Why Medical Malpractice Caps are Bad for YOU!

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In my 25 years of practice I have never seen a proposed NY  ”law” that is so anti-consumer, so anti-taxpayer and so pro-insurance company as the proposed caps on damages in medical malpractice cases.

These caps are buried within Governor Cuomo’s budget.  You might quite logically wonder why sweeping changes to the law are found in a “budget” but the short-answer is “Albany politics at its worst”!  In an effort to cut a Medicaid “deal” with the hospitals, Governor Cuomo gave in to a demand from the hospitals that he reverse hundreds of years of NY law to impose a cap on damages in medical malpractice cases.

SPECIAL TREATMENT FOR DR’S OR HOSPITALS BUT NOT FOR YOU OR ME…..

These proposed medical malpractice caps means if a Dr or a hospital screws up and hurts you, your non-economic damages are artificially and arbitrarily capped at just $250,000.  Interestingly, this protection only applies to Dr’s and hospitals.  So if I screw up as a lawyer and commit malpractice you can recover for the FULL amount of your damages with no caps.  If an accountant, an architect, a mechanic or ANYONE else (other than a Dr. or a hospital) screws up and hurts you, you can collect 100% of your damages with no caps.  But if you are a Dr. or a hospital you get special protections that apply to no one else.  How is that fair?

CAPS MEAN MORE COSTS WILL BE SHIFTED FROM INSURANCE COMPANIES TO THE TAXPAYER……

For 25 years I have represented the injured in the Southern Tier of NY and Northern Tier of PA.  I have represented babies brain-damaged due to medical malpractice.  I have represented the elderly who have suffered amputations because a nurse failed to monitor an infected wound.

Young or old, I have proudly represented these injured folks knowing that the settlements or verdicts obtained from the insurance companies for the wrong-doers would be paying the bills for my injured client rather than the taxpayers footing the entire bill through Medicare or Medicaid.

But all of that is about to change if  these caps are approved.  Now, settlements from insurance companies will be smaller meaning that the victim will have less resources available to pay their own bills.  It means those bills for their needs will be turned over to Medicare or Medicaid.  That means that taxpayers, rather than the insurance companies for the wrong-doers will be paying the bills.  How is that fair?  Isn’t it more fair that the person responsible for causing the injury pay for the damage they have caused rather than putting this burden on the taxpayer?

HERE IS A LETTER I AM SENDING TO MY CLIENTS ASKING THEM TO OPPOSE THESE CAPS……I HOPE YOU TOO WILL OPPOSE THESE CAPS…….

The health care industry is lobbying state legislators in Albany to pass a bill which would severely limit the rights of all victims of medical malpractice.

The proposed bill would limit or “cap” pain and suffering compensation in all medical malpractice cases to $250,000, even for the most damaging medical mistakes, including those that leave a patient blind, paralyzed, brain damaged, disfigured, infertile or otherwise gravely injured for life.  Caps would shield doctors and hospitals from the full consequences of their negligence.

This bill would also take away the rights of babies who suffer brain damage at birth due to medical negligence to be fully compensated in a court of law for their injuries. Instead, these children would receive very limited coverage for their future medical costs from a newly created state bureaucratic fund — under conditions which would ensure that they will never receive the quality of care they need and deserve.  Meanwhile, negligent hospitals and doctors will not be responsible for paying any of those costs. That’s wrong.

If hospitals, doctors and insurance companies want to save money it should not be on the backs of innocents victims of medical negligence. The best solution to reducing costs is to reduce medical errors and the injuries they cause.

Tell Albany: Protect Victims and Stand up for Patients Rights.

Please write your state legislators and urge them to vote “NO” to arbitrary caps on damages and “NO” to taking away the rights of brain damaged babies, by clicking on to:

www.protectnypatients.org

Thanks for reading, Jim
_________________________________
James B. Reed
NY & PA Injury & Malpractice Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
Mailto: jreed@zifflaw.com
Office: (607)733-8866
Toll-Free: 800-ZIFFLAW (943-3529)
Web: www.zifflaw.com
Blogs: NYInjuryLawBlog.com and
NYBikeAccidentBlog.com

NY Medical Malpractice Lawyer: Don’t Let NY Take Away Your Rights!

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Mid-March is usually a time when we say good-bye to snow, prepare for St. Patrick’s Day, and dream of warmer weather.  But while the rest of NY is slowly awakening from its winter daze, some lawmakers in Albany are trying to strip you of your rights.

Governor Cuomo has proposed a $250,000.00 cap on non-economic damages as part of his proposed budget.  He claims that this will somehow save the state money, despite the fact that such caps have never done so in any other state where they have been enacted.  NY doctors and hospitals already receive greater protection than any other profession in the entire state.  NY doctors and hospitals are already protected by shorter statutes of limitations and procedural prerequisites that don’t exist anywhere else.  NY already restricts medical malpractice claims more than many states; doctors are not fleeing NY, and NY has no medical malpractice insurance crisis.  In short, there is no medical malpractice crisis in NY!

