

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An employee of the food services company Aramark has filed a civilArchdiocese of Phila. logo complaint against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia over a broken arm and injured knee she allegedly sustained while working in the kitchen of an area Catholic school nearly two years ago.

Laura Miller, of Lansdale, Montgomery County, filed suit Sept. 23 against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, which operates Lansdale Catholic High School, the site of an Oct. 31, 2011, incident in which Miller claims she became injured after tripping on irregularities and depressions in the floor of the high school’s kitchen.

The complaint, which was filed at the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas by Jenkintown, Pa. attorney Brian M. Felgoise, says that Miller at the time was forced to walk over a drain in the floor that measured more than an inch lower than the floor.

The suit says that the indentation was caused when workers removed a dishwasher but left the drain intact.

“There is no possible manner in which plaintiff could have avoided the drain,” the complaint reads.

The incident allegedly caused Miller to sustain “serious and painful injuries,” including internal derangement of the right knee requiring surgery and a left arm fracture.

Miller says that she has had to spend money on medicines and medical treatment necessitated by her injuries, and that she has suffered a loss of income and earning capacity due to her inability to work.

The lawsuit accuses the Archdiocese of Philadelphia of negligence for allowing a defective condition to exist in a high foot traffic area, failing to repair the defective condition, failing to warn people of the hazard that existed on the premises, and permitting dangerous occurrences on its property.

The complaint also contains a loss of consortium count on behalf of the plaintiff’s husband, David Miller.

The couple seeks more than $50,000 in damages.

 

The case ID number is 130902569. 


Judge dismisses Hess Corp.’s argument that parking lot defect was trivial, allows claim to proceed to jury

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A judge has disagreed with an argument by Hess Corp. in a negligence

U.S. District Judge R. Barclay Surrick

U.S. District Judge R. Barclay Surrick

action that a hazardous condition at one of its gas stations that caused an elderly woman to become injured was trivial, and not actionable as a matter of law.

U.S. District Judge R. Barclay Surrick, of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, issued a ruling last week denying a bid for summary judgment by Hess, which is being sued by Mary Mieloch over injuries the then-81-year-old says she sustained on Dec. 8, 2010, at a defendant-owned gas station on the 6300 block of Oxford Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia.

The plaintiff’s complaint says the woman sustained injuries to her jaw, teeth, face, hands and knees after, while walking to a kiosk to pre-pay for her gas, she tripped on an uneven surface in an area where the asphalt meets a concrete pad on which the gas pumps are located.

Mieloch, a frequent customer who has been going to that gas station for about a decade, claims that she didn’t notice the defect in the ground on that December day until she fell.

The plaintiff originally filed suit in Philadelphia’s Common Pleas Court but the defense removed the action to federal court in late December 2012, records show.

In its motion for summary judgment, which was filed this past December, attorneys for Hess argued that the negligence claim fails because the condition in the gas station parking lot was de mimimus, or trivial.

The plaintiff counter-argued that the change in elevation between the asphalt and concrete pad is not so obviously trivial and that her claim should be allowed to proceed to a jury.

Among other things, Surrick, the judge assigned to the case, noted that in its argument, Hess ignored Pennsylvania Supreme Court guidance that there is “no definite or mathematical rule” for determining whether a defect is trivial.

“Each case must be examined based on the facts presented and upon all of the surrounding circumstances,” Surrick wrote. “We reject Defendant’s invitation to apply a numerical delineation between defects that qualify as trivial and those that do not. The case law does not support this approach.”

Surrick wrote that even if he did accept the defendant’s argument that defects less than two inches are categorically trivial, a factual dispute still exists as to the actual depth of the depression at the parking lot.

“Accepting Plaintiff’s version of the facts, the change in elevation between the asphalt and the concrete pad was at least two inches, if not more,” Surrick wrote. “This undermines Defendant’s entire premise for summary judgment.”

The judge wrote that after reviewing the evidence by the parties, which included nine photographs and the transcript of the plaintiff’s deposition, “we are unable to conclude as a matter of law that the defect at the Hess parking lot is obviously trivial.”

