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Starbucks sued for $114 million over a freebie

Started by bull, September 17, 2006, 10:41:06 PM

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bull


Vainglory, Esq.

From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

bull

Yea, you'd think winning a lawsuit over spilling McDonald's coffee on your own crotch would be an uphill battle too but we know how that ended.

dodge freak

Well McDonald's had drive though lane's and when they hand you your order it goes right over your lap. McDonald's knew people were drinking the coffee in their cars. That lady was in her 80's and lots of people hands shake at that age. I am glad she sued and won , now if I do the samething I will not get burn as bad cause the coffee is not served as hot. Its too bad somebody had to get hurt very bad and sue. McDonald's is not a mom and pop business, they spend millions just on marketing.

6pkrunner

Yeah - there's a whole alternate legal system for dealing with coupons. It is not legal tender nor an exchange of goods or services for goods or services. They will have to fight that on goodwill percieved agreement.
However the PR blackeye for Starbucks may be substantial.

nh_mopar_fan

what does the fact that McDonalds isn't a "mom and pop" business and what they spend on marketing have to do with a lawsuit over coffee?

Unbelievable.

dodge freak

Cause the amount of the money the lady received sounds like a whole lot and it is but McDonald's was able to deal with it and not go out of business. I think its wrong when a small business has one boo boo and get sue and lose everything. McDonald's need to get sue like that to wake them up-but it did not hurt them much dollar wise.

Troy

The McDonalds case is completely different as you're asking the company to protect a customer from themselves - impossible with the quality of idiots we have these days. If I were McDonalds I would have stopped selling coffee at the drive-through OR in to go cups just to protect the lazy, uncoordinated putzes who might actually burn themselves with HOT coffee while driving. It's coffee - if it isn't HOT then people would sue for you serving cold coffee and making them circle back around in the parking lot wasting valuable gas and time. I read an interesting article about insurance claims the other day that listed eating/drinking in the car as the reason for 25% of all accidents. This ranks much higher than talking on a cell phone. Way back in the old days if you a bit dim witted and poked a dinosaur with a stick to get its attention then you'd likely get eaten. This was considered "cleaning the gene pool" but now we try to keep these nuts alive. The same thinking back then would have someone suing the stick manufacturer for allowing it to be used in an unsafe manner. All future sticks would need to be extended by 14" just to hold the thousands of lines of disclaimers and proper use instructions. What ever happened to personal responsibility?

In this case, you aren't protecting the customer but refusing to honor a coupon sent via email. I can't agree with the corporation because their poor planning is what caused this mess (marketing was allowed to run with an idea without thinking of the consequences). I can't agree with the lawsuit though just because class action lawsuits are basically a huge scam. However, the way this will work (if the case even gets off the ground) is that the lawyers and Starbucks will settle for $30 million or something equally rediculous and the lawyers will immediately take their half. The "thousands" of angry, betrayed coupon holders will be provided with another coupon for approximately 12 cents and will happily buy a $5.95 coffee to redeem it just because they are "sticking it to those evil corporations". I think Starbucks was wrong in the way they handled the situation but this lawsuit is a joke. The plaintiff in this case deserves exactly one grande drink and then they should be banned from ever setting foot in another Starbucks.

As for the chicken parts - is there a magpie hunting season?

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

Troy

Quote from: dodge freak on September 18, 2006, 11:21:06 AM
Cause the amount of the money the lady received sounds like a whole lot and it is but McDonald's was able to deal with it and not go out of business. I think its wrong when a small business has one boo boo and get sue and lose everything. McDonald's need to get sue like that to wake them up-but it did not hurt them much dollar wise.
I bet it did. Small business go out of business because of the same stupid, frivilous lawsuits. It shouldn't matter if they can "afford" it. That's being hypocritical. What happens when a small company avoids lawsuits until they become a big company? When do your standards change? There's a reason that companies don't want to make/sell products here in America. People have no clue that they are harming themselves with this kind of thing. Insurance rates, prescription drugs, cars, medical and dental expenses, tools, software, and even food all has a built-in cost associated with lawsuits purely to protect the companies. Everything you buy costs more because you're proud when someone takes advantage of the system. Of course, then the companies are the "bad guys" for raising prices to recoup their loss. Just like government programs, the money has to come from somewhere and it's usually out of the pocket of everyone else.