So why is Gov. Cuomo trying to put a cap on damages?  As a NY medical malpractice lawyer, this had me scratching my head as well.  Ralph Nader has an interesting take that I wanted to share with you:

Selling Out Injured Baby Rights
from www.nader.org
By RALPH NADER
New York State’s Governor Andrew Cuomo will be judged harshly by history if he doesn’t reverse his position supporting limiting the legal rights of brain damaged babies. Imagine a life-time $250,000 cap on pain and suffering and families having to endure a burdensome and humiliating struggle to get medical bills paid as they arise from an insurance funded entity.

Governor Cuomo is hiding behind the recommendations of his Medicaid Redesign Team, which has more than a sprinkling of hospital and industry lobbyists, and which was the stalking horse for this heartless proposal.

Why you might ask would Andrew Cuomo, the son of Mario Cuomo, a man widely regarded as a champion of the underdog, advance such a mean-spirited and wrong-headed measure?

The short answer: political expediency. Credible observers say Governor Cuomo needs to give the health insurance industry a financial benefit in exchange for the health insurance industry not economically punishing hospitals workers. And to top it off with a touch that would make Machiavelli proud, the Governor placed this initiative in his budget proposal. This means that for the New York State Assembly and Senate to vote against this draconian measure used to seal a political deal, the legislators would have to vote down the entire state budget.

It is shameful that the Governor would use his creativity and intellect to help the health industry at the expense of helpless babies who are victims of medical malpractice.

Many in the health care and insurance industry seem to regard the civil justice system as a nuisance that threatens to destroy our economy and way of life. In reality, America’s civil justice system plays an indispensable role. When the rights of injured consumers are vindicated in court, our society benefits in countless ways: compensating victims and their families for shattering losses (with the cost borne by the wrongdoers rather than taxpayers); preventing future injuries by deterring dangerous health care and other practices, spurring safety innovation; and educating the public to risks associated with certain products and services. These legal rights provide society with its moral and ethical fiber by defining appropriate norms of conduct.

Governor Cuomo needs to review the facts on medical malpractice. First he should know that supporters of tort “deform” invoke one myth after another: a litigation explosion, juries automatically ruling in favor of plaintiffs and routinely awarding punitive damages, an economy shattered by these awards. Each of these notions is demonstrably false. Only a tiny percentage of persons injured bring lawsuits, and an even tinier percentage of those who do receive large verdicts. Limiting victims’ rights is an anti-democratic solution to a trumped-up problem.

Second, a driving force behind this dishonest campaign is the insurance industry. Whenever, over the years, insurers face low interest rates and declining stock investments, they start the drumbeat against justice for victims. They’ve made a particular cause against liabilities for medical malpractice. Instead of demanding disciplinary action against incompetent physicians, urging medical associations to police their own ranks, the insurance industry lobbies state and federal legislatures to curtail victims’ rights and remedies in courts of law. At the insurance industry’s behest, their physician policyholders have joined the call.

Why do physicians allow themselves to be tools of insurance companies that gouge them especially when they are not among the incompetent few who account for most malpractice claims (five percent of doctors are involved in roughly 50 percent of malpractice payouts)? One answer is that insurance companies frighten physicians with false data suggesting that malpractice suits run amok. A persuasive case can be made that there are far too few malpractice suits. The 1999 Institute of Medicine study estimated that gross malpractice in hospitals alone takes up to 98,000 American lives a year and causes hundreds of thousands of serious injuries. Yet various studies show that roughly 90% of people harmed by medical malpractice do not even file suit.

If you total the entire amount of premiums physicians pay in a year for their malpractice insurance and divide it evenly by all the physicians practicing in the United States, the average annual premium is less than $10,000 per doctor. Very manageable. So why are some doctors paying $50,000 or $100,000 a year to their malpractice insurers? Because the profit hungry companies have learned to over-classify their risk pools, thereby charging exorbitant amounts to specific specialists like obstetricians and orthopedic surgeons. In addition, because insurers fail to surcharge the few incompetent physicians in these specialties, the competent specialists pay for more than they should.

There is another benefit to the insurance industry from this kind of over-classification. When obstetricians are gouged, they protest loudly, threaten not to deliver babies, and sometimes actually go on strike. This makes great television — crying babies and physicians in their garb blaming lawyers – and deflects blame from the insurers, who laugh their way to the bank. In recent years, their profits have soared.

