0 results for 'Smith Mazure Director'
Judge Questions If MTA Bid to Disqualify Lawyer Over Public Forum Participation Chills Free-Speech
Attorneys for the MTA argue that David Roth, who represents a woman who lost an arm and a leg in 2016 after she fainted on a subway platform and fell in front of an oncoming train, broke ethics rules for New York attorneys when he questioned New York City Transit Authority President Andy Byford.MTA Seeks to Disqualify Lawyer Who Confronted Official at Open Meeting
The MTA claims that David Roth of Roth & Roth, who represents Luisa Harger da Silva in her personal injury suit against the authority, broke the “no contact” rule when he engaged New York City Transit Authority president Andy Byford about safety improvements to subway platforms.Drug-Involved Fatal Crash Leads to $5M Settlement in Middlesex
A $5.04 million settlement in a Middlesex County suit, claiming a tractor-trailer driver treating with methadone was asleep at the wheel when he slammed into another vehicle, was paid on March 20.View more book results for the query "Smith Mazure Director"
Drug-Involved Fatal Crash Leads to $5M Settlement in Middlesex
A $5.04 million settlement in a Middlesex County suit, claiming a tractor-trailer driver treating with methadone was asleep at the wheel when he slammed into another vehicle, was paid on March 20.Jury Awards Nearly $30M to Victim of Fire Escape Fall
A New York University student who was rendered a paraplegic after falling from a faulty East Village fire escape in 2008 was awarded $29.3 million Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court.Vertical Ladder Fire Escape Where Student Fell Ruled Illegal
The landlord of a Lower East Side walk-up cannot escape liability for a student's fall from a fire escape on grounds that a 1929 law outlawing the type of fire escape from which she fell had been grandfathered under the statute.Jury Not Prejudiced by 'Intoxicated' Reference, Judge Says
The jury, which found the New York City Transit Authority and a motorman not negligent for the accident in which the plaintiff lost his left leg and right foot after being run over by a subway, never reached the issue of the plaintiff's comparative fault and were not prejudiced by the reference to an excluded medical report.Jury Not Prejudiced by 'Intoxicated' Reference, Judge Says
The jury, which found the New York City Transit Authority and a motorman not negligent for the accident in which the plaintiff lost his left leg and right foot after being run over by a subway, never reached the issue of the plaintiff's comparative fault and were not prejudiced by the reference to an excluded medical report.Trending Stories
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