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

dodge freak

 They are still making tons of money. That lady was not stupid she was old. Hopefully we all be old one day. Old people hands shake, and yes eatting and driving slows traffic down and causes accidents but not one fast food place has been sue because of their drive though lanes. If McDonald's doesn't agree with the laws here in the USA they can close up shop. Don't worry there always be a place you can drive up to a window and get a cup of coffee. And McDonald's isn't closing up either they are making lots of money here in the USA.

As for Starbucks lawsuit I think its a joke. Nobody got hurt and does anybody think a company would just give you a free anything. If they do great but if not so what. How did that hurt anybody.

Orange_Crush

I thought I'd make a couple of points about the McDonald's case that bear mentioning because it pots the case in much more of a "grey area" and, for me, it actually gives it legitimacy.

Facts About the Case

Stella Liebeck of Albuquerque, New Mexico, was in the passenger seat of her grandson's car when she was severely burned by McDonald's coffee in February 1992. Liebeck ordered coffee that was served in a Styrofoam cup at the drive-through window of a local McDonald's.

Critics of civil justice often charge that Liebeck was driving the car or that the vehicle was in motion when she spilled the coffee; neither is true. After receiving the order, the grandson pulled his car forward and stopped momentarily so that Liebeck could add cream and sugar to her coffee. Liebeck placed the cup between her knees and attempted to remove the plastic lid from the cup. As Liebeck removed the lid, the entire contents of the cup spilled into her lap.

The sweatpants Liebeck was wearing absorbed the coffee and held it next to her skin.

Stella Liebeck's Injury and Hospitalization

A vascular surgeon determined that Liebeck suffered full thickness burns (or third-degree burns) over 6 percent of her body.

Liebeck suffered burns on her inner thighs, perineum, buttocks, and genital and groin areas.

She was hospitalized for eight days, during which time she underwent skin grafting and debridement treatments (the surgical removal of tissue).

Stella Liebeck's Initial Claim

Liebeck sought to settle her claim for $20,000, but McDonald's refused.
McDonald's Attitude

During discovery, McDonald's produced documents showing more than 700 claims by people burned by its coffee between 1982 and 1992. Some claims involved third-degree burns substantially similar to Liebeck's. This history documented McDonald's knowledge about the extent and nature of this hazard.


McDonald's also said during discovery that, based on a consultant's advice, it held its coffee at between 180 and 190 degrees Fahrenheit to maintain optimum taste.
Other establishments sell coffee at substantially lower temperatures than at McDonald's.
Coffee served at home is generally 135 to 140 degrees.
Damaging Testimony

McDonald's own quality assurance manager testified that a burn hazard exists with any food substance served at 140 degrees or above and that McDonald's coffee was not fit for consumption because it would burn the mouth and throat.

The quality assurance manager further testified that the company actively enforces a requirement that coffee be held in the pot at 185 degrees, plus or minus five degrees. He also testified that while burns would occur, McDonald's had no intention of reducing the "holding temperature" of its coffee.

Plaintiff's expert, a scholar in thermodynamics as applied to human skin burns, testified that liquids at 180 degrees will cause a full thickness burn to human skin in two to seven seconds.

Other testimony showed that as the temperature decreases toward 155 degrees, the extent of the burn relative to that temperature decreases exponentially. Thus, if Liebeck's spill had involved coffee at 155 degrees, the liquid would have cooled and given her time to avoid a serious burn.

McDonald's asserted that customers buy coffee on their way to work or home, intending to consume it there. However, the company's own research showed that customers intend to consume the coffee immediately while driving.

McDonald's also argued that consumers know coffee is hot and that its customers want it that way. The company admitted its customers were unaware that they could suffer third-degree burns from the coffee and that a statement on the side of the cup was not a "warning" but a "reminder" since the location of the writing would not warn customers of the hazard.

According to The Wall Street Journal
A Jury of One's Peers

The Wall Street Journal wrote (September 1, 1994), "The testimony of Mr. [Christopher] Appleton, the McDonald's executive, didn't help the company, jurors said later. He testified that McDonald's knew its coffee sometimes caused serious burns, but hadn't consulted burn experts about it. He also testified that McDonald's had decided not to warn customers about the possibility of severe burns, even though most people wouldn't think it possible. Finally, he testified that McDonald's didn't intend to change any of its coffee policies or procedures, saying, 'There are more serious dangers in restaurants.' "

The Journal quoted one juror, Jack Elliott, remarking after the trial that the case had been about such "callous disregard for the safety of the people."