Neither organized medicine nor the insurance companies go after bad doctors. The AMA’s web site does not report any data about incompetent or crooked physicians, and the insurance companies have shown little interest in loss prevention. Instead, both physicians’ and insurers’ lobbies fund and press legislators to enact laws that politicize the courts, tie the hands of judges and juries, and make it harder for innocent people or children to receive just compensation for their tragic suffering.

Isn’t it time to focus on malpractice prevention instead of trying to hamstring hundreds of thousands of Americans harmed by their doctors’ negligence? Are malpractice awards the national crisis physicians and insurers suggest? In fact, the entire medical malpractice insurance industry payout to victims in verdicts and settlements is about $5 billion a year (substantially less than the amount our the country spends on dog food). Isn’t it time to focus on malpractice prevention instead of trying to restrict the rights of hundreds of thousands of Americans harmed by their doctors’ negligence?

We need to ask whether proposed reforms level the playing field or tilt an already un-level field even further by making it more difficult for wrongfully injured citizens to receive justice from the perpetrators of their harms.

The tort deform movement amounts to a perverse rewriting of history. Tort law produced decades of slow but steady progress in state after state respecting the physical integrity of human beings against harm by recognizing that even the weak and defenseless deserve justice. Instead of seeing this evolution as a source of national pride, a coalition of insurance companies, corporate defense lobbies, and craven politicians depict it as an accountability that must be stripped.

If this campaign succeeds, the results are sadly predictable. Tort reform means less deterrence, which means more injuries, more uncompensated victims, and tremendous overall costs transferred to society.

Send the governor a letter and remind him an important part of being a leader is defending the defenseless. His address is:

The Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo of New York State
State Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224

Ralph Nader is the founder of the Center for Study of Responsive Law, in Washington.

Food for Thought.

Thanks for reading,

Adam
_______________________________
Adam M. Gee, Esq.
NY and PA Medical Malpractice Attorney
The Ziff Law Firm, LLP
303 William Street
Elmira, NY  14901
Phone: (607)733-8866
Fax: (607)732-6062
Email: agee@zifflaw.com
www.zifflaw.com


An Injury Lawyer Can NOT Be Afraid to Go to Trial!

Crashed Toyota Matrix

A fellow injury lawyer friend of mine from Oklahoma, Clayton Hasbrook,  recently posted a question we hear all the time: “Are we going to have to file a lawsuit for my car accident?

Most people don’t enjoy the litigation process – it’s stressful and time consuming.  I certainly understand that concern.  When I am asked that question I always answer that I frankly cannot predict those cases that will require me to file a lawsuit and those that can be settled before a lawsuit needs to be filed.  Likewise, of the lawsuits I file on behalf of my injured clients, I cannot predict those that will have to go to trial versus those that can be settled prior to trial.

Unfortunately, despite 25 years handling NY and PA injury and malpractice cases, I do not have a crystal ball and there are simply too many variables in every case to be able to accurately predict what will happen in YOUR case.

What I CAN tell you is that I get paid only when you get paid and the more I get for you, the more I get for me!  Because my fee depends 100% on winning and because my fee is one-third of the total recovery, I have a direct, personal incentive to resolve your case as quickly as I can AND for as much as I can.

Unfortunately, sometimes you can’t have it both ways– a fast settlement AND a maximum recovery.  You can have it fast if you are willing to accept mere pennies for what your case is really worth.  But if you want full value for your case, you might have to wait a little longer because the insurance company is going to insist on doing things the hard way.

The key thing for you as the client is that you have an attorney who is willing to do things the hard way if need be.

Your attorney cannot be a cut-and-run artist who is willing to accept the first dollar bills that are waved under his nose!  He cannot be afraid to file a lawsuit.  He cannot be afraid to take your case to trial.

As you’ll notice on our New York Personal Injury Settlements page, our attorneys actually try cases.  We are prepared to go to trial on EVERY case we accept.  That does NOT mean that we DO go to trial on every case.  Quite frankly, in most cases, if you are well-prepared and do your homework, the insurance company will ultimately make a reasonable settlement offer.  However, in those cases, where the insurance company or their defense lawyer refuses to make a reasonable offer, we know the only way to get full value for our clients is to take their case to trial.

Our firm has a similar position to that of Clayton’s:

We KNOW  insurance companies facing attorneys who won’t “go the distance” will value those car accident claims much lower.   Insurance companies smell fear and if they know an attorney is afraid to take a case to trial, they will low ball the case and offer mere pennies on the dollar……

Insurance companies carefully track opposing attorneys and know the attorney’s track record.  One summer while I was in law school, I worked for the Dark Side, the defense side, for a firm that defended claims.  One of the things I got to see first-hand was the report that a defense attorney was required to file with the insurance company for whom they worked.  One of the questions on the report requested the defense attorneys “evaluation” of the attorney representing the injured party.  Is that lawyer experienced?  Well-prepared? Intelligent?  All of these factors, together with the lawyer’s reputation in the courtroom, was all taken in to consideration when the insurance company was deciding how to handle the claim.