“The change in elevation between the asphalt and the concrete pad is somewhere between 1.5 inches and over three inches, which although not significant, is certainly not trifling,” Surrick wrote. “Moreover, the elevated portion of the concrete pad over which Plaintiff tripped and fell is located in between the gas pumps and the payment kiosk, an area that customers are required to walk through because of Hess’ practice of requiring customers to pre-pay for fuel.”

Under the circumstances, Surrick wrote, the court could not grant the defense summary judgment at this juncture, since the question of whether the condition in the parking lot constituted a trivial defect is best left for a jury to decide.

Salvation Army sued in slip and fall

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Hill

Hill

A woman is suing the Salvation Army after she slipped on ice and fell.

Katrina German filed a lawsuit Feb. 10 in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas against The Salvation Army, citing negligence.

According to the complaint, on Jan. 5, German was at Salvation Army, 729 Long Lane, Upper Darby, when she slipped and fell due to snow and ice on the property. German says she sustained injuries due to her fall.

German is seeking damages in excess of $50,000.

She is being represented in the case by attorney Leonard K. Hill.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas Case ID. 140200973.

Woman sues dog owner claiming injuries in attempt to evade attack

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Schneider

Schneider

A woman is suing after she tripped and fell down steps while allegedly trying to avoid an attack by a dog.

Lakeya Salaam filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas against Jurea Wilson, citing negligence.

According to the complaint, Wilson owned a dog at her residence, 5235 N. Hutchinson St. The complaint states on March 9, 2012, Salaam was at the defendant’s property when she was attacked and chased by the dog, causing her to trip and fall down several steps. The plaintiff says she suffered injuries due to her fall, including losing several teeth.

Salaam is seeking damages in an amount exceeding the limits of compulsory arbitration, plus costs and interest. She is being represented in the case by attorney Andrew J. Schneider.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas Case ID. 140201044.

Man injured on bolt sues multiple defendants

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Rosenbaum

Rosenbaum

A Pennsylvania resident is suing over claims he was injured on a metal bolt.

Antonio Deseignoria filed a lawsuit Feb. 10 in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas against Alpha Shirt Co., 9250 Ashton Road Inc., Velocity Express, Alphabroder and Broder Bros. Co., citing premise liability.

According to the complaint, on May 24, 2012, Deseignoria was injured while on the defendant’s premises at 9250 Ashton Road, Philadelphia, when he tripped and fell due to a metal bolt protruding from the floor. The plaintiff contends the defendants’ negligence caused his injuries.

Deseignoria is seeking damages in excess of arbitration limits.

The plaintiff is being represented in the case by Jeffrey M. Rosenbaum of Rosenbaum & Associates PC.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas ID. 140200921.

Petco named in slip and fall lawsuit

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Miller

Miller

Petco is facing a personal injury lawsuit after a Philadelphia woman allegedly slipped and fell while on its premises.

Dorothy Tangredi filed her lawsuit in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas on Feb. 11, naming Petco Animal Supplies Inc. as the sole defendant.

According to Tangredi, on the morning of July 5, 2012, she was shopping at the Petco store at 917 Roosevelt Blvd. in Philadelphia. While at the store, Tangredi allegedly stepped into an accumulation of liquid which caused her to slip and fall. Tanredi says she suffered serious injuries to her hip, back and head when she fell.

Tangredi is suing for negligence, accusing Petco of allowing a dangerous condition to exist on its premises. She claims Petco’s negligence caused her physical pain and monetary loss for which she is hoping to recover damages from Petco.

Tangredi is seeking an undisclosed amount in damages. She is being represented by attorney Robert S. Miller of Wapner, Newman, Wigrizer, Brecher and Miller.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas Case No. 140201196.

Slip and fall in Wendy’s bathroom results in lawsuit

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gavelA Philadelphia man is suing over injuries he allegedly sustained when he slipped in the restroom of a fast food chain.

Darnell Robinson filed suit in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas on Feb. 11, naming Wendy’s Inc. as the defendant. Robinson claims he sustained injuries as the result of Wendy’s negligence.

Robinson claims he was at the Wendy’s at Broad and Champlost streets in Philadelphia in December 2012 when the accident occurred. He was allegedly walking into the bathroom when he unknowingly encountered slippery floors, which caused him to lose his balance and fall.