The Journal story continued, "Next for the defense came P. Robert Knaff, a human-factors engineer who earned $15,000 in fees from the case and who, several jurors said later, didn't help McDonald's either. Dr. Knaff told the jury that hot-coffee burns were statistically insignificant when compared to the billion cups of coffee McDonald's sells annually. To jurors, Dr. Knaff seemed to be saying that the graphic photos they had seen of Mrs. Liebeck's burns didn't matter because they were rare. 'There was a person behind every number and I don't think the corporation was attaching enough importance to that,' says juror Betty Farnham."

At the beginning of the trial, jury foreman Jerry Goens told the Journal, he "wasn't convinced as to why I needed to be there to settle a coffee spill."

By the end of the trial, Betty Farnham told the Journal, "The facts were so overwhelmingly against the company. They were not taking care of their customers."

The Verdict

The jury awarded Liebeck $200,000 in compensatory damages. This amount was reduced to $160,000 because the jury found Liebeck 20 percent at fault in the spill. The jury also awarded Liebeck $2.7 million in punitive damages, which equals about two days of McDonald's coffee sales.

Post-verdict investigation found that the temperature of coffee at the local Albuquerque McDonald's had dropped to 158 degrees Fahrenheit.

The trial court subsequently reduced the punitive award to $480,000—or three times compensatory damages—even though the judge called McDonald's conduct reckless, callous and willful. Subsequent to remittitur, the parties entered a post-verdict settlement.
I ain't got time for pain, the only pain I got time for is the pain i put on fools how don't know what time it is.

nh_mopar_fan

So, it's ok to sure McDonalds for tons of cash because they have it but if it were a small mom and pop, you wouldn't feel the same way?

What kind of twisted logic is that? Either the old lady had a legit reasont o sue or she didn't. It has nothing to do with whether the plaintiff had deep pockets. It's that kind of stupidity that created the system we have no where it's never anybodys fault and you always go after the people with the ability to pay.

nh_mopar_fan

Quote from: dodge freak on September 18, 2006, 11:53:57 AM
They are still making tons of money. That lady was not stupid she was old. Hopefully we all be old one day. Old people hands shake, and yes eatting and driving slows traffic down and causes accidents but not one fast food place has been sue because of their drive though lanes. If McDonald's doesn't agree with the laws here in the USA they can close up shop. Don't worry there always be a place you can drive up to a window and get a cup of coffee. And McDonald's isn't closing up either they are making lots of money here in the USA.

As for Starbucks lawsuit I think its a joke. Nobody got hurt and does anybody think a company would just give you a free anything. If they do great but if not so what. How did that hurt anybody.
When you put a hot cup of coffee between your legs, that qualifies as stupid in my book.

Why do you insist on repeating this silly stuff about how much money McDonalds makes? Is making money a crime? Are they more at fault because they have the ability to pay?

WTF.

dodge freak

Yeah its not right but thats the way it is. A small business might not have the means to improve their product. Maybe I am wrong and if the samething happen to a mom and pop shop they should be sued out of business, but I don't agree with that. They are not wrong about making money but if they do like McDonald's does then they have the means and ability to protect their customers.

Thanks Orange Crush--you explained it better than I ever could.

defiance

Perhaps putting coffee between your legs is stupid, but if a corporation enforcing a policy of giving customers a "beverage" that causes third degree burns on contact isn't negligent, then there's simply no such thing.

defiance

As for the starbucks one, the case has merit as a class action.  No one plaintiff deserves more than the cost of a cup of coffee a day for a month (which, at starbucks, is actually a chunk o' money!! :P ), but Starbucks' marketing department screwed up COMPLETELY - but it got internal approval, so they should be held to their promise.

Blown70

Quote from: Troy on September 18, 2006, 11:27:37 AM
What ever happened to personal responsibility?


THAT IS A VERY GOOD QUESTION!!!!!!!!!!!

