October 29, 2009

Indiana Court of Appeals Rules Against Allstate In Underinsured Motorist Case

On October 29, 2009, in the matter of Brown-Day v. Allstate Insurance Co., the Indiana Court of Appeals held that Allstate, as the Plaintiff's UIM carrier, was not entitled to substitute the dismissed tort feasor as the party defendant for purposes of the underinsured motorist trial to prevent prejudice from the “mention of insurance” under Evid. R. 411. According to the Court (Barnes, J. writing with Kirsch and Vaidik, JJ. concurring):

Evidence Rule 411 simply is not a mechanism providing for an outright substitution of parties so that the identity of a party as an insurer may be shielded. It does not contemplate the creation of a fiction to avoid possible prejudicial effects from a reference to insurance or an insurer.

The Court also held that the Plaintiff was entitled to cross-examine Allstate's medical examiner regarding who had hired him and how much he had been paid even though that line of questioning would reveal the existence of insurance. This ruling is consistent with the language and purpose of Indiana Rules of Evidence 411 adn 616 which only exclude evidence of insurance when it is offered to establish liability and specifically authorize evidence of insurance when it is offered for the purpose of establishing the bias and prejudice of a witness.

The Plaintiff in this case was represented by Nick Deets of the Indianapolis, Indiana Personal Injury Firm of Hovde Dassow and Deets, LLC.

The full opinion may be found at: http://www.in.gov/judiciary/opinions/pdf/10290901lmb.pdf.

June 3, 2008

Indiana Court of Appeals Decides Major Issue on Damages for Plaintiff's Personal Injury Cases

The Indiana Court of Appeals decided the case of Stanley v. Walker on Tuesday, June 5, 2008. In this significant Indiana decision, the Court held that discounts on medical bills that were obtained because the plaintiff had procured his own health health insurance were not admissible under Indiana's Collateral Source Statute. This means that Plaintiffs can claim the full amount of their medical bills and are not punished for having the foresight to purchase their own health insurance. This is a major victory for Indiana citizens seeking to obtain fair compensation for their injuries in auto and truck accident cases as well as other actions such as medical malpractice cases.

The decision may be read by utilizing the following link:

http://www.in.gov/judiciary/opinions/pdf/06030803cld.pdf

May 28, 2008

Family of Indiana Teacher Killed by Schneider Truck Files Suit

The family of a Gary, Indiana teacher who was killed when her van was rear-ended by a semi-truck in May of 2008 has filed a $50 million dollar lawsuit against Schneider National Carrier and its driver, Justin Wallace of Pennsylvania. The victim of the preventable semi-truck collision had been a math teacher at Gary Roosevelt High School for more than 30 years.

The family's attorney filed a request for a restraining order against Schneider to prevent it from altering or destroying any of the evidence involved in the collision. Schneider could be found liable on the basis of spoliation of evidence under Indiana law if it destroys or alters evidence after such an order is entered. The family's attorney stated that he believes the crash was caused by Schneider cutting back on maintaining costly safety standards due to the high price of diesel gas.

Gary Post-Tribune, May 17, 2008