Common complaints heard during KY3 Call a Lawyer

I was asked to sit on the Springfield Bar Association Call a Lawyer program on KY3.There were some common questions or complaints that I heard several times. I will try to answer some of them over the next few posts.
 

Common Complaint #1

"I had my hearing several months ago and still don't have a ruling.  My attorney isn't doing anything about it."

There is very little your attorney can do to speed this up.  Many judges write their own opinions or make numerous revisions to opinions written by SSA opinion decision writers.  Wait times of 90 days are not uncommon.  Some judges may send you out for additional consultive exams.  Some judges are just slower than others.

 

Interesting report on slip and fall

CNA Insurance has put together a white paper reportt  with some interesting facts about slip and fall accidents or premises liability cases. Including the fact that "more than one million people suffer from a slip, trip or fall injury each year, and more than 16,000 die as a result of falls."

The report also makes a great point that as the population ages we will likely start seeing more slip and fall type injuries.

 With the aging baby boomer generation, the size and scope of this issue is expected to grow significantly. The National Floor Safety Institute (NFSI) estimates that between 2005 and 2020, the number of seniors in the U.S. will increase from 35 million to 77 million. Statistically, seniors are far more likely to experience a slip-and-fall accident. For those that are injured, the cost of treatment and recovery time is significantly greater than the average for non-seniors. According to the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, these types of injuries are also the leading cause of hospital admission for older adults.

 

  

The report states that the insurance company see five major causes for slip-and-fall accidents:
1. Lack of slip resistance on walking surfaces
2. Poor walking surface conditions
3. Poor visibility
4. Lack or poor condition of handrails and guardrails
5. Poor accessibility

I think that is pretty accurate.  I routinely see cases come into the office in which one or more of these five factors that are present in the facts of the clients fall.

 

 

Why do people in Southwest Missouri still hilltop?

Hilltopping is when a driver accelerates over the top of a steep hill to simulate a brief feeling of weightlessness on the downhill side.

It seems like a couple times every year there is a major car crash accident involving teenagers or young people hill topping.  Just last year there was a quadruple fatality east of Springfield. had a friend in college who lost her brother to a hilltopping accident.    That split second feeling of exhilaration can lead to a lifetime of heartache. 

Two women were in a hospital on Wednesday after the speeding motor vehicle in which they were riding crashed on Greene County Farm Road 94 known locally as Bluegrass Road. People who live near the crash site say it's not the first time a hilltopping accident has happened there.  The two women were not wearing seat belts and were ejected.

The wreck was just east of U.S. 65 about 3:30 a.m. Wednesday.   Troopers say the driver was going more than 100 miles per hour.  

Watch video interview  with the Missouri Highway Patrol.  

Missouri Senate repeals mandatory motorcycle helmet law

The Associated Press is reporting that the Missouri Senate yesterday approved the removal of the existing motorcycle rider helmet law.  I don't ride a motorcycle, but do ride a bicycle as as my primary hobby.  The big groups of bicyclists that I routinely ride with are pretty good about policing themselves about helmet usage, but it is a personal choice.  As a kid, I rode my bicycle all around Southwest Missouri, and never had a helmet, but that was the late 70's and 80's.  (in fact I remember asking my mom for a cool euro style bicycle helmet, which would have provided next to no protection by today's standards, but would have looked cool.  My mom said no.) but now I never chance it without a helmet.  I hope most people still choose to ride with proper helmets.

The new bill also provided that insurers can not claim that riding a motorcycle provides an element of comparative fault.  However, not wearing a helmet does not explicitly receive such status, but the new statute does provide "no insurer, agent, producer, or claims adjuster of an insurer shall assign a percentage of fault to a party based upon the sole fact that the party was  operating a motorcycle in an otherwise  legal manner "

I can assure you that the insurance companies will try to use an injured persons non use of the helmet against them.

From the AP:

The Missouri Senate voted Thursday to allow people at least 21 years old to ride a motorcycle without wearing a helmet as long as they're not traveling on an interstate highway.
Some motorcycle enthusiasts contend that riding without a helmet is more fun and that the state shouldn't micromanage their lives.
"At some point in our society, you have to allow people who are 21 to make a conscious decision and weigh the risks of their own decisions," said Sen. Kurt Schaefer, R-Columbia, who has a motorcycle license but no longer owns a bike.

Missouri has required riders to wear helmets for decades, but some lawmakers have been trying to overturn that law, arguing that it infringes on civil liberties.
Supporters of the current helmet requirements argue the state should keep people safe during a potentially dangerous activity.

If helmets aren't required, "the state fails to protect those riders from brain injuries and ultimately even death," said Sen. Yvonne Wilson, D-Kansas City. Her son was killed in a motorcycle accident 10 years ago on Sunday.

"Of course the scars are still there," she said. "I feel I have to get past my own feelings and get concerned about those vulnerable motorcycle riders."

The motorcycle helmet provisions were added to a broader insurance bill, which passed 23-6. Under the bill, the helmet exemption would expire in five years. The measure now moves to the House, which has passed similar bills in past years.

About half the states are like Missouri in requiring all motorcycle riders to wear helmets. A few don't require anyone to wear a helmet, and the rest require them for younger riders.

Wilson said the National Highway Safety Association estimates that motorcycle helmets saved 1,784 lives across the country in 2007.

A study completed by researchers at the University of Missouri-Columbia and the University of Tennessee-Knoxville found motorcycle death rates increased by an average of 12.2 percent in states that repealed universal helmet requirements. The study analyzed the effect of helmet law changes in all 50 states and the District of Columbia from 1975 through 2004.

The insurance portions of the Senate legislation would prohibit insurance companies from assigning fault to someone in an accident based only on the fact that the person was riding a motorcycle.
 

Here are the UNOFFICIAL Bills are as follows:

Revised Missouri Statute 302.020

4. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection 2 of this section,  any person who is twenty-one years of age or older may operate or ride as a passenger on any motorcycle or motortricycle without protective headgear upon any highway of this state, except for an interstate highway. Any person twenty-one years of age or older operating or  riding as a passenger on any motorcycle or motortricycle without protective headgear upon an interstate highway shall be guilty of an  infraction for which a fine not to exceed twenty-five dollars may be imposed. The protective headgear exemption provided by this subsection shall expire on August 28, 2014.

537.055.

1. In any action to recover damages arising out of the ownership, common maintenance, or operation of a motor vehicle, the fact that one of the parties was operating a motorcycle shall not, in and of itself, be considered evidence of comparative negligence.
 2. When investigating an accident or settling an automobile  insurance policy claim, no insurer, agent, producer, or claims adjuster of an insurer shall assign a percentage of fault to a party based upon the sole fact that the party was operating a motorcycle in an otherwise  legal manner. As used in this subsection,the term "insurer" shall mean any insurance company, association or exchange authorized to issue policies of automobile insurance in the state of Missouri. The term
"automobile insurance policy" shall mean a policy providing automobile liability coverage, uninsured motorists coverage, automobile medical payments coverage or automobile physical damage coverage insuring a private passenger automobile owned by an individual or partnership.