Robinson says he couldn’t tell the floors were slippery and there was no warning that the floor was wet or dangerous. He apparently suffered serious injuries to his back when he fell and seeks to hold Wendy’s liable.

Robinson is seeking more than $50,000 in damages. He is being represented by attorney Jared S. Zafran.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas Case No. 140201194.

Shoprite at Morrell Plaza named in slip and fall claim

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gavelA Philadelphia County woman is suing a property owner over claims she sustained injuries while shopping.

Deborah A. King filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County District Court against McMenamin Family Shoprite Inc. and Levin Management Corporation, citing negligence.

King claims on June 22, she suffered injuries when she fell in an aisle of the Shoprite at Morrell Plaza at 9910 Frankford Ave. in Philadelphia. According to the brief, there was a liquid substance on the floor that the defendant failed to clean up, causing King to fall, resulting in severe injuries to her right knee and buttock including an ACL tear and aggravation of underlying osteoarthritis.

King is seeking damages for an amount less than $50,000. She is being represented in the case by Philadelphia attorneys Robert H. Nemeroff and Andrew S. Brown of Friedman Schuman P.C.

Philadelphia County District Court Case No. 140201058.


Philadelphia County couple sues after wife slips and falls on sidewalk

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sidewalkA Philadelphia County couple are suing a property owner over claims the wife sustained injuries as a result of a poorly maintained sidewalk.

Rita Churnestski and Joe Churnestski filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County District Court against Janet Kennedy, formerly known as Janet Cross, citing negligence.

The plaintiffs claim on April 26, 2012, Rita suffered injuries when she fell due to a cracked and uneven sidewalk at 5422 N. Fairhill St. in Philadelphia. According to the brief, the defendant failed to inspect and maintain the sidewalk, causing Rita to fall, resulting in severe injuries to her head, neck, back, arms, legs and body, including sprained left wrist and broken finger.

The plaintiffs are seeking damages for an amount less than $50,000. They are being represented in the case by Philadelphia attorney Tristram Heinz.

Philadelphia County District Court Case No. 140201067.

Woman sues city of Philadelphia after slip and fall

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Robert M. Silverman

Robert M. Silverman

A Philadelphia County woman is suing over claims she sustained injuries as a result of a poorly maintained drain at a playground.

Crystal Jones filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County District Court against the Philadelphia Housing Authority and the city of Philadelphia, citing negligence.

Jones claims on Aug. 22, 2012, she suffered injuries when she fell due to a dangerous condition of the walkway at a playground on North 11th Street between West Berks Street and West Norris Street in Philadelphia. According to the brief, the defendant failed to inspect and keep the property safe, causing Jones to fall, resulting in severe injuries to her leg, ankle and back, including a herniated disk.

Jones is seeking medical expenses in excess of $1,500, interest, attorney’s fees and court costs. She is being represented in the case by attorneys Louis T. Silverman and John R. Trotman Jr. of Silverman Trotman and Schneider LLC.

Philadelphia County District Court Case No. 140201068.

Couple sues over slip and fall on ramp at Metro PCS

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Wilf

Wilf

A Philadelphia County couple are suing over claims the husband sustained injuries as a result of tripping on a ramp.

Tonovila Hicks and Wilele Hicks filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County District Court against Bruce Zeiger, Barbara Zeiger and Le John, citing negligence and loss of companionship.

The plaintiff claims on Aug. 20, 2012, plaintiff Tonovila Hicks suffered injuries when he tripped and fell on an unsafe ramp in the back room of Metro PCS at 6117 Woodland Ave. in Philadelphia. According to the brief, the defendant failed to provide a safe ramp for his workers, causing Hicks to trip and fall, resulting in severe injuries to his right knee and back.

The plaintiffs are seeking damages in excess of $50,000 from each defendant, interest, attorney’s fees and court costs. They are being represented in the case by attorney Adam D. Wilf of Lundy Law.

Philadelphia County District Court Case No. 140201071.

Bank of America named in slip and fall claim

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Liss

Liss

A Philadelphia County couple are suing over claims the wife sustained injuries as a result of tripping on a sidewalk outside Bank of America.

