Woman Sues Sprint Over Driving While Yakking Death
from the good-luck-there dept
More than five years ago, we wrote about a ridiculous lawsuit that involved a lawsuit against Cingular (now a part of AT&T) seeking to pin liability on Cingular for an accident caused by a driver who was talking on his phone. That lawsuit was tossed out as ridiculous (and again on appeal) with the court noting that the mobile phone operator was not at all responsible for what a driver did. Apparently, some folks are unaware of this case. Broadband Reports alerts us to the news that Sprint is being sued in a similar lawsuit. In this case, a woman was killed by a driver on the phone, and the woman’s daughter is claiming that Sprint should have warned people of the risks of driving while talking on the phone. Nice try, but chances are, this lawsuit is going to get tossed just as fast as previous ones.
Filed Under: car crash, driving while yakking, liability
Companies: sprint
Comments on “Woman Sues Sprint Over Driving While Yakking Death”
It’s not Sprint’s fault and the danger doesn’t lie in talking on the phone while driving. It’s the fault of the government for giving licenses to morons. So the lawsuit should be against the DOT for that state.
Re: Morons?
I agree, the “adapt or die” natural selection rule applies. There is a big difference between putting a truly dangerous product in the marketplace, (one that can in and of itself creates risk and hazardous situations) but morons create hazardous situations all by themselves. (they are the primary causal factor) And the irony of it all is that some expect to get enriched just because they are morons.
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The only time any driver follows the rules of the road is during their driving test. After that it’s free reign to drive however you see fit, even if it endangers others. I think that drivers tests should happen every 5 years or something just to remind people of their responsibility while driving.
i don’t know. how many people thought the hot coffee trial was going to be thrown out.
face it, common sense just isn’t that common.
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Yeah but this seems to have some precedent already set by the courts. I don’t know if the hot coffee incident did.
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Actually, the McDonald’s hot coffee lawsuit was an actual legitimate lawsuit, not frivolous as popular myth believes.
The coffee wasn’t just hot; it was dangerously hot (180 degrees, at least 20 degrees hotter than at any other restaurant, enough cause third degree burns in seconds). McDonald’s knew this after over 700 complaints before the incident that sparked the lawsuit and their own expert consultants. The cups and lids were so flimsy they were prone to spilling when opening (eg to add cream and sugar).
The woman who sued suffered third degree burns to her thighs, legs, and groin; she literally burned her genitals off and was disabled for years afterwards. If the coffee had been at a standard ~155 degrees, she might have suffered minor first degree burns, but nothing serious.
The following links have more information on the case, Liebeck v. McDonald’s:
Liebeck v. McDonald’s Restaurants
The Actual Facts about the Mcdonalds’ Coffee Case
McFacts abut the McDonalds Coffee Lawsuit
While I agree that many lawsuits these days (including the one against Sprint in the article) are frivolous, the McDonald’s coffee lawsuit is *not* one of them. It is one of the few cause where a lawsuit actually helped fix a wrong and keep a corporation honest; after the lawsuit McDonald’s finally changed its policy regarding coffee temperature.
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Thanks AC for typing all that so I don’t have to. It always fascinates me that people will spout off about that lawsuit with only the barest second-hand knowledge of the real issues behind it.
Sigh
“Nice try, but chances are, this lawsuit is going to get tossed just as fast as previous ones.”
Never underestimate the power of stupidity in America….
Because often times we’re not just stupid, but WILLFULLY stupid….
“The gun maker should of warned us that a gun could kill people”
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“hospitals should warn that birth can lead to death.”
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True. Life, after all, is a terminal disease….
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And it’s sexually transmitted.
Re: Gun Makers Do Warn Idiots
Sturm Ruger was successfully sued around 1978 for not adequately warning users that a gun is dangerous. The court ordered that “Read The Manual” had to be stamped into every barrel.
Like the chic
that walked past all the cones and fell down the open man hole?
Re: Like the chic
I’ve got a worse one. A lady tripped and fell on one of those orange warning cones and attempted to sue. The United States District Court For The District Of Minnesota agred with the lower court and held that warning cones are per se open and obvious and dismissed her case.
Phyllis A. Engleson, Plaintiff, v. Little Falls Area Chamber of Commerce, Civil No. 01-1072 (DWF/RLE).
