Monday, November 28, 2022

How Much Money Can You Seek For Pain And Suffering?

An injured person may demand compensation for their pain and suffering as part of seeking compensation for accident-related losses. Pain and suffering damages reimburse you for the physical discomfort and emotional distress you have endured because of someone else’s negligence.

The question is how much money for pain and suffering is correct in a specific personal injury claim?

In North Carolina there is no fixed formula for placing a value on physical pain and mental suffering regardless of whether you are negotiating with an insurance adjuster or in a trial. At trial, a jury will be instructed to determine what is fair compensation by applying logic and common sense to the evidence. An exception to this is that North Carolina limits all pain and suffering damages awarded in a single medical malpractice case to a maximum of $500,000.

If Younce, Vtipil, Baznik & Banks, P.A. handles your North Carolina pain and suffering claim, we will pursue full compensation for your pain and suffering. We will take the time to understand how your injury has affected your life. Living with pain after a serious accident can limit your enjoyment of life and your future. We’ll present evidence showing the full extent of your losses.

How Is Pain and Suffering Compensation Calculated?

Liability insurance companies base their settlement offers in large part on what juries have awarded in the past when similar facts were presented in court. They keep large data bases on verdicts in all parts of the United States as well as in your local jurisdiction.

Typically, a jury’s pain and suffering calculation begins after calculating economic damages. This includes:

  • Medical bills
  • Lost income from lost work time
  • Travel expenses for medical appointments
  • Property damage, such as the cost to repair or replace a vehicle after a car accident
  • Miscellaneous expenses attributed to the injury, such as help with house or yard work while recuperating.

When determining compensation for pain and suffering, some juries may base their awards on:

  • A multiple of economic damages, often 1 to 5 times compensatory damages, depending on the severity of the injury.
  • A per month payment based on the number of months between the accident and full medical recovery, often $1,000.00 per month, depending on the severity of the injury.
  • If permanent injury is proven the jury might award pain and suffering for each day, month or year of your life expectancy.

Contact a Raleigh, NC, Personal Injury Attorney

With more than 100 years of experience, the attorneys at Younce, Vtipil, Baznik & Banks, P.A., have developed their practice as a client-oriented law firm that utilizes state-of-the-art case management tools to ensure that clients receive the best representation possible. Our experienced North Carolina personal injury lawyers are committed to providing you with excellent, timely, and compassionate legal service while seeking maximum compensation for your losses.

It costs you nothing to speak with an experienced Raleigh injury lawyer during a free initial consultation. Contact us at 919-661-9000 or online today to get started.

 

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Is a Spouse Entitled to a Workers’ Comp Settlement?

Suffering a severe or disabling injury can put an incredible strain on a marriage. The caretaker burden placed on a spouse and the diminished lifestyle can cause a couple to split up and divorce. What happens then to the proceeds from a workers’ compensation settlement obtained for a workplace injury or other compensation recovered for a personal injury? The uninjured spouse may seek a share of a workers’ comp settlement finalized before the couple separated.

A fight over money meant to sustain a seriously injured spouse can quickly turn a divorce into a heated and heart-wrenching experience. If you find yourself in such a situation, you need to speak with an attorney who understands North Carolina divorce law and can protect your interests during the process of equitable distribution.

Why Divorce Puts Your Workers’ Comp Settlement in Jeopardy

In a divorce, North Carolina law requires an equitable distribution between each party of the couple’s marital assets and divisible property.

  • Marital assets are those obtained during the marriage.
  • Divisible property refers to assets acquired from the date of separation through the date of your divorce trial.

Separate property is not part of the marital estate and is not subject to equitable distribution. Separate property includes any assets acquired by either spouse before the marriage began or as a gift or inheritance during the marriage.

When determining whether assets from a workers’ compensation settlement may need to be divided, what is crucial is when the injured spouse obtained the settlement and why exactly they were paid out. If a settlement was recovered after the couple married, it is likely subject to division and equitable distribution.

How Is a Workers’ Compensation Settlement Divided in a Divorce?

Workers’ compensation is insurance carried by employers to provide benefits to employees who have been injured on the job or become ill because of work conditions. The insurance benefits include:

  • Payment of all medical bills related to the occupational injury or illness
  • Replacement of about two-thirds of wages or income lost because of a disabling injury or illness or reduced earning capacity.
  • Stipends for specific losses or disfigurement, such as the loss of a leg or facial scarring from burn injuries.