Merlene A. Strunk and Charles Fisher filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in the Philadelphia County District Court against Bank of America Corporation, Stanbery Development LLC, doing business as The Shoppes at English Village, Tristate Fre I LP and Famestarr I Corp., citing negligence.

The plaintiffs claim that on Sept. 1, 2012, Strunk suffered injuries when she tripped and fell down on a sidewalk outside Bank of America in The Shoppes at English Village at 1460 Bethlehem Pike in North Wales. According to the brief, the defendant did not properly care for the walkways outside the bank, causing Strunk to trip and fall, sustaining injuries.

The plaintiffs are seeking damages in excess of $50,000 from each defendant. They are being represented in the case by attorneys Ricky L. Liss and George S. Marion of Liss and Marion P.C.

Philadelphia County District Court Case No. 140201078.

Couple sues Harrah’s after fall amounts to injuries

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Leonard G. Villari

Leonard G. Villari

A couple visiting a casino is suing the establishment after one of them fell and sustained injuries.

Doreen and John McGettigan filed a lawsuit Feb. 10 in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas against Chester Downs and Marina L.L.C., doing business as Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino and Racetrack and/or Harrah’s Philadelphia, and Harrah’s Chester Downs Management Company L.L.C., doing business as Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino and Racetrack and/or Harrah’s Philadelphia, citing negligence.

The lawsuit states the McGettigans were in the casino on Feb. 15, 2012, when Doreen was walking in a foyer and her foot unexpectedly dropped into an unmarked metal gutter in the casino floor. She tripped and sustained permanent and debilitating injuries, the complaint states.

The McGettigans are seeking in excess of $50,000 in damages. They are being represented by Leonard G. Villari of Villari, Lentz, & Lynam L.L.C. and Zarella Law Offices.

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Case No. 140200938.

Couple sues property owners after fall results in injuries

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gavelA Philadelphia couple is suing a Newtown couple after a woman fell in a grassy area while attempting to get into her son’s car.

Mary and Eugene Lewis filed a lawsuit Feb. 6 in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas against Roy and Margaretta Neitheimer, citing negligence.

The lawsuit states Mary Lewis was leaving property at 6518 N. Mascher St., Philadelphia, on March 10, 2012, when she stepped off the sidewalk onto the berm to get into the vehicle. She fell in an area of sunken ground and sustained severe and permanent injuries, the complaint said. The Neitheimers own the property, according to the complaint.

The plaintiffs are seeking in excess of $50,000 in damages. They are being represented by Michael Mednick.

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Case No. 140200704.

Jewell Transport removes tractor-trailer injury suit to federal court

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A New England-based trucking company being sued by a woman who

Nigel A. Greene

Nigel A. Greene

allegedly sustained traumatic brain injury following a vehicle accident with a tractor-trailer belonging to the defendant is seeking to transfer the matter from state to federal court.

Attorney Nigel A. Greene, of the Philadelphia law firm Rawle & Henderson, filed a removal petition with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania seeking to transfer a lawsuit by Montgomery County couple Kathy and Alan Scott Leister from the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas to the federal venue.

The Leister’s, who live in Oaks, Pa., filed suit in late January in Common Pleas Court against Vermont-based Jewell Transport Inc. and driver Nathan Pelletier over a June 22, 2012, vehicle accident between Pelletier and Kathy Leister.

On that day, the plaintiff was driving her vehicle with her minor daughter Kaitlyn as a passenger along Route 422 in Upper Providence Township, Pa. when Pelletier crashed his tractor trailer into the woman’s car, according to the civil action.

As a result of the collision, Kathy Leister sustained a host of injuries to her body, including a concussion, a closed head injury, and traumatic brain injury.

She also reportedly suffered cognitive dysfunction, post traumatic stress disorder, sleep dysfunction, traumatic shingles and an aggravation of pre-existing medical conditions, the lawsuit states.

The plaintiffs say they have had to spend large sums of money for medicine and medical attention to treat Kathy Leister’s injuries.

In their complaint, they accuse Jewell Transport of hiring inexperienced drivers and placing corporate profits over public safety resulting in unsafe vehicles and careless drivers being placed on public roadways.

The suit also accuses Pelletier, the driver, of operating his tractor-trailer at an excessive speed, failing to have his vehicle under proper and adequate control, disregarding a steady red traffic signal and other acts of negligence.