So, if you are sitting down to make the important decision about what personal injury lawyer you are going to hire to handle your injury case, make darn sure you pick someone who you trust will work hard on your case for as long as it may take…..

Thanks for reading!

Jim

_________________________________
James B. Reed
NY & PA Injury & Malpractice Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
Mailto: jreed@zifflaw.com
Office: (607)733-8866
Toll-Free: 800-ZIFFLAW (943-3529)
Web: www.zifflaw.com

How Long Will My New York Auto Accident Case Take?

If I only had a nickel for every time I’ve been asked that question….

The honest answer is: “It depends.”

Sorry, but that is the best answer any injury lawyer can give you. I am NOT trying to evade the question or be flip, but I have learned over my 25 years of representing injury victims that there is no easy answer to this question. The answer ALWAYS depends on the unique facts of each case.

I have settled some cases within a month of the accident; I’ve had other accident cases that have taken many years to finally reach the courtroom.

How long your case may take depends on a wide range of factors.

It depends on…

… how long you are actively treating for your injuries because most often it is NOT a good idea to try to settle your claim until you are done treating. Responsible lawyers are quick to remind their clients that they only get one chance—one bite at the apple—to settle their case so they need to be very sure of the permanent consequences of any injury before even discussing the settlement value of your case.

… the nature of your injuries. Some injuries heal quickly so very early on you are able to tell what might be the lasting consequences of your injury. Other injuries take a long time to heal or in some cases, never heal. Those cases usually take longer.

… how the accident occurred. Is the fault of the other driver clear and convincing or is there some significant argument about who was responsible for causing the accident? The more complicated the liability question, the longer the case is likely to take.

… the insurance carrier who insures the other driver. Some carriers have a reputation for quickly evaluating claims and making reasonable settlement offers. Other carriers are known for taking forever and never settling a case before trial.

… the amount of the insurance coverage. Often, the more money that may is at stake, the longer the case might take.

The key thing about how long your case should take is that you want it to take as long as it needs to take to get maximum value for your case.

You do NOT want to rush your case, thereby settling for less than it is worth. Likewise, you do NOT want your case to drag on any longer than it needs to take.

I like to say to my clients, “I don’t get paid until you get paid – so rest assured that I am NOT going to let your case drag on any longer than it needs to take!”

Thanks,

Jim

_____________________________________
James B. Reed, Esq.
NY & PA Personal Injury Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
William St., Elmira, NY 14902
Tel. (607) 733-8866 Fax. (607) 732-6062
Toll Free 1-800-943-3529
mailto:jreed@zifflaw.com http://www.zifflaw.com
E-mail me at FreeReports@zifflaw.com for two free books:
NY Car Accidents and NY Car Insurance Secrets YOU Need to Know


NY Injury Lawyer Calls for Tougher Penalties for Distracted Driving

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In New York state, a driver caught texting while on the road is subject to a maximum $150 fine and an $85 surcharge. That’s only $235 total for a an action that has been proven to extremely dangerous and often deadly. I think so a low penalty is ridiculous and much tougher laws should be implemented to discourage this deadly practice.

According to a Car and Driver study, texting is more of an impairment to some drivers than being legally drunk. Maybe that’s because people correctly view drinking and driving as wrong. But when it comes to texting and driving, they are not as outraged.

The fine system we currently have in New York state is not enough of a deterrent or punishment. It doesn’t send a strong message about how risky this behavior is. This is all part of just what I argued on a recent “Law Talk” segment on WETM-TV 18 here in Elmira.

Every Wednesday at noon, a Ziff Law attorney – Adam Gee, Christina Bruner Sonsire, or myself – discuss important legal issues with a member of the WETM News Team. Our hope is that “Law Talk” is compelling – and I think my recent segment about Distracted Driving was one of our best ever.

I’m currently handling two injury cases related to distracted driving. I also keep thinking about the 2007 deaths of FIVE young girls from the Rochester suburb of Fairport.

This “Law Talk” video segment, “Distracted Drivers,” features some graphic images from an accident caused by distracted driving. I believe that the real, graphic images of the carnage caused by this reckless habit are an effective way to get across the message – DON’T TEXT AND DRIVE.

I also think showing the real aftermath of an accident will help wake voters up to what they need to ask of New York state’s lawmakers: Make the penalties stronger for distracted driving. Send the message that you are putting peoples lives – including your own – at risk when you do it.

Thanks for watching “Law Talk” and reading the NY Injury Law Blog,

Please Comment below to let me know what you think on this important issue.

Jim

______________________________________

James B. Reed, Esq.