Ponch ®

Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D
"I spent most of my money on cars, birds, and booze. The rest I squandered." - George Best

Chrysler Performance West

Vainglory, Esq.

Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

Hey now!  This is the third week... ;D

dodge freak

Good luck to you, the world needs another Johnny Cochran.

Troy

Quote from: dodge freak on September 18, 2006, 11:53:57 AM
They are still making tons of money. That lady was not stupid she was old. Hopefully we all be old one day. Old people hands shake, and yes eatting and driving slows traffic down and causes accidents but not one fast food place has been sue because of their drive though lanes. If McDonald's doesn't agree with the laws here in the USA they can close up shop. Don't worry there always be a place you can drive up to a window and get a cup of coffee. And McDonald's isn't closing up either they are making lots of money here in the USA.
She was holding a cup of coffee between her knees while trying to take the lid off...  :eyes:

Orange Crush's post above points out that she was found 20% at fault due to her own actions (did you read it?). I'd say they were being generous with that estimate. It also helps to make my other point about the total monetary award. You see, she finally ended up with $640,000 ($160,000 compensatory + $480,000 punitive) but then settled out of court for an amount that isn't listed. The lawyers would have gotten 30-50% of that amount and there may have been expenses on top of that. After her medical expenses she probably made enough to get another coffee.

Quote from: dodge freak on September 18, 2006, 11:53:57 AM
As for Starbucks lawsuit I think its a joke. Nobody got hurt and does anybody think a company would just give you a free anything. If they do great but if not so what. How did that hurt anybody.
That's where I disagree - they did promise a product for free. It's about integrity and business ethics and all that. Technically, nobody got hurt but a customer should expect a company to hold up their end of the deal. The amount asked for is a joke considering a decent Starbucks manager would have just comp'd the woman a free drink if she complained.

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

Ponch ®

Quote from: Vainglory on September 18, 2006, 01:58:27 PM
Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

Hey now!  This is the third week... ;D

my bad, Chief Justice Marshall.
"I spent most of my money on cars, birds, and booze. The rest I squandered." - George Best

Chrysler Performance West

bull

Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

The words "great" and "Johnny Cochran" should not go in the same sentence unless the word "loser" or something similar is between them.

Ponch ®

Quote from: bull on September 18, 2006, 05:54:31 PM
Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

The words "great" and "Johnny Cochran" should not go in the same sentence unless the word "loser" or something similar is between them.

you can question Johnny Cochran's character all you want, but any lawyer that could get a blatantly guilty OJ Simpson off is great in my book.
"I spent most of my money on cars, birds, and booze. The rest I squandered." - George Best

Chrysler Performance West

hemigeno

Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 06:11:54 PM
Quote from: bull on September 18, 2006, 05:54:31 PM
Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

The words "great" and "Johnny Cochran" should not go in the same sentence unless the word "loser" or something similar is between them.

you can question Johnny Cochran's character all you want, but any lawyer that could get a blatantly guilty OJ Simpson off is great in my book.



bull

Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 06:11:54 PM
Quote from: bull on September 18, 2006, 05:54:31 PM
Quote from: MojoJojo Classic ® on September 18, 2006, 01:20:55 PM
Quote from: Vainglory on September 17, 2006, 11:52:43 PM
From my (albeit very limited) knowledge of contracts cases, I think the plaintiffs will have a very steep uphill battle.  $20 says this goes in favor of Starbucks.


...but don't construe that as an offer. :P

look at this guy...he's in law school for a week and he already thinks he's the late, great, Johnny Cochran. ;D

The words "great" and "Johnny Cochran" should not go in the same sentence unless the word "loser" or something similar is between them.

you can question Johnny Cochran's character all you want, but any lawyer that could get a blatantly guilty OJ Simpson off is great in my book.

Great as in notable or remarkable, sure. Great as in wonderful or virtuous, hardly. Jeffrey Dahmer was a great killer, Stalin was a great political leader and Rosie O'Donnell is a great pain in the a$$. Yea, Cochran is the pinnacle of all defense attorneys, but what does that say about him? Johnny Cochran: The greatest of America's bottom-feeders. It's like hlpag.com bragging about selling the most Chargers in North America or Radhakant Bajpai bragging about having the world's longest ear hair.

Vainglory, Esq.

Not that I'd disagree with you in principle - OJ was guilty and Johnnie Cochran got him off.  That's probably bad.