In their state court complaint, the couple says they are seeking more than $50,000 in compensatory damages plus unspecified punitive damages, interest and litigation costs.

They are being represented by Philadelphia lawyer Michael O. Pansini of the firm Pansini & Mezrow.

In the defense removal petition, which was filed on March 7, attorney Greene wrote that he believes that based upon a “fair reading” of the complaint, the damages sought by the plaintiffs are likely to exceed $75,000, which is the trigger for federal court jurisdiction.

The lawsuit can also be removed to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction, Greene wrote, since the parties are citizens of different states.

 

The state case ID number is 131203826 and the federal case number is 2:14-cv-01411-EL.


Phila. public storage facility faces injury claim by patron who tore tendon after fall

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A public storage business is facing a personal injury claim by a New Jersey

Bryan M. Ferris

Bryan M. Ferris

man who says he had to have surgery to repair a ruptured tendon he suffered after he fell at the Philadelphia facility.

Michael Dellavecchia filed suit Oct. 11 at the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against California-based Public Storage Inc.

The man claims he was injured on Jan. 12 of this year after the cart he was pushing struck an uneven section of the floor, an act that caused Dellavecchia’s belongings to slide to the side of the cart, and in turn caused the plaintiff to sustain physical injuries after he attempted to grab the falling items.

As a result of the incident, Dellavecchia sustained a left elbow acute distal biceps tendon tear that required surgery, as well as a severe shock to his nervous system, the complaint states.

The plaintiff says he had to spend various sums of money on medical attention to treat and repair his physical injuries.

He also claims to have suffered earnings losses due to his inability to work during the time he was attending to his medical issues.

Dellavecchia, the suit claims, has also suffered “great and unremitting physical pain, suffering and mental anguish,” as a result of the incident at the storage facility, which is located in Philadelphia’s Port Richmond section.

The West Coast-based defendant, which operates the Philadelphia storage facility, is accused of negligence for allowing the premises to be kept in a dangerous condition for a prolonged period of time, failing to timely fix or alter the uneven section of flooring at the facility, creating and allowing a dangerous condition to exist by failing to provide proper safety instructions to business invitees, failing to warn individuals traveling on the grounds of the facility of the hazardous condition, and otherwise failing to provide a safe place for business invitees such as Dellavecchia.

The plaintiff seeks more than $150,000 in damages.

He is being represented by Newtown, Pa. attorneys Brandon A. Swartz and Bryan M. Ferris of Swartz Culleton P.C.

 

The federal case number is 2:13-cv-05972-SD.

GSK faces products liability claim by woman alleging birth defects from Paxil

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An Ohio woman claims in a newly filed products liability suit that her child

Bryan Aylstock

Bryan Aylstock

was born with infant respiratory distress syndrome and a ventricular septal defect, diagnoses she blames on the fact that she took the antidepressant drug Paxil during pregnancy.

Kathryn Kiker, who resides in Columbus, OH, is suing drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline over claims that her child’s birth defects are directly attributed to the defendant’s medication.

The medication “paroxetine,” which is marketed under the brand name Paxil, is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor that was first approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration back in 1992 for the treatment of depression in adults.

The drug, however, has never been approved by the FDA for use by pregnant women, the lawsuit claims.

The plaintiff says her family physician prescribed her the pharmaceutical, which she continued to ingest while she was pregnant with her child, identified in the suit only as “C.S.”

She gave birth to C.S. in the spring of 2001, records show.

“At the time Paxil was prescribed to Mrs. Kiker, GSK knew through pre-market studies and post-marketing studies and reports that Paxil was associated with a significant increased risk of cardiac birth defects in babies whose mothers ingested Paxil during pregnancy,” the complaint reads. “Notwithstanding this knowledge, GSK aggressively and actively promoted Paxil for use with pregnant women.”

The drug company, the lawsuit alleges, encouraged its sales force to promote Paxil to pregnant women and touted the medication as being a safer alternative to other similar drugs for women who were pregnant.

“Indeed, GSK even suggested that Paxil was safer and more efficacious than other SSRIs on the market, such as Prozac and Zoloft,” the complaint states. “In fact, none of this was true.”