NY & PA Personal Injury Lawyer

Ziff Law Firm, LLP

William St., Elmira, NY 14902

Tel. (607) 733-8866 Fax. (607) 732-6062

Toll Free 1-800-943-3529

mailto:jreed@zifflaw.com http://www.zifflaw.com

E-mail me at FreeReports@zifflaw.com for two free books:

NY Car Accidents and NY Car Insurance Secrets YOU Need to Know.


PUNITIVE DAMAGES IN NY: A TOUGH ROAD

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I am in the process of drafting a complaint against a doctor, nurse and hospital for extremely egregious medical malpractice that led to the premature and unnecessary death of an Elmira man.  Included in my complaint is a claim for punitive damages.

In drafting the complaint I did a fair amount of research about punitive damages in New York, and learned several helpful tips for both practitioners and potential claimants.

At the onset, it is critical to understand what punitive damages are designed to do as well as the strict limitations New York Courts apply in their application.  New York’s tort system (the system that allows injured people to recover against the people or entities that caused their injuries through negligence, malpractice and intentional conduct,) generally allows an injured person to only be compensated for actual economic and non-economic injuries directly related to his or her injuries.  These types of damages are called “compensatory damages” because they are designed to compensate victims.  Compensatory damages include such things as lost wages, medical bills, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life and future treatment costs.

Punitive damages, on the other hand, are designed to punish and deter the wrongdoer or “tortfeasor”.  In other words, the purpose of awarding punitive damages is to send a message to the torfeasor and all similarly situated persons or entities that the conduct alleged is so egregious and unacceptable as to require punishment in order to deter others from engaging in the same types of acts.

In 2008 the New York Law Journal published a very interesting article called “The Rules On Punitive Damages.”  In this article authors Steven Napalitano and Hayden Coleman explain, “[t]hese damages, also known as exemplary damages, serve a dual purpose: first, to punish the tortfeasor, and second, to deter both the wrongdoer and others similarly situated from engaging in the same conduct in the future.”

There is no question the bar for allowing an injured person to recover punitive damages in New York is set very high.  In a recent landmark case, New York’s Court of Appeals (the highest court in New York) observed:

“Punitive damages are permitted when the defendant’s wrongdoing is not simply intentional but evince[s] a high degree of moral turpitude and demonstrate[s] such wanton dishonesty as to imply a criminal indifference to civil obligations”. (Ross v Louise Wise Serv., Inc., 8 NY3d 478, 489, quoting Walker v Sheldon, 10 NY2d 401, 405; see Prozeralik v Capital Cities Communications, 82 NY2d 466, 479; Sharapata v Town of Islip, 56 NY2d 332, 335).

Indeed, Napalitano and Coleman assert “New York courts have strictly limited punitive awards to the most reprehensible instances of wrongdoing; they are only awarded in cases involving gross, wanton or willful fraud, or other morally culpable conduct.”

So, the question emerges: are punitive damages appropriate in my case?  Of course, the analysis required to answer this question must be performed on a case-by-case basis.  However, there are a few general considerations every practitioner and potential claimant should keep in mind:

1.   Does the conduct warrant punitive damages?

This is the million dollar (figuratively speaking, of course) question.  In many ways the answer starts in your gut.  Do the tortfeasor’s actions make you mad? Really mad?  Seething mad?  Do they make you want to call the newspaper and the cops and 20/20 because this sort of thing should never happen in the USA?  If the answer is a resounding yes, then perhaps you have a claim.

Much more critically, do the torfeasor’s actions make your 72 year-old/very fiscally conservative/wary of lawsuits/cheerleader of tort reform mother-in-law seething, red-faced mad?  Too often we see our cases through a rose-colored lens, and, after having sat with a grief-stricken family, believe punitive damages are a given.  They’re not.  Ever.  Vet your case out to your neighbors, your families, your colleagues.  Become part of some active list-serves.  Read verdict sheets.  There is simply no substitute for good old research.  It can save you a lot of time (and face) down the road when you are answering the summary judgment motion the defendant will surely bring.

2.   Would the conduct have made your mother-in-law seething, red-faced mad at the time it occurred?

Do not overlook this step!  Determine when the conduct occurred.  Is this a toxic tort case that involved conduct in the 1950’s?  Is this an asbestos case where the building was erected 50 years ago?

According to Napalitano and Coleman, “a claimant should be precise in defining the time period of the conduct allegedly justifying punitive damages. In cases where the conduct at issue happened many years ago, as is often the case in the toxic tort context, a plaintiff must be prepared to show that the conduct was outrageous based on the norms and knowledge then prevailing. Defense counsel may seek to engage an expert witness to establish that the conduct was not sufficiently malicious or vindictive at the time. Finally, if circumstances have changed so that the allegedly offending conduct could not happen today, as with a change in the law, defense counsel may properly assert that the goal of deterring future improper conduct cannot be satisfied.”

