January 31, 2008

Plenty of Blame to Go Around in Kentucky Comair Airplane Crash

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You may recall the tragic Comair airplane crash in Lexington, Kentucky in 2006. The plane crashed after taking off from the wrong runway, killing 49 of the 50 people aboard. A federal judge Tuesday unexpectedly moved up by four months a trial to determine fault in the crash of Comair Flight 5191. In a hearing in federal court, U.S. District Judge Karl Forester set an Aug. 4 trial date for 29 families who have sued Comair over the August 2006 fatal crash at Blue Grass Airport.

There is plenty of blame to go around. The plane took off on a runway that was far too short for the aircraft. There was a construction project going on at the airport at the time and the maps the pilots had were not up to date. The National Transportation Safety Board found that the probable cause of the crash was pilot error. Comair, meanwhile, has sued the Federal Aviation Administration and Blue Grass Airport. It is appealing a ruling that the airport is immune from lawsuits because it is a government entity.

Kentucky law has been harsh to the families of the victims. The judge has ruled that those who lost loved ones in the 2006 crash of a Comair plane aren't entitled under Kentucky law to sue the airline for loss of companionship. Kentucky is among four states that don't allow jury awards for loss of companionship by surviving spouses. There also is no state provision for companionship damages for adult children or their parents, although the state does allow children younger than 18 to sue for damages when a parent is wrongfully killed.

Comair requested a trial date in 2010. Delay is a typical tactic by defense lawyers. But, fortunately, with the judge's pushing the trial date up to August 2008, the families of the crash victims will see justice sooner.

January 31, 2008

Wealthy Insurance Companies Rob Their Own Insureds

It is happening in almost every personal injury case these days, a wealthy health insurance carrier grabbing a personal injury plaintiff's settlement money under a roose called "subrogation." It is robbery and every Georgia Citizen and every American citizen should be outraged. I recently saw an article that highlighted this tactic by health insurance carriers in the context of the Minnesota Bridge Collapse, which you will remember occurred earlier this year. The typical situation is you have a badly injured personal injury plaintiff who settles his or her lawsuit, and then his or her health insurance carrier steps in, having done absolutely NOTHING to procure the settlement, and recoups all of the money it has paid medical care providers for medical treatment for the plaintiff. What is even more repulsive is that the health insurace carrier has actually sold its account payable to a collection agency who then often fraudulently claims it is still the health insurance company acting. This is happening even though the Plaintiff has diligently paid his or her health insurance premiums all along.

It is a complicated analysis, but, fortunately, Georgia has the "made whole" doctrine, which says the plaintiff must first have been made whole before any third party, like the health insurance carrier, can just waltz in and take away the plaintiff's settlement money unfairly. Fortunately, for Minnesota victims of the bridge collapse, Minnesota Lawmakers are trying to make up for bridge collapse survivors' financial losses and out-of-pocket expenses and are brainstorming with attorneys about how they can keep health plans from recovering money meant for victims. I would urge the Georgia Lawmakers to do the same thing. Enough if enough.

January 28, 2008

Car Seats Save Lives~Buckle Up the Ones You Love

This child never had a chance. Yesterday, in Atlanta, a two month old infant was killed because she was sitting in her mother's lap while her mother was driving a car and hit a telephone pole. The air bag deployed, as it should, and the infant died immediately. The mother was physcially unharmed. As would have been her baby if the mother had simply taken one minute to strap her into a child's car seat.

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Parents can learn more about child car seat safety from the National Highway Traffic Safety Admininstration (NHTSA) and its Child Passenger Safety Program. Specifically, for Georgia law on child car seats, parents can have their questions answered at The Governor's Office of Highway Safety.

Continue reading "Car Seats Save Lives~Buckle Up the Ones You Love" »

January 27, 2008

Georgia State Bar Board of Governors Concerned About Effect of the GREAT Plan

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As you may know, I am a member of the State Bar of Georgia's Board of Governors, the governing body over Georgia's 38,000 lawyers. We, the Board of Governors, recently held our Mid-Year meeting here in Atlanta, and one item on our agenda was the GREAT Plan, HR 900, the new tax plan being proposed by the Speaker of the House, Glenn Richardson, a Republican State Representative from Paulding County. The Georgia Board of Governors voted to express our concern with and opposition to the GREAT plan, as it applies to the taxation of legal services. Because the Speaker has now exempted business-to-business transactions from the
plan's tax scheme, that means only individual Georgia citizens, not corporations, would have to pay the tax on legal services. Corporations get a free pass, while Georgia would be trying to raise revenue on the backs of individual Georgia citizens, those who can least afford it. How could this possibly comport with the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the laws? It can't, but that has often before never been much of an impediment to the Georgia General Assembly's passage of laws, as evidenced by 2005's SB3, the so-called "tort reform" bill. Much of SB3 has now been held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of Georgia, and it is only a matter of time before the remaining provisions are also ruled unconstitutional. In the meantime, though, many deserving Georgia citizens have been robbed of justice because of SB3.
I am proud of the action taken by the Georgia Board of Governors expressing opposition to the proposed tax scheme. If there is anyone who will stand up for the individual Georgia citizen, it is the honorable lawyers of the State Bar of Georgia.