The defendant’s “illegal and improper” marketing of drugs such as Paxil were done to give a “false impression of both the safety and efficacy of the drug to the medical community, prescribing doctors and patients,” the lawsuit says.

The complaint goes on to allege that GSK did not begin to inform doctors of the serious risk associated with Paxil until September 2005, when third party research was released showing the association between Paxil and cardiac birth defects.

The complaint says that prior to Kiker’s pregnancy with C.S., the defendant had the “knowledge, the means and the duty to provide the medical community and the consuming public with a stronger warning regarding the association between Paxil and birth defects through all means necessary including but not limited to labeling, continuing education, symposiums, posters, sales calls to doctors, advertisements and promotional materials, etc. GSK breached this duty.”

The suit contains counts of negligence and negligence per se, negligent pharmaco-vigilance, strict liability, failure to warn, breach of express and implied warranties, fraud, negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligent design, negligent misrepresentation, and violations of unfair trade practices and consumer protection laws.

The plaintiff seeks unspecified past and future general damages and economic damages, earnings losses, medical expenses, punitive damages, attorneys’ fees and costs.

The plaintiff is being represented by attorneys Bryan F. Aylstock and R. Jason Richards of the Pensacola, FL firm Aylstock, Witkin, Kreis & Overholtz.

 

The federal case number is 2:14-cv-01445-CMR.

Federal judge denies plaintiff’s motion to remand Children’s Tylenol death case to Phila. Common Pleas Court

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A father’s lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson over his son’s death, allegedly

U.S. District Judge Gene E.K. Pratter

U.S. District Judge Gene E.K. Pratter

due to a dose of Children’s Tylenol, will remain in federal court after a U.S. District judge denied the plaintiff’s motion to remand the matter to Philadelphia’s Court of Common Pleas.

U.S. District Judge Gene E.K. Pratter agreed with the defense in the case, which argued that McNeil PPC is a New Jersey citizen and that all the other defendants who were said to have presented an impediment to removal were fraudulently joined to the litigation.

The lawsuit stems from the death of 4-year-old Joshua Arndt who died on Nov. 2, 2009, in his New York home after his father, Shawn Arndt, the plaintiff, gave the child one dose of Infant’s Tylenol.

Within minutes of receiving the medication, the boy started bleeding from the nose and mouth.

Joshua was rushed to the hospital, but he was pronounced dead upon arrival, according to the father’s complaint.

More than five months later, the record shows, Johnson & Johnson, one of the defendants in the litigation, announced a recall of defective Infant’s Tylenol and other children’s medicine, which covered the bottle purchased by Shawn Arndt.

Johnson & Johnson and subsidiary McNeil also shut down the McNeil manufacturing plant in Fort Washington, Montgomery County, which is located just outside of Philadelphia, after which a Congressional investigation determined that that plant had pervasive quality control problems for many years, according to court records.

In his lawsuit, Arndt argued that several of the other defendants in the case had a hand in the decision-making that led to the contaminated products reaching store shelves.

Arndt filed his lawsuit on Oct. 31, 2012, at the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas naming 16 defendants in total.

The defense subsequently removed the case to the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia and the plaintiff sought to remand the case back to Common Pleas Court.

The defendants argued that some of the defendants were fraudulently joined to the litigation and that McNeil’s principal place of business is in New Jersey, not Pennsylvania, as the plaintiff contended.

They argued that complete diversity of citizenship exists and that the forum defendant rule was not violated by removal to federal court.

Records show that shortly after Arndt field his motion to remand, U.S. District Judge Mary McLaughlin denied a similar motion to remand another case involving Children’s Tylenol pending at the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

In her March 5 memorandum and order, Pratter wrote that individuals in Skillman, N.J., unlike those in Fort Washington, Pa., direct, control or otherwise coordinate McNeil’s business as a whole, and therefore the court adopted the reasoning in Judge McLaughlin’s case that determined McNeil’s principal place of business is in that New Jersey municipality.

Therefore, Pratter wrote, McNeil’s status as a defendant does not prevent removal to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

As for the fraudulent joinder claim, Arndt had contended that he asserted viable claims against the various individual defendants, many of who are Pennsylvania residents.