A workers’ compensation beneficiary who has been disabled may receive payment for years or may in some cases opt for a lump sum settlement.

The North Carolina Court of Appeals ruled in Freeman vFreeman, 421 S.E. 2d 623, 107 N.C. App. 644 (1992) that what must be considered is what the workers’ compensation award or settlement is meant to pay for and when.

Does One Have to Share Workers’ Comp in a Marriage?

Under Freeman, benefits recovered during the marriage should be considered marital property, meaning the uninjured spouse may be entitled to a portion of that money. However, any part of a settlement acquired for medical expenses or other needs expected after the couple separated due to the spouse’s permanent disability would be the injured spouse’s separate property and not subject to division and distribution.

If your workers’ compensation claim was ongoing at the time of your separation, delaying a settlement may protect much of your benefit from designation as marital property. If you already had a settlement, you would need to designate to the satisfaction of the court what portions of the settlement were meant to replace past, current, or future losses. A knowledgeable family law attorney at Younce, Vtipil, Baznik & Banks, P.A., can help you understand how the process of equitable distribution as part of a divorce affects your workers’ compensation settlement or payments.

Let Our Divorce and Workers’ Comp Lawyers Help

Without proper legal counsel, it’s easy to overlook the financial impact of divorce and wind up with a separation agreement that proves costly for years to come. The attorneys of Younce, Vtipil, Baznik & Banks, P.A., in Raleigh know divorce law and workers’ compensation law in North Carolina. We can help you navigate this difficult time. Contact us today at 919-661-9000 or online.

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Tuesday, November 8, 2022

A Story of Child Abuse

When I wrote about a workers’ comp case recently and posted it, I got a lot of encouraging responses. Well, here goes again. I write this with the permission of my client’s family.

In late 2017 I was contacted by the father of a 2 ½-year-old girl who was hospitalized at Duke.  He was from Arkansas. His wife had run off with another man while he was in prison. The mother and her new boyfriend were both addicted to methamphetamines and kept the four children in extremely unstable living circumstances. Once when the mother came back from shopping and changed her daughter’s diaper, she found her backside covered in bruises. The boyfriend explained that he “didn’t mean to hit her that hard.”

Eventually, they gave the two older children to her mother to keep, the newborn baby to her brother and his wife to adopt, and took my two-year-old client to North Carolina to live with the boyfriend’s mom and the boyfriend’s mom’s boyfriend (confusing, huh?). Soon after they arrived in North Carolina, my client’s mother texted photos of bruises that looked suspiciously like belt marks on the back and facial bruises to her sister in Arkansas. This was after the boyfriend had babysat for the little girl while her mom was at work. The sister urgently and emphatically texted back to confront the boyfriend and/or get the child out of the house. The mother did confront the boyfriend but backed down when he denied hurting the child. My client’s mother and the boyfriend’s mother agreed that, given his bad temper, they would never leave the child alone with him again. However, within a couple of weeks, she was being left with him again. The boyfriend’s mom’s boyfriend offered to pay to take the toddler to the doctor, but the mother refused since both she and her boyfriend had outstanding arrest warrants in Arkansas and feared that the police would find out.

Other things happened that I won’t take the time to recount here, but suffice it to say that the boyfriend had a violent temper with women and children (anyone weaker than he). A few months later the boyfriend’s mom bought them a small house to live in rent-free. She also bought them both vehicles, knowing that neither of them had a driver’s license. By that point, even though they both had full-time jobs, they were spending so much money on their drug habit that, even without having to pay rent, they could barely keep food in the house. A couple of months later he put my client’s mother in the emergency room following one assault (5 staples in her head), and then the mother came home to find bruises on the little girl again.

The boyfriend’s mother and her boyfriend kept the toddler most weekends because my client’s mother and her boyfriend would be in no condition on the weekends during their drug binges to take care of a child.

On the fateful day while my client’s mother was at work, she left the girl with the boyfriend again. When she came home she found the 2.5-year-old girl unconscious on their bed wearing only a diaper. The boyfriend claimed that he was playing with her, chasing her around the bedroom when she ran into the dresser, was knocked unconscious, and had a seizure. He claimed that she had been unconscious for an hour or two! He didn’t call EMS because of his outstanding arrest warrants.