3.   Is the claim for punitive damages insured?

As usual, insurance is the 110 pound gorilla in the room.  It is one thing to be a crusader and secure a 10 million dollar punitive damages verdict for your client, but a whole other beast to actually translate the judgment into money your client can take to the bank.

Unfortunately, it appears claims for punitive damages are generally uninsurable in New York.  New York’s Court have ruled the public policy underlying a claim for punitive damages – that tortfeasors actually endure punishment in order to deter future bad conduct – is eradicated if insurance companies simply pick up the tab.

The law firm McCullough, Campbell & Lane, LLP created a detailed list of the rules governing the interplay of punitive damages and insurance in all 50 states, including New York:

Directly assessed punitive damages are not insurable in New York. See Public Service Mut. Ins. Co. v. Goldfarb, 425 N.E.2d 810 (N.Y. 1981); Hartford Accident & Indem. Co. v. Village of Hempstead, 397 N.E.2d 737 (N.Y. 1979); Soto v. State Farm Ins. Co., 600 N.Y.S.2d 407 (N.Y. App. Div. 1993), aff’d 635 N.E.2d 1222 (N.Y. 1994); National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa. v. Ambassador Group, Inc., 556 N.Y.S.2d 549 (N.Y. App. Div. 1990), appeal dismissed, 571 N.E.2d 85 (N.Y. 1991).

In addition, the court in Home Ins. Co. v. American Home Products Corp., 550 N.E.2d 930 (N.Y. 1990), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 902 F.2d 1111 (2d Cir. 1990), applied the prohibition to out-of-state punitive damages awards for which the insured seeks coverage in New York. The court pointed out that “the punitive nature of the award, coupled with the fact that a New York insured seeks to enforce it in New York against a New York insurer … calls for the application of New York public policy.” 550 N.E.2d at 933. See Zurich Ins. Co. v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 642 N.E.2d 1065 (N.Y. 1994) (noting that only when a statute allowing indemnification awards damages that serve a wholly punitive, and not compensatory, purpose are they precluded by New York policy).

Vicariously assessed punitive damages are not insurable in New York. See Zurich Ins. Co., 642 N.E.2d 1065.

This of course does not mean claims for punitive damages should never be asserted in NY, nor does it mean they are always uninsured.  It simply means practitioners should have their eyes wide open with respect to collections matters.

Thanks for reading!

Christina

_________________________________
Christina Bruner Sonsire, Esq.
NY & PA Injury & Malpractice Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
303 William Street
Elmira, New York 14902-1338
csonsire@zifflaw.com
Office: 607.733.8866
Toll-Free: 800.ZIFFLAW (943.3529)
Web: zifflaw.com
Blog: NYInjuryLawBlog.com


FORMER CHEMUNG COUNTY ADA REFLECTS ON NEW YORK’S YOUTHFUL OFFENDER LAWS

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I started my legal career at the Chemung County District Attorney’s Office where I prosecuted crimes against women and children, (and just happened meet my wonderful hubby).

Today I received an inquiry from WETM’s Law Talk regarding youthful offender adjudication.  The inquiry read:

I am curious about my Youth Offender status.  I made a stupid mistake and got arrested..small misdemeanor charge, nothing serious…anyways I spent a couple of hours in jail and went to court the next morning.  Since it was my first offense I was put as a Youth Offender and they said it would not be put on my record or “replacing an actual conviction” if I stay out of trouble of course for certain period of time.  Now I called the courthouse and was told my record is “clean” and will remain clean until for that period of time until they throw it out when the time comes.  I also called the Sheriff’s office where I was arrested and they said my arrest record along with the court record is sealed and will be thrown out when I finish my unwatched probation.

I had a background check done on me and nothing shows up…and I was also told that even though I was fingerprinted they will not send my fingerprints to the FBI because again my record is still considered clean.  I understand I can still have this put on my record if I mess up.

I just want verify if this is the case..I don’t want it sent up to the FBI and I want to know what’s your say on this.  Is this basically a 2nd chance for me not to mess up?  How certain is it that they will throw it out if I complete my probation?  Is there a certain law that applies with Youth Offenders?

This gave me a good chance to wade through the cobwebs in my noggin and think about Criminal Law for a few minutes.  I responded:

You are correct.  Unless you have something unrelated to this on your record, your record is clean.

New York State Law essentially allows young people under 18 who are charged with a misdemeanor a free pass the first time they get into trouble.  In other words, the misdemeanor conviction for a person age 18 or younger is replaced with “Youthful Offender Status” and the person’s record remains clear.