The plaintiff in Moore v. Johnson & Johnson, the similar case handled by McLaughlin, had brought claims against a few of the same people named in the Arndt suit.

In that case, McLaughlin held that the individuals had been fraudulently joined to the litigation.

In the present case, Pratter wrote that the issue turns on whether Arndt has alleged successfully that the individuals actually participated in tortious conduct, or rather whether the allegations reflect misfeasance as opposed to mere nonfeasance.

Under Pennsylvania law, Pratter noted, corporate officers can be held personally liable if they “specifically direct the particular act to be done or participate, or cooperate therein.”

Arndt claimed that the individual defendants substantially reduced resources for quality control, failed to address quality control warnings from the Food and Drug Administration, dismantled corporate compliance groups, planned and implemented a secret recall of various medications, concealed dangers from the public, and continued to ship products despite knowledge of their defects.

For the most part, Pratter wrote, the allegations conjure up “classic nonfeasance,” meaning they involve alleged failures to act.

“Despite an attempt to set forth more fulsome allegations against a much larger number of individual defendants in this case as compared with Moore, nowhere does the Complaint contain allegations suggesting that any of the individual defendants were directly involved in the manufacture or distribution of Infant’s Tylenol,” the judge wrote.

Pratter wrote that because the plaintiff has not alleged any conduct on the part of the individual defendants that is causally connected to his injury and amounts to misfeasance, as opposed to nonfeasance, the individual defendants were fraudulently joined to the case, and the claims against them would have to be dismissed, meaning they present no impediment to diversity jurisdiction necessary for removal to federal court.

Injury suit, possibly first of its kind in Phila., filed against makers of ‘Low T’ drug Testim

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Philadelphia personal injury firm Ross Feller Casey filed suit in state court

Matthew A. Casey

Matthew A. Casey

in Philadelphia late last week on behalf of an Alabama man who claims he suffered a stroke due to his use of the testosterone drug Testim.

The complaint is believed to be the first such civil action filed in Philadelphia’s Common Pleas Court against a maker of medication used to treat low testosterone in males.

“The pharmaceutical industry created a condition called Low T as part of a multi-billion dollar marketing and sales campaign,” firm partners Robert Ross, Joel Feller and Matt Casey said in a joint statement. “There was sufficient medical evidence to reasonably know that these drugs would cause injuries.”

The complaint was filed on behalf of Robert and Kathleen Hoehl, a husband and wife who reside in Anniston, Alabama.

The defendants named in the litigation are Chesterbrook, Pa.-based Auxilium Pharmaceuticals Inc. and drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline.

Robert Hoehl, 64, who had no prior history of cerebrovascular disease or neurological impairments, began taking the testosterone replacement drug Testim in the fall of 2011, the complaint states.

The following summer, Hoehl experienced a cerebrovascular accident and was ultimately diagnosed with concomitant erythrocytosis and clinical hyperviscosity syndrome, which the plaintiff claims was caused by the “exogenously administered testosterone-containing medication Testim.”

The man immediately discontinued his use of Testim, and after about three to four months of monitoring his blood counts, his hematocrit returned to normal levels, according to the civil action.

“Robert Hoehl’s cerebrovascular accident and neurologic sequelae were directly and proximately caused by the testosterone-containing topically applied medication Testim,” the complaint reads.

The lawsuit, which Ross Feller Casey maintains is one of only a handful of such cases to have been filed to date across the country, says that Testim received Food and Drug Administration approval in October 2002.

It was launched in the United States the following year.

The plaintiff’s firm alleges that Testim was defective in its condition and unreasonably dangerous with respect to its design, warnings, instructions and/or indications for use.

The suit claims that the medical information concerning the “syndrome,” “disease” or “condition” classified as “Low T” was false and misleading, and conveyed inaccurate medical information for the purpose of creating a condition that would need to be treated with testosterone replacement therapy, such as through use of the drug Testim.

The complaint says that a decrease in testosterone levels is a “normal and expected component of the male aging process,” and is neither a “syndrome” nor “disease” nor “condition,” as described by the defendants.

