$6 Million Verdict In 2004 Road Debris Death.LIGHTHOUSE lighthouse, towerlike structure erected to give guidance and warning to ships and aircraft by either visible or radioelectrical means. Lighthouses were long built to conform in structure to their geographical location. Until the beginning of the 19th cent. POINT, Fla. -- February 17, 2004, began like a normal day for Claudia Avila. The 43-year-old went to work, and then began traveling home as a passenger in a car traveling south on I-95 in Delray Beach Delray Beach, resort city (1990 pop. 47,181), Palm Beach co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; settled 1895, inc. 1911. Mostly residential, Delray Beach is also the trade center for a citrus-fruit and vegetable-growing region. . She was on the way to meet her eldest ELDEST. He or she who has the greatest age. 2. The laws of primogeniture are not in force in the United States; the eldest child of a family cannot, therefore, claim any right in consequence of being the eldest. daughter, Fernanda Avila, then 26 years old, for lunch. At about 12:45 p.m., as the car approached the Congress Road exit, a 34-pound metal plate flew into the windshield of the car, and struck her in the head. She died several weeks later from the injury. No one came forward. The Avila family took to the television and newspapers, seeking information about the accident, but had no luck. The Florida Highway Patrol highway patrol n. A state law enforcement organization whose police officers patrol the public highways. investigated, and then closed the case as they were unable to determine the metal's origin. Ms. Avila's daughters and son, Fernanda, Renata and Cicero, hired attorney Marc A. Wites of Wites & Kapetan, P.A., and months later the law firm solved the mystery. The firm discovered that in the early morning of February 17, Tarmac America, a concrete block manufacturer, had packaged for shipment thousands of the unique metal plates at its Melbourne plant and then loaded the cargo onto several flat-bed tractor trailers, and that the trucks then headed south on I-95 toward Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale (lô`dərdāl), residential, commercial, and resort city (1990 pop. 149,377), seat of Broward co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; settled around a fort built (c.1837) in the Seminole War, inc. 1911. . Tarmac produced a surveillance video showing the trucks, and disclosed that it had sold the plates to a scrap metal company called IGM, which in turn disclosed that it had hired trucking company EM Transfer to transport the cargo. The Avila family filed a wrongful death The taking of the life of an individual resulting from the willful or negligent act of another person or persons. If a person is killed because of the wrongful conduct of a person or persons, the decedent's heirs and other beneficiaries may file a wrongful death action lawsuit against the 3 companies in late 2004. Along the way, the scrap metal company settled with the family, as did the trucking company. The Avila family went to trial against the remaining defendant, Tarmac. They argued that Tarmac was negligent negligent adj., adv. careless in not fulfilling responsibility. (See: negligence) in failing to properly package the cargo of metal plates for shipment, by either failing to secure the metal plates to the wooden pallets on which they stacked Stacked is an American television sitcom that premiered on Fox on April 13, 2005. On May 18, 2006, Stacked was cancelled, leaving five episodes unaired in the United States. The last episode aired on January 11, 2006. , or by securing the metal plates to the pallets with banding that Tarmac knew was not strong enough to contain the plates during highway transportation on a truck. Mr. Wites argued to the jury that Tarmac's failure to properly package the cargo resulted in the metal plate coming off the truck and killing Ms. Avila. On September 17, 2008, after an 8-day trial in Palm Beach County Circuit Court, the jury agreed and returned a verdict of $6,098,000. The jury apportioned ap·por·tion tr.v. ap·por·tioned, ap·por·tion·ing, ap·por·tions To divide and assign according to a plan; allot: "The tendency persists to apportion blame as suits the circumstances" 28% of the liability to the remaining defendant, Tarmac. The verdict, which included $2,000,000 in damages for pain, suffering and loss of parental support to each of Ms. Avila's three adult children, and medical expenses, will be reduced by the 72% of liability the jury apportioned to the trucking company. Lead trial attorney Marc Wites said that the family was relieved that the trial was over, and was grateful for the opportunity to have their day in court. While it obviously won't bring back their mother, the family feels that the verdict recognizes Tarmac's role in the incident, and they are hopeful that the case will send a message to those that package and transport cargo to consider the public's safety before sending their cargo on America's highways. For more information, contact: Marc A. Wites, Wites & Kapetan, P.A. 4400 N. Federal Highway, Lighthouse Point, FL 33064 (954) 570-8989 or (561) 752-1414 mwites@wklawyers.com |
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