The law makes the replacement of a misdemeanor conviction with YO mandatory (called “mandatory YO”) for all people under 18 if that person has not been convicted (i.e. has not received YO in the past), though it may not apply to some misdemeanor sex crimes.   I am not sure.  A judge generally has discretion to grant YO (called “discretionary YO”) to any person under 18 regardless of the person’s past criminal history, though most judges do so very rarely.

My guess is you plead guilty to the misdemeanor and were granted mandatory YO and a conditional discharge or probation, meaning if you stay out of trouble for one year from the time you plead guilty the court will lose jurisdiction to resentence you.  If you get into trouble, the judge can bring you back into court and impose a greater sentence (jail, probation, etc), but, with respect to this charge, you should always be mandatory YO.

The bottom line is if what you say is true, your record is squeaky clean and you should not have any problems.  Keep in mind most background checks ask if you have ever been “convicted” of a crime.  The answer for you is no – YO is NOT a conviction.  But, be careful of the wording in the background check.  It may ask if you have ever been “arrested”, in which case you would have to say yes. Continue reading


UPDATE: STEUBEN COUNTY OFFICIALS IDENTIFY DRIVER IN HORNELLSVILLE CRASH

Map of New York highlighting Steuben County
Image via Wikipedia

The Elmira Star Gazette reported that Steuben County officials identified the driver in a one car crash that occurred at about 5:00 A.M. on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, in Hornellsville.

Sheriff identifies driver in accident that injured 9

The Steuben County Sheriff’s Office named the driver in the one-car accident that injured nine teens Wednesday morning.

Emily S. Mayorga, 18, of Fourth Street in Canisteo was driving the 2004 Chevrolet Cavalier packed with eight other teens when she lost control of the car on a sharp curve about a quarter-mile east of Lain Road on county Route 109, drove into a ditch, hit a concrete culvert, went airborne for about 25 feet and rolled over, deputies said.

Six of the teens remain hospitalized today, deputies said.

The investigation is ongoing, the sheriff’s office said.

As I reported in an post earlier today, this terrible tragedy highlights a number of issues all parents need to consider.  Aside from the obvious concerns about underage drinking and teen drivers, an accident such as this with multiple victims raises several important questions regarding auto imsurance coverage.

Please take the time to read my earlier post, and do not hesitate to contact me if you have questions about your own coverage.  Many times coverage questions are asked after an accident occurs, and generally that is just too late.

Thanks for reading,

Christina

_________________________________
Christina Bruner Sonsire, Esq.
New York and Pennsylvania Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
303 William Street
Elmira, New York 14902-1338
csonsire@zifflaw.com
Office: 607.733.8866
Toll-Free: 800.ZIFFLAW (943.3529)
Web: zifflaw.com
Blog: NYInjuryLawBlog.com


NEW YORK ACCIDENT ATTORNEY COMMENTS ON STEUBEN COUNTY CRASH INVOLVING NINE TEENS

Map of New York highlighting Steuben County
Image via Wikipedia

A horrific accident involving nine teenagers occurred at approximately 5:00 A.M. on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, in Steuben County, New York (near Corning).  Aside from highlighting the dangers associated with underage drinking and teen drivers, the accident raises several critical insurance coverage issues that every parent should understand.

According to the Elmira Star Gazette (full article pasted below, nine teens were injured in a one car accident in the Town of Hornellsville following an underage drinking party.

The parents of the nine injured teens are facing — or surely will face — tough questions with respect to how or if their children will be compensated as the teens begin the long road to recovery.

In general, parents of children injured in one-car motor vehicle accidents involving multiple passenger need to be aware of the following insurance coverage information:

1.  BASIC NO-FAULT COVERAGE – New York State Insurance Law requires every driver to provide at least $50,000 of Personal Injury Protection (“PIP”) to each passenger of his vehicle regardless of whether he caused the accident or not.  This type of insurance is generally referred to as “No Fault Insurance” because it is triggered even if the driver was not at fault.

What does this mean?  Every passenger in a vehicle is entitled to $50,000 of PIP coverage under the driver’s insurance policy in the event the passenger is injured in an accident.  In general, PIP covers economic losses such as lost wages and medical bills.

Why is this important?  Here, assuming the driver had proper insurance coverage, all nine teens (the driver is entitled to PIP benefits as well) are likely entitled to receive up to $50,000 to compensate them for their economic loss.  In addition, a passenger may be able to collect No Fault PIP benefits under his own policy once PIP iunder teh driver’s policy is exhausted.  This is called “stacking” PIP coverage, and it often allows a passenger to receive up to $100,000 to cover economic loss.

2.  ADDITIONAL NO-FAULT COVERAGE — Residents of New York are also free to purchase additional No Fault coverage in the event they or members of their families are seriously injured in an accident and their economic losses exceed $50,000.  The two primary types of additional coverage are called Additional Personal Injury Protection (“APIP”) and Optional Basic Economic Loss Coverage (“OBEL”).