“Defendants repeatedly and knowingly represented, through deeds, actions, and words, including an aggressive and pervasive direct-to-consumer advertising campaign, that low testosterone levels and ‘Low T’ were pathologic entities requiring treatment,” the lawsuit states.

Hoehl, the plaintiff in the case, maintains that he was never provided with information with respect to the risks of cerebrovascular accident and neurologic disability.

As a result of his using the defendants’ product, the plaintiff says he suffered neurologic impairment, cognitive deficits and impairments, loss of life’s pleasures, fear and fright, embarrassment and humiliation, economic loss, requirement for medical monitoring relating to this stroke, and a loss of earnings.

He also says he has incurred past, present and future medical expenses.

The plaintiff’s wife, Kathleen, has a loss of consortium claim in the litigation.

The complaint contains counts of strict liability, negligent design, breach of implied and express warranties, fraud and recklessness, and negligent misrepresentation.

The Hoehls’ seek an unspecified amount of compensatory damages, plus interest, costs and delay damages.

 

The state case ID number is 140301684.

Parents of seriously injured harness-racing driver file suit against racetrack

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Relatives of a harness-racing driver who sustained traumatic brain injuries

Joseph G. DeAngelo

Joseph G. DeAngelo

during a crash at a suburban Philadelphia racetrack have filed suit against the owners and operators of the venue.

The parents of New Jersey resident Anthony Coletta filed a lawsuit in Philadelphia’s Common Pleas Court on Tuesday alleging that the Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino in Chester, Delaware County, which is where the racetrack is located, knew for two years prior to the accident that the track was “dangerously defective” and posed a safety threat to drivers and their horses.

The defendants in the litigation – Caesars Entertainment Corp., Caesars Entertainment Operating Corp., Chester Downs and Marina LLC, Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino & Racetrack Inc. and Harrah’s Chester Downs Management Co. LLC ­– are accused of knowing about the hazardous conditions at the track but failing to take corrective measures because it didn’t want to spend the necessary time or money.

“It is now clear, and asserted in the Complaint, that the track owners turned a blind eye when it came to track maintenance and they permitted an unreasonably dangerous condition to exist at the exact location where the chain-reaction accident began,” Michael F. Barrett, one of the attorneys who filed the lawsuit, said in a statement.

The complaint says that the defendants, in not taking any action to remedy the alleged defects in the racetrack, put the lives of the professional harness drivers at risk.”

“Harrah’s Philadelphia and Caesars failed to take any action with respect to assessing and/or redoing the track during the September 2013 racing season break, which was just two months prior to Anthony Coletta’s injuries,” the complaint reads.

The 31-year-old Coletta sustained numerous fractures, as well as brain and skull injuries, as a result of being thrown from his sulky, the device pulled by the horse, and then trampled by other harness racers.

The law firm that represents his parents maintains that it was impossible for Coletta to avoid the horse in front of him that stumbled on the defective surface, an act that set off the “horrific accident.”

Coletta, who was once a widely acclaimed harness racer, remains hospitalized following several surgeries, according to the law firm of Saltz Mongeluzzi Barret & Bendesky.

During the firm’s investigation, attorneys learned that drivers at Harrah’s repeatedly attempted to warn the owners of the racetrack of the imminent danger and urgent need for repairs, but the concerns apparently fell on deaf ears.

“They knew there was an unreasonably dangerous condition because horses were routinely losing their footing,” co-counsel Joseph G. DeAngelo said in a statement. “There is no question that this was an accident waiting to happen and that corrective actions were not seriously considered until after Mr. Coletta nearly died.”

The plaintiffs’ attorneys said they received a court order back in January permitting them to conduct a forensic investigation of the racetrack’s surface.

The plaintiffs in the case, Hammonton, N.J. residents Alfred and Rosemary Coletta, the injured driver’s parents, turned to the law firm to use “all legal means necessary to determine what caused the accident, hold those responsible fully accountable for their actions, and ensure that no other drivers and their horses are put at risk,” reads a statement from Saltz Mongeluzzi.

“We look forward on behalf of Anthony and his family to presenting this case of corporate greed and indifference to a jury,” stated Robert Mongeluzzi, a partner with the firm.

The plaintiffs seek more than $50,000 in damages.

 

The case ID number is 140102714.

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