Moun ki andomaje nan travay ap fè fas ak yon gwo pwoblèm sou zafè dwa yo genyen anba sistèm konpansasyon pou anplwaye ki andomaje nan travay nan Florid depi kòmansman’l nan ane 1935. Kèk nan peryòd sa yo te pi mal pase kèk lòt. Sepandan, pa gen yonn ki te ka pi mal pase tan…
Continue reading ›Florida Injury Attorney Blawg
Injured workers have experienced a steady erosion of their rights under Florida’s workers’ compensation system since its inception in 1935. Some periods have seen greater losses than others. None, however, were as ugly as the Jeb Bush years, when he served as the 43rd Governor of Florida from 1999 to 2007, along with a Republican-controlled…
Continue reading ›“Rabbit from a hat.” That’s the description I have given to a case we recently handled with Domnick & Shevin PL. I have blogged extensively about the indecent and dangerous immunity afforded medical providers under Florida’s wrongful death statute. (Gigantic Loophole in Florida’s Wrongful Death Act; Florida Wrongful Death Survivors Chart — Back by Popular…
Continue reading ›Corporate America has campaigned for more than thirty years to brainwash average people into believing that America’s civil justice system is a bad thing. Sadly, the campaign has worked, fostering views contrary to one of the most fundamental principle on which America was founded: that the courts are to be a neutral forum in which…
Continue reading ›Every personal injury plaintiff must plead and prove that the defendant owed and breached a duty of care and that the breach proximately (i.e., foreseeably and substantially) contributed to the specific injury suffered. These are the prima facie elements of a personal injury case. Whether a duty exists is a matter of law for the…
Continue reading ›Courts and lawyers have turned the following legal principle — whether a party has a duty of care depends on the ability to exercise control — on its head. These cases and countless others state the principle: Metsker v. Carefree/Scott Fetzer Co. 90 So.3d 973, 977 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012) (“In a premises liability case,…
Continue reading ›I have blogged here ad nauseam about the continual conflict between insurance companies and their insureds over claims. While carriers insist upon receiving premium payments timely, their all too common approach to the claims process is delay and deny. Carriers have at their disposal a bag of tools designed to effectuate this delay/deny business model.…
Continue reading ›Vicarious liability has been recognized in Florida since 1920. Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Anderson, 80 Fla. 441, 86 So. 629 (1920). As applied to motor vehicles, the legal concept allows the owner of a vehicle to be held liable without fault for damages caused by the negligent operation of the vehicle by a consensual…
Continue reading ›Motor vehicle bodily injury (BI) insurance compensates for economic and non-economic damages caused by the insured at-fault driver and vehicle owner. The amount available under any particular policy is capped by the coverage limits chosen by the insured. BI coverage is not mandatory in Florida. The insured must pay a premium for the coverage on…
Continue reading ›In a decision demonstrating strong support of confidentiality provisions, even at the expense of family dynamics, in Gulliver Schools, Inc. v. Snay, the Third District Court of Appeal punished a father (the Plaintiff) for informing his college-age daughter that a settlement was reached with the Defendant in an emotional case. When his employment contract was…
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