Then again, every criminal defendant has a right to representation, and every lawyer has an ethical duty to provide rigorous representation.  Johnnie Cochran likely could have been as good as a prosecutor (it's kind of like modern sophism, really), so what I would do would be blame the jury and/or the judge.

dodge freak

How about blaming the LA police department ? And what about the glove that did not fit ? That racist cop Mark Furman-not spelled right-may have very well planted that glove over at OJ house. And Mrs. Simpson was living with a know coke head. How does anybody know it was not a drug deal gone bad ? You could had Ron Goldman set the deal up and who ever was selling the junk killed both of them and took all the money, maybe thousands of dollars. That would explain why the glove did not fit. Anybody who thinks they know what happen -I don't, just guessing- does not. The only person who really knows if OJ did do it is OJ himself and IF he did not do it the person who really did.

PocketThunder

"Liberalism is a disease that attacks one's ability to understand logic. Extreme manifestations include the willingness to continue down a path of self destruction, based solely on a delusional belief in a failed ideology."

Ponch ®

Quote from: Vainglory on September 19, 2006, 12:10:10 PM

Then again, every criminal defendant has a right to representation, and every lawyer has an ethical duty to provide rigorous representation.  Johnnie Cochran likely could have been as good as a prosecutor (it's kind of like modern sophism, really), so what I would do would be blame the jury and/or the judge.

That's my point. He was hired to do a job (defend OJ) and he did it well. He somehow managed to convince the jury that his client was not guilty,despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Using the "race card" to manipulate the jury was an ethically suspect tactic, but then, like you said, the jury bought into it. That's what happens in a "trial by a jury of peers" system. You're liable to be at the mercy of a bunch of gullible dumbasses.

Maybe he was framed by Fuhrman and the LAPD, maybe he wasn't. In a system where the accused are innocent until proven guilty, the burden is on the prosecution to prove guilt. You can argue that Johnny Cochran did a better job at convincing the jury that he was framed than the prosecution did that he was not. 
"I spent most of my money on cars, birds, and booze. The rest I squandered." - George Best

Chrysler Performance West

bull

Quote from: Vainglory on September 19, 2006, 12:10:10 PM
Not that I'd disagree with you in principle - OJ was guilty and Johnnie Cochran got him off.  That's probably bad.

Then again, every criminal defendant has a right to representation, and every lawyer has an ethical duty to provide rigorous representation.  Johnnie Cochran likely could have been as good as a prosecutor (it's kind of like modern sophism, really), so what I would do would be blame the jury and/or the judge.

Sure. Cochran was just doing his job and doing it well, albeit a despicable occupation IMO. I think there are some defense attorneys who really seek justice and are convinced their clients are innocent. The ones that bother me are the ones that know their client is guilty and yet do everything within their power to get them off on the slightest shred of a technicality. The system is not perfect and I think that particular part of it is the most questionable, frustrating and unjust. As far as the jury is concerned, it was chosen by the defense for the most part. Yea, I know the members are chosen by both the defense and prosecution but in the OJ trial the defense definitely came out on top in jury selection. I think the prosecutors did a horrible job overall from beginning to end. They should have never had him try the glove on (what idiot doesn't know that leather gloves shrink when wet and then shrivel up like a prune as they dry?). Basically, the whole debacle amounted to TV's first big time reality show. As long as the American public is entertained justice has prevailed, right? Maybe Cochran was not that awesome, maybe the prosecution was just that bad.

Orange_Crush

To be honest, I think the people to blame for the OJ verdict are Marcia Clark and her "team."  They were about as worthless as a football bat.
I ain't got time for pain, the only pain I got time for is the pain i put on fools how don't know what time it is.

Old Moparz

First, I want to say that I agree, McD's coffee was always too damn hot to drink. I also want to add that it tastes like crap, so I never risked any injury with it. Starbuck's has a menu I don't even read, all I want is a good, plain, cup of coffee, so if I go there I ask for a plain cup of coffee that's a $1.50 & not where I need to go to an ATM to cover the price. I have no interest in ordering any flavor of the day, like cranberry-nut-&-twig-mocha-latte-grande, with a drizzle of caramel & yak urine in it.   :puke:
I never even got a coupon, so I don't care about all the poor cry babies in line. If you spend all day in line looking for a free cup of coffee, then you're an idiot. The panhandler on the corner, (well, he was on the corner until Starbuck's called the cops to chase him away so he doesn't scare the customers) has one up on you. He'll get enough to buy it in a few minutes, & then go to Dunkin' Donuts because he can bath in the bathroom there without getting tossed out, then get his coffee without a line & still have enough left to go get a bottle of Thunderbird.

