A friend of mine who is a defense lawyer told me that in 50 % of the cases he defends he is not served written discovery.

I can imagine that there might be a tactical reason not to serve written discovery in a particular case. I can also say that that situation has not arise in my 24 years of practice.

I have found it best to almost always serve written discovery with the complaint. In many cases, we also serve a notice to depose the individual defendant or a corporate representative at a date we estimate to be 60 days after service of the complaint, when we will have an answer and the discovery in hand. We will almost always modify the date to accomodate the defendant and the defendant’s lawyer, but we like to get the case moving right off the bat.

There has been a lot of talk about the decision of the Tennessee Supreme Court in the case of West v. East Tennessee Pioneer Oil Co.; even the Tennessesan has weighed in with an editorial.

The Court held that convenience store employees owe a duty of reasonable care to persons on the roadways when the employees sell gasoline to an obviously intoxicated person and / or assist the driver in pummping gas into his vehicle.

An employee of a c-store refused to sell Tarver beer because he was too intoxicated. Then, some level of physical assistance was given to Tarver to purchase $3.00 worth of gasoline for his vehicle. Tarver left the seen, drove 2.8 miles, and hit the plaintiffs’ vehicle head on, causing both plaintiffs’ serious injuries.

This opinion by Judge Koch does a great job summarizing the “slip and fall” law as it exists in Tennessee. This decision does not include a discussion of the so-called “method of operation” theory; that particular topic is addressed in a recent decision of the Tennessee Supreme Court.

If you read these two opinions you know what you need to know about this area of the law.

The 11th Circuit has reversed a jury verdict in favor of Toyota in a seat belt case, holding that the judge should have instructed the jury on the consumer expectation test. The judge only instructed on the risk-utility test. The judge was applying Florida law and the 11th Circuit ruled that, under Florida law, a seatbelt is a product about which a ordinary consumer could form expectations.

Read the opinion here. As you do remember that Tennessee also has a consumer expectation test in products cases.

State Court New Jersey September 12
State Court Houston October (exact date unknown)
Federal Court New Orleans Nov. 28,
Federal Court New Orleans, Feb. 13, 2006
Federal Court New Orleans, March 13, 2006
Federal Court New Orleans, April 10, 2006

By the way, according to this article in the New York Times, Merck has shifted its strategy and now said that it may settle some of the claims against it.

The Maryland Court of Appeals has ruled that a defendant may use photos showing relatively little property damage to a vehicle to argue that the plaintiff did not have a significant personal injury.

The decision is Mason v. Lynch. There is also a great dissent on the issue; it makes the point that there is a substantial body of scientific literature that actually disproves the argument that “minor” impacts do not cause serious neck injuries. Accordingly, the dissent argues, a lawyer should not be able to make the argument that an injury is not real or significant simply based on the lack of property damage seen in photographs.

I wrote the other day about Rev. Robertson’s suggestion that the United States kill a foreign leader. Here is the post.

August 22, 2005: Believe it or not there are people who get there news from Pat Robertson. This man, who runs a tax-exempt empire that he holds out as a church, now has called for the assassination of the leader of a foreign country.

What does the rest of the world – particularly the Muslim world – think about America when one of us who is prominent to have his own TV show calls for the murder of a foreign leader? When a nut in the Muslim world does this we call him a savage and a terrorist.

I mentioned the other day that we would be hosting a couple of seminars in December, the first designed to help newer lawyers and the second designed for those with a little more experience. You can read more about both programs, and register on-line, by clicking here.

Contact Information