On November, 9, 2009, plaintiff was an emergency room nurse at Erlanger Hospital. During her shift, a certified nurse anesthetist employed by the defendant was administering anesthesia to a patient. Near the end of the procedure, the patient awoke prematurely and was agitated. The patient tried to extubate herself and rise from the…
Day on Torts
Tennessee Chiropractor Denied Direct Claim Against Tortfeasor’s Liability Insurer
A Tennessee appellate court has ruled that a chiropractic clinic’s assignment agreement unenforceable in lawsuit against former patient injured in car wreck and liability insurance company who settled injury claim with patient. In Action Chiropractic, LLC v. Prentice Delon Hyler,, No. M2013-01468-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 12, 2014), the defendant…
No Sale – No Liquor Liability in Tennessee
This is a liquor liability case against a bar in East Tennessee known as the Electric Cowboy. After a night of drinking, Ashley Langworthy was driving her vehicle at a speed in the range of 83 to 94 mph when she lost control and struck a tree causing her vehicle…
Be Careful What You Ask For; You Just Might Get It
This case is ugly. And when I say ugly, I mean ugly. This case is so ugly that if it tried to sit in the sand a cat would come up and bury it. This case started in Davidson County General Sessions Court. On May 6, 2010, plaintiff filed a negligence action again Davidson Transit…
Tennessee Health Care Liability Notice Statute and Its Interaction with the Savings Statute
The health care liability notice statute continues to supply our courts with work that has nothing to do with the merits of the claim, defense lawyers with increased income for simply pivoting, and plaintiff’s lawyers with heartburn. The plaintiffs in Johnson v. Floyd, No. W2012-00207-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 6,…
The “Error in Judgment” Rule Exposed – and Rejected
The "error in judgment" rule in Tennessee medical malpractice cases is perhaps the most unfair principle of the common law of torts. The rule was conceived in recognition of the fact that there may be more than one right way to approach a medical issue – the "two schools of…
Deceased Pro Se Litigant’s Lawyer-Spouse Cannot Represent Decedent Without Opening Estate
In Dry v. Steele, the Tennessee Court of Appeals grappled with a procedural nightmare, including three related lawsuits separate from the one actually on appeal – a medical malpractice case, an action for interference with service of process, and a malicious prosecution case. Putting aside the morass of ancillary issues, the…
Nashville Government Blames One Of Its Own Employees For Crash
Tennessee law of tort liability of local governments gives rise to some strange scenarios, but this one is odder than most. In Harp v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, No. M2012-02047-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 22, 2014), the defendant, Metro, appealed a judgment entered in favor of one…
Another Tennessee Health Care Liability Case Dismissal For Notice Omission
This is a healthcare liability case with the central issues being (1) compliance with the notice provisions of the statute; and (2) the statute of limitations. Here is the procedural history in the trial court: September 25, 2009 – Decedent presented to the emergency room at Defendant Parkwest Hospital …
Jury Trials in Tennessee Tort Cases Declines Again
The number of jury trials in Tennessee personal injury and wrongful death cases continues to drop. For the year ended June 30, 2013, there were only 213 jury trials. Add to that another 225 non-jury trials for a 438 total tort trials. Shelby County (District 30) had 53 tort trials,…