SAFE KIDS HELMET GIVEAWAY A SUCCESS
This weekend, the Law Offices of Gary O. Bruce and Safe Kids of Columbus partnered to distribute over 300 bicycle and skateboard helmets to children 14 and under.
All said, over 600 people showed up for the helment distribution and learned about helmet safety.
The Law Offices of Gary O. Bruce want to keep the children of Columbus and its surrounding areas safe and are proud to support Safe Kids of Columbus in this important community outreach effort.
Stay safe, Columbus.
The Law Offices of Gary Bruce / www.GaryBruceLaw.com
Website Intro
Columbus Personal Injury Attorneys Serving Families Throughout West Georgia and East Alabama
If you've been injured by the negligence of another person, you are suddenly faced with many unexpected problems. These problems can include payment for medical bills, lost wages, ongoing medical needs, lost employment or educational opportunities and even difficulties in family relationships. If your life has been changed by an accident, put one of "the good guys" on your side.
We have been serving Columbus, Ft. Benning and the valley area for over 20 years. We hope our blog can help shed some light on issues we see in our practice on a daily basis. If you have any questions, want to discuss your personal situation or just need information, please do not hesitate to contact us - via email, phone or by an in person appointment.
We hope you never need our services, but if you do, we promise to do all we can to help resolve the matter in the most effective manner possible for your family.
If you've been injured by the negligence of another person, you are suddenly faced with many unexpected problems. These problems can include payment for medical bills, lost wages, ongoing medical needs, lost employment or educational opportunities and even difficulties in family relationships. If your life has been changed by an accident, put one of "the good guys" on your side.
We have been serving Columbus, Ft. Benning and the valley area for over 20 years. We hope our blog can help shed some light on issues we see in our practice on a daily basis. If you have any questions, want to discuss your personal situation or just need information, please do not hesitate to contact us - via email, phone or by an in person appointment.
We hope you never need our services, but if you do, we promise to do all we can to help resolve the matter in the most effective manner possible for your family.
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Monday, June 4, 2012
GEORGIA SUPREME COURT AFFIRMS MADE WHOLE
Recently, the Georgia Supreme Court again affirmed that, in
Georgia, the Courts will ensure that as between an insurance company and an
insured party who has sustained a loss, the policy of Georgia is to side with
the insured.
In Royal Capital Development v. Maryland Casualty Ins.Co. ____ Ga. ____ (No. S12Q0209, 2012), the Court held that an insured
making a claim for damage to real property under a contract of insurance could
claim damages for diminution in value of the property. The facts of the
case were that the owner of a building sustained property damage to his
building after a neighboring building underwent construction. The owner
filed a claim with his property insurance company for over $1 million in
property damage to his building as well as a the diminution in value for now
owning a building that had sustained serious damage requiring substantial
repairs.
The insurance company, as they often do, tried to weasel out
of paying the damages to which the insured claimant was legally entitled,
claiming that diminution in value damages are limited to automobile property
damage claims. (In that regard, see State Farm v. Mabry 274 Ga.
498 (556 SE2d 114) (2001)). The insurance company actually convinced a
federal district court judge to agree with them. The federal judge, in an
unsettled area of state law, granted summary judgment to the
insurance company. The owner appealed to the 11th Circuit,
which certified the question to the Georgia Supreme Court, requesting an
answer: does Georgia limit diminution in value insurance claims exclusively to
the automobile insurance context?.
In a unanimous decision, the Georgia Supreme Court
concluded that Georgia law did not limit an insured from claiming damages for
diminution in value in an insurance claim involving real property (real estate).
The Court reasoned that Georgia’s public policy was to support making the
claimant who has sustained damages whole and that many, many real property insurance
contracts involve unsophisticated homeowners who could potentially be duped by
the insurance company by not paying the full value of a claim. To the
Court, the economic realities of insurance claims involving damages to real property was
that even if the property was repaired by the insurance company, the owner
would still be left with diminished value to his real property simply by
now having property that had substantial repairs.
The case shows how, despite the best effort of insurance
companies and their cronies, Georgia remains a state that looks out for the
injured claimant. The case further shows how federal courts should not
interfere with issues of state law due to the fact that they can misinterpret
state law or just plain get it wrong.
TEXTING WHILE DRIVING: NEWS UPDATE
Recently,
an attorney in New Jersey made a novel argument in a tort lawsuit
involving a woman who texted another woman who was driving a car.
According
to the Plaintiff’s attorney, the case involved a New Jersey woman that
sent a text to a woman who was also driving; just seconds after
responding to the text, the driver was involved in a tragic accident
with a motorcycle. The driver and passenger of the motorcycle each had
to have a part of their legs amputated.
Plaintiff
the woman who texted the driver, arguing that the texter was
“electronically present” in the incident. (It is not clear if the driver
was also sued, but likely was).
The
case against the individual allegedly texting with the driver was
dismissed on causation grounds. The judge noted in his order dismissing
the case, “were I to extend this duty [to the woman sending the text],
in my judgment any form of distraction could potentially serve as basis
of a liability case.” In his order, the judge also asked how the
distraction from the texting woman was any different from a billboard.
This case shows the importance of proving causation and how plaintiff
must meet that burden in presenting his/her case.
In
a lawsuit claiming negligence, the plaintiff must prove that the
defendant caused injury to him/her. There are two general types of
causation: “but for” causation and “proximate” causation. But for
causation is usually easily proved by medical evidence. But for
causation asks the question: would the injuries Plaintiff suffered have
occurred but for the defendant’s negligence? Proximate causation is
more difficult to define but can be boiled down to this question: even
if the injuries would have occurred “but for” the defendant’s
negligence, is the defendant’s negligence connected closely enough to
the plaintiff’s injuries that it is fair to hold the defendant
responsible?
In
this case, the judge seems to have taken issue with the attorney’s
argument concerning proximate causation. Notably, the system worked in
this case. The judge dismissed a case in which there is a strong
argument that the attorney was overreaching.
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