The mother picked the girl up, and the boyfriend dropped them off at the hospital. On the way, they concocted fake names and a fake story as to how she got hurt. The boyfriend drove home to clean up the evidence.

By the time they got her to the hospital, the child was almost dead.

This is a partial list of what WakeMed found:

  • Large hematoma to the top of her head
  • Large hematoma to the superior/posterior aspect of her head
  • Pupils were reactively sluggish with an intermittent upward gaze
  • Anterior chest wall bruises
  • Posterior chest wall bruises around the mid-thoracic region
  • Distended abdomen
  • Left forearm bruises
  • Actively seizing with intermittent posturing
  • Her Glasgow Coma Scale score was 3 which is the worst
  • Head CT scan showed cerebral edema with nondisplaced skull fracture
  • Cholecystic fluid which may be secondary to her liver laceration
  • Subacute rib fractures of the left 9th and 10th ribs
  • Diffusely dilated bowel with no evidence of bowel injury
  • Elevated liver function with elevated lipase consistent with blunt abdominal trauma
  • Closed fracture of the skull
  •  Liver laceration
  •  Elevated pancreatic enzyme
  • Retinal hemorrhage of both eyes
  • Optic nerve edema
  • Bradycardia
  • Severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, the worst of her medical problems. This means that her brain was deprived of blood and oxygen for an extended period of time causing severe brain injury.

It was immediately apparent to the doctors that she had been the victim of severe physical abuse. It was also clear that this was not just a one-off. Her rib fractures showed significant callous formation, an obvious sign of healing, and were at least 14 to 21 days old or maybe older. That meant that her other caregivers – the mother’s boyfriend and her boyfriend – had to have known of the prior abuse. You can’t take care of a two-year-old and not know she has rib fractures.

Even more tragic than the vicious beating was the fact that her brain injury would likely not have been nearly as severe if he had just called EMS immediately so her brain wasn’t deprived of blood and oxygen for so long.

When the boyfriend finally came to the hospital hours later, he claimed that the bruises on her back were from his efforts to perform CPR. The doctors responded that her abdominal and brain injuries were far, far worse than could have been done that way. She had been beaten savagely.

It didn’t take the police long to figure out that they had been given false names, and the boyfriend’s mother had taken part in that scheme. In addition to the usual interviews with everyone involved, neighbors and combing the crime scene, the investigation included hundreds of pages of text messages between the mother and her boyfriend.

It’s never made sense to me why law enforcement makes it so hard for private lawyers like me to get their investigative reports, but they do. When the little girl’s father first contacted me, the only information I had was what little the police and doctors had told him and a couple of short newspaper articles. Real estate searches gave me a little more information.  There was no way I was going to get the police file without filing suit first, and that presented an ethical question. Lawyers are always supposed to do a thorough investigation before filing a lawsuit, but the only way to really do a thorough investigation was to file suit in order to gain subpoena power. A subpoena for the police file was the only way to get it. Even then I had to take the additional step of getting a protective order. The whole process took months.

There was also the financial problem. Private lawyers like me who have to meet payroll, rent, tax, and other obligations can only take profitable cases if we want to stay in business and support our families. People who assault other people are usually judgment-proof, meaning that even if we get a verdict for $100 million, we’ll probably never collect a dime of it because the perpetrators rarely have sufficient assets to pay even a very small verdict. I explain it to my clients this way – bank presidents don’t usually go around assaulting people. For instance, the boyfriend’s mother in this case filed bankruptcy right in the middle of the case, so her assets would never be accessible to us. So private lawyers can rarely take an assault case. After talking it over with my partners, I justified the thousands of dollars it was going to cost us for litigation expenses and the hundreds of hours of my and my paralegal’s time by the potential good publicity the case might bring to us. Frankly, that little bit of publicity was never going to make up for what we were going to have to put into the case, but I couldn’t walk away from it.  That little girl was never going to speak or be able to feed herself again. She would never marry and have a family. Her father and later her siblings would always have to take care of her (if she was lucky and didn’t end up in an institution). Someone had to speak for her, even if the effort was mainly symbolic.