Too many lawyers make it worse than being too competitive. They need to create work by being creative, or they will all be asking "Do you want fries with that?" I knew about the lawsuit the old woman had & McD's attitude, but I think the amount was ridiculous. Stupidity is still running wild & there will be far worse cases of it to come. I will say that Starbuck's screwed up if they back peddled on an offer. They should have eaten it & nobody would care, but maybe they learned.

I still see & hear stores claim the ads are wrong. I just went to Circuit City to get a DVD/VCR recorder that was advertised cheap. When I went to pay, it was suddenly double & the clerk said the ad was a mistake. That's BS because Circuit City has a reputation of being deceitful. I don't normally go there, & that just solidified my opinion of them & I won't go back. I won't sue them, but I do tell people about why they should shop at a competitor.

I guess I'm bored too. :D
               Bob               



              Going Nowhere In A Hurry

dodge freak

What about these new car ads the dealers run saying a new car cost $15,000 when its over $20,000 ? I live in Michigan and thats all you see everyday in the new car ads. How can they keep doing it I like to know.

defiance

Quote from: bull on September 19, 2006, 01:17:48 PM
...albeit a despicable occupation IMO. I think there are some defense attorneys who really seek justice and are convinced their clients are innocent.

How is ensuring "innocent until proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt" dispicable?  That's their job.  And since defense attorneys are required BY LAW to do their absolute best to defend their client, regardless of the client's actual guilt or innocense, making ANY judgement about the client's guilt is actually unethical. 

Insulting attorneys for making the American way of life possible is absolutely misguided.

Now, insulting the litigious "ambulance-chaser" type attorneys, that's a different story...   >:(

dodge freak

In most cases how does somebody really know if the person is guilty or innocent ?

Remember some guys even say they are guilty when they are not. And it does happen all the time, just not often people hear about it. Some need to be in a hospital not in jail.

Yes I think its those sue everybody for everything lawyers that give the whole bunch a bad name.

bull

Quote from: defiance on September 20, 2006, 07:52:15 AM
Quote from: bull on September 19, 2006, 01:17:48 PM
...albeit a despicable occupation IMO. I think there are some defense attorneys who really seek justice and are convinced their clients are innocent.

How is ensuring "innocent until proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt" dispicable?  That's their job.  And since defense attorneys are required BY LAW to do their absolute best to defend their client, regardless of the client's actual guilt or innocense, making ANY judgement about the client's guilt is actually unethical. 

Insulting attorneys for making the American way of life possible is absolutely misguided.

Now, insulting the litigious "ambulance-chaser" type attorneys, that's a different story...   >:(

Same thing for the most part.

89MOPAR

Quote from: dodge freak on September 19, 2006, 12:51:45 PM
How about blaming the LA police department ? And what about the glove that did not fit ? That racist cop Mark Furman-not spelled right-may have very well planted that glove over at OJ house. And Mrs. Simpson was living with a know coke head. How does anybody know it was not a drug deal gone bad ? You could had Ron Goldman set the deal up and who ever was selling the junk killed both of them and took all the money, maybe thousands of dollars. That would explain why the glove did not fit. Anybody who thinks they know what happen -I don't, just guessing- does not. The only person who really knows if OJ did do it is OJ himself and IF he did not do it the person who really did.

Try opening your hand as wide as possible, then while keeping it open, try to slip a glove over it. That is basically what the defense did. No-one can fit a glove on like that. You close your hand in to put on a glove until your fingers are inside... As to the stupididty of the jurors for not recognizing that , well - enough said.

  If the lady had pulled off her knickers, it wouldn't have burned so bad.