What does this mean?  If you or a family member are seriously injured in an accident and your economic loss — again, I am primarily talking about lost wages and medical benefits — exceed the available PIP coverage ($50,000), APIP and OBEL can be triggered to cover your excess expenses.  In addition, as a passenger you may be able to collect against the driver’s APIP and/or OBEL coverage, depending on how the policy is written.

Why is this important? According to the Star Gazette article, at least three of the teens suffered serious injuries and were helicoptered to Strong Memorial Hospital.  A helicopter ride alone generally costs around $2,500, and it is safe to assume the medical bills for these teens could approach $50,000 very quickly.

The passengers first need to determine whether the driver had APIP or OBEL coverage.  If so, it is possible the passengers could be compensated for additional economic loss under the driver’s policy, depending on how it was written.

Next, if the teens’ parents have APIP or OBEL coverage, the teens will likely be considered “Resident Relatives” and will meet the standard to be named an “eligible injured person” under their parents’ polices.  (Important tip — MAKE SURE YOU HAVE APIP AND OBEL NO FAULT COVERAGE.  At Ziff we are willing to review your insurance policy FOR FREE. Just stop in or email us a copy of your policy to info@zifflaw.com.)

3.   LIABILITY COVERAGE– In addition to no-fault coverage, New York State Insurance Law requires all drivers to carry at least $25,000/$50,000  liability coverage.  What does this mean?  It means every driver on the road in New York is required to provide at least $25,000 of coverage to any one injured person for non-economic loss(things like pain and suffering, serious disfigurement and loss of enjoyment of life) because of his negligence.  If more than one person is injured, the total maximum recovery is limited to $50,000 regardless of whether two people are hurt or whether 20 people are hurt.  If there are more than two people hurt, those people would have to split the $50,000 “pie”.

Of course, drivers are permitted to carry — and, in my opinion, SHOULD carry –  much higher liability coverage.  Why is this important?  In an accident such as this — where I am Continue reading


Personal Injury Lawyer Offers Advice for Success in Small Claims Court

court-sentenceI was recently contacted by e-mail for some legal advice by a reader of the NY Injury Law Blog. This person had gone over some of my posts, particularly “The “People’s Court”– NY Small Claims Court.”

I am going keep this person’s identity confidential, but I want to share my response because I believe this advice will be useful to other readers.

The person who contacted me had been the victim of an assault. The assailant had pled guilty and awaits sentencing. The victim had a permanent scar from the assault and this damage was the source of the question to me.  As a NY personal injury attorney, could I advise:

1. How the assault victim should act and speak when before the judge.

2. What amount of compensation might be expected for a scar?

3. When would the compensation decision be made and is there a process to collect claims won in Small

Claims Court?

Here is the advice that I offered:

1. Go to court prepared and organized. Have an outline of how you are going to explain what happened to the judge. Take some good pictures of your scar and print them out as 8-inch by 10-inch images so you can give them to the judge.

Go to the Court Clerk’s office and get a copy of the Certificate of Conviction showing the guilty plea. If you have any witnesses to the assault, bring them with you and have them prepared to tell the judge how you were assaulted.

Stay calm and be polite to the judge (say “Yes, sir,” and “No, sir,” etc.).

2. Scars are tough to value and there is no single website where you can get a precise idea of value.

However, with that said, don’t sweat it because the decision about how much your scar is worth is up to the judge anyway. In order to convince the judge to give you the highest amount possible, you need to be prepared to tell the judge in a calm, honest way about the many different ways in which the scar bothers you both emotionally and physically.

Tell your story with as much heart as you can, but be honest and be careful to not come off as a total whiner.

3. In Small Claims Court, the judge makes the decision. Usually he or she makes it that day, but he or she can “reserve decision” to secure more time think about the ruling.

There is a process to collect, and you can read about it in the informational booklet available at Small Claims Court.

I hope this advice helps the reader who contacted me, as well as anyone else anticipating a day in Small Claims Court.

I enjoy working on the NY Personal Injury Law Blog and helping readers make sense of some very complicated and scary legal issues. Please feel free to contact me with questions – I’m happy to help and explain what you need to know.

Thanks for reading,

Jim
_________________________________________
James B. Reed, Esq.
Personal Injury & Malpractice Attorney
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
303 William St., Elmira, NY 14902
Tel. (607) 733-8866 Fax. (607) 732-6062
Toll Free 1-800-943-3529
mailto:jreed@zifflaw.com http://www.zifflaw.com
E-mail me at FreeReports@zifflaw.com for two free books:
NY Car Accidents and NY Car Insurance Secrets YOU Need to Know.