Thankfully, several months into the case I found out that the boyfriend’s mother had homeowners insurance on the house they were living in that had liability insurance of $300,000. The bad news was that the liability insurance policy was written in such a way that a claim that was based on an assault was excluded from the policy. I read the policy over and over. I read every case ever published by North Carolina courts about homeowner liability policies in the context of child abuse. I couldn’t find a case that matched our case in all pertinent aspects, but I felt that I had a colorable argument. In other words, I thought I had a fighting chance to get insurance coverage.

When I finally got the police investigation, I was both happy and unhappy to see that it was over a foot thick.  Happy because that meant that it was probably a thorough investigation. Unhappy because I saw 50 to 60 hours of work to read and outline it. I still had other cases to handle, so the process took weeks. The hardest part was the hundreds of pages of texts between two shallow, self-centered people. I had to read scores of pages of nauseating texts between two despicable people to every once in a while find relevant information that I could actually use. For anyone who thinks law school is their ticket to a life of glamor and riches, think again. Unless you really, really want to help people, it’s just not worth it.

Two years after I initially agreed to take the case we got to start taking depositions of the parties. In a deposition, the lawyers get to ask witnesses questions under oath (under penalty of perjury) with a court reporter present to record everything and make a word-for-word transcript to be used later in the litigation. Depositions are at the heart of what litigators do. We deposed the mother and the boyfriend from their jail cells. The boyfriend had pled guilty to felony attempted intentional child abuse and common law obstruction of justice. The mother pled guilty to felony negligent child abuse with serious physical injury. The boyfriend’s mother pled guilty to misdemeanor obstruction of justice but spent no time in jail. Not surprisingly, all four of them denied knowing anything about the child’s rib fractures.

The case against the boyfriend was obvious, but he was the one who was the least likely to be covered by liability insurance. Liability insurance almost never covers intentional acts. I knew from the start that finding him liable was going to be as easy as falling off a log, but it was very unlikely that I would ever get money for that poor little girl from him.

My effort was to walk the legal tightrope of finding the other three negligent for not protecting the child in such a way as to trigger the liability coverage. The insurance company’s lawyer filed a motion for summary judgment on a declaratory judgment action to find that they didn’t have coverage for the mother or her boyfriend. We lost. The judge declared that there was no coverage for the two of them. I didn’t appeal because I had been convinced along the way that they were right about that.

The case continued against the boyfriend’s mother and her boyfriend. Why?  North Carolina law states that “(a) Any person who has cause to suspect that any child is abused or neglected, shall report the case of that child to the director of the department of social services in the county where the child resides or is found. The report may be made orally, by telephone, or in writing.” I added the underlines. Every adult is required by law to notify the appropriate authorities (Child Protective Services) if they even suspect abuse or neglect.

I felt that we had proven that the two of them had lots of reasons to suspect that the child was being abused and was in danger from further abuse. Although there was substantial doubt on whether I would win on the issue of liability coverage for them, I put enough fear into the insurance company that they offered to pay over half of their policy limits to settle before trial. My client’s father, who was the decision maker, decided to play it safe and settle for that. A part of me still wishes that he had let me try the case, but in my heart, I think he did the right thing.

After all of that, the case still wasn’t over. Medicaid had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in three different states providing care for the child. The law in each state is different as to how much we have to pay them out of a settlement or verdict. I came to terms with North Carolina and one of the other states within a few weeks, but it took almost exactly a year for us to finally get the third state to settle with us. They took far more than the other two states because their state law allowed them to do it. It left my client with even less of the settlement than I had hoped for, which was disappointing.

The good news is that the father has stepped up to the plate and is taking responsible care for his four children. I’ve talked on the phone and facetimed with them several times since they moved back to Arkansas. My client seems happy and well-cared for. The father has been sober and has had no more legal trouble since her injury. For the rest of her life, she will probably not be able to speak, feed herself, go to the bathroom by herself, or many other activities of daily living.  Her medical bills run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.  She will continue to incur other bills for the rest of her life.

What is the point of this long story?  Yes, it’s tragic. Yes, people can be horrible. But this didn’t have to happen. If the adults into whose hands God placed that child had just acted with some courage and responsibility and called Child Protective Services, she would probably be a healthy, normal seven-year-old now. We’ve all heard stories about people who were turned over to CPS who shouldn’t have been, and their lives were ruined. I don’t know how many of those stories are actually true. This has taught me, however, to err on the side of protecting the child and trusting CPS to use some common sense.

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