Last quarter Starbucks officially blamed their "disappointing revenues" and subsequent stock price decline on the idea that their iced coffee frappuchino drink " took to long to make compared with other drinks " resulting in customers not waiting in line and leaving.  Now why would a company with that problem issue unlimited coupons for the very product that caused their "disappointing revenues" ?   
Hmmmn.....
77 Ram-Charger SE factory 440 'Macho' package
03 Ram Hemi 4x4 Pickup
Noble M400
72 Satellite Sebring Plus +

Shakey

I liked the Seinfeld episode when Sue Ellen Mishke tried to put the bra on in court.   :yesnod:

Orange_Crush

Quote from: 89MOPAR on September 24, 2006, 06:31:38 AM


  If the lady had pulled off her knickers, it wouldn't have burned so bad.


At 185 degrees, it takes a liquid 3 seconds to cause deep tissue 3rd degree burns.  Try pulling your knickers off while you're in a car seat wearing a seatbelt in less than three seconds.
I ain't got time for pain, the only pain I got time for is the pain i put on fools how don't know what time it is.

dodge freak

Its this blame the victim allways thinking that insurance company's love. No thought as to the type of person and what she was doing. Most people like to add cream in their coffee, it was common sense that a person could get some on their lap. Just cause thousands of people don't does not mean she was wrong. You can run a red light hundreds of times without having an accident but you are still wrong doing that.

nh_mopar_fan

Only an effing idiot would put a hot coffee between their legs to add cream to it.


dodge freak

Well theres lots of idiots in the world and maybe at 80+ years old she could not hold the cup with one hand. Is that her fault ? If people were not so dumb things would be much different but cars are made to crash without causing unnecessary harm, guns are made to be drop without firing, things that can happen are not allways the persons 100 % fault if the other party could have foreseen that happing and took steps to lessen the harm. Now of days McD's coffee is not as hot and people still buy it and if another idiot gets some on their lap they are not hurt as bad. Whats so wrong about that ? Could be somebody you love one day.

defiance

Jeez, man, people spill coffee *EVERY DAY*.  If you drink coffee and you've never spilled coffee on yourself, well goody-fer-farkin-you, you're probably the only one in the whole darned world.

Whether she should've been more careful, sure, she should've.  And we all should've those many times we all spilled coffee, too.

But when spilling coffee, something we've probably ALL done, causes THIRD DEGREE BURNS, something is wrong!!!

Orange_Crush

McDonalds, previous to this lawsuit, had settled 700 claims of injury in ten years against them due to the high temperature of their coffee.  They could have gotten away with paying 20,000 dollars for her medical bills, but they refused and the case was taken to court. Any jury, given those circumstances, would find negligence on the part of McDonalds.
I ain't got time for pain, the only pain I got time for is the pain i put on fools how don't know what time it is.

694spdRT

I don't drink coffee but the hot chocolate out of the local McD's automatic dispenser is so hot I have to add ice to the cup before filling or wait 15 minutes for it to cool down. I wonder what temp that stuff is served at?
1968 Charger 383 auto
1969 Charger R/T 440 4 speed
1970 Charger 500 440 auto
1972 Challenger 318
1976 W200 Club Cab 4x4 400 auto 
1978 Ramcharger 360 auto
2001 Durango SLT 4.7L (daily driver)
2005 Ram 2500 4x4 Big Horn Cummins Diesel 6 speed
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited 5.7 Hemi

Brock Samson



694spdRT

Quote from: Brock Samson on September 25, 2006, 11:39:47 AM
dump it in your lap and find out..  ;D

But now if the lawyers find this thread it would show intent and my case would be thrown out of court... :icon_smile_wink:
1968 Charger 383 auto
1969 Charger R/T 440 4 speed
1970 Charger 500 440 auto
1972 Challenger 318
1976 W200 Club Cab 4x4 400 auto 
1978 Ramcharger 360 auto
2001 Durango SLT 4.7L (daily driver)
2005 Ram 2500 4x4 Big Horn Cummins Diesel 6 speed
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited 5.7 Hemi

dodge freak

Yes-Suing isn't as easy as some people think. I don't think that old lady was looking for a lawsuit when they went over to McD. Wish there was a way to stop these "looking for a lawsuit folks" without perventing the people who deserve to win their cases. I seen-know- people TRY to get hurt by a bus or cab just so they can sue. Those people hurt everybody.

Brock Samson

long story short,...
since 9/11 personal injury lawsuits are none too successful...