Re: Re: Like the chic
being from MN, i have to say that I am quite speachless with this one… but not so much… we do have some pretty retarded people out here… I think the cold freezes their brains.
Re: Re: Like the chic
Out of curiosity, how badly was she hurt?
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The opinion does not say. Which is not surprising because, under the open and obvious doctrine, the seriousness of the injury simply does not matter. The open and obvious doctrine only attacks the argument that there was some duty, in this instance, a duty to warn.
Of course the plaintiff’s argument that the city needed to warn her of a warning cone is pretty hilarious.
Re: Re: Like the chic
Just curious, how might one warn you that a warning cone is in front of you? Another warning cone? Warning sign?
But then how would you warn them of the warning sign warning you of a warning cone? There would be a never ending chain of warning objects. It would be madness!
Cases like these
remind me that as a rule … I fucking hate people.
Re: Cases like these
I must agree!
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With “Stuart”
Made up news from the past....
Associated Press, 1930: Galvin Manufacturing Corporation was sued today by a woman who claimed that the corporation should have warned drivers that its newfangled “car radio” could distract drivers which could lead to serious accidents.
Judge Ima Idiot, who thought this new “car radio” technology was “of the devil, because it did not exist when I was a kid,” agreed with the plaintiff Anita Someonetoblame and awarded 10 bucks. Which incidentally, would be worth $40 billion when adjusted into dollars for the year 2009.
Re: Made up news from the past....
Off topic, but the original Mini had no place to mount a radio, purely because the designer (that I can’t remember the name of) decided that they WERE too distracting for the driver.
Re: Re: Designer of the Mini
It was Alec Issigonis – later Sir Alec. Boosted sales of radios though! I seem to recall we had a tranny on the back seat….
Re: Re: Re: Designer of the Mini
Do you mean a large thing with a big shaft, or a transmission?
Re: Re: Re:2 Designer of the Mini
Funny! But he was referring to a portable transistor radio.
The Mini designer also made the seats purposely uncomfortable to keep the driver alert.
Driving with both hands
I am guessing that the case is simply about money, not common sense.
Re: Driving with both hands
Perhaps. But it could have a lot to do with the visceral reaction we have to tragedy: we lash out at everything remotely connected because we have a desire to attach blame to someone or something. It’s a very sad thing, because it’s entirely possible that the daughter in this case is simply distraught and trying to make some sense of the situation – in a very misguided but somewhat understandable way.
har har
Mother Nature should warn that life has a 100% death rate
Almost ready to agree with the suit
As insane as it feels to actually lean toward sympathy regarding one of these suits, I’m getting there. The communciations companies are spending an inordinant amount of money lobbying against hands-free laws and distracted driver laws that, in my mind, they’re rapidly assuming some responsibility because they’re actively fighting against those of us who would like to hold that driver responsible for their own actions. My life has been threatened by enough morons on phones that I’m ready to blame the provider until they stop working against public safety in favor of the bottom line.
Re: Almost ready to agree with the suit
There are ALREADY laws in place that hold the driver responsible for their own actions.
Re: Almost ready to agree with the suit
*As insane as it feels to actually lean toward sympathy regarding one of these suits, I’m getting there. The communciations companies are spending an inordinant amount of money lobbying against hands-free laws and distracted driver laws that, in my mind, they’re rapidly assuming some responsibility because they’re actively fighting against those of us who would like to hold that driver responsible for their own actions. My life has been threatened by enough morons on phones that I’m ready to blame the provider until they stop working against public safety in favor of the bottom line.*
That is pure over-legislation. Are we going to need homer simpson laws?
– Faxing while driving can be dangerous and should be illegal
– Making Nachos while driving can be dangerous and should be illegal
– Watching a portable tv while driving can be dangerous and should be illegal
.
.
.
How about enforce the law for reckless driving and call it a day. You know what happened with hands free in CA? First day cops handed out tickets left and right, hands free manufacturers made a mint and everyone was off the phone. 3 days later, back to normal.
Re: Re: Almost ready to agree with the suit
Wait – making nachos while driving can be dangerous?
Great, I installed that microwave in the dash for nothing…
Re: Almost ready to agree with the suit
Seriously, the last time I checked any knuckle head that does not pay attention to driving and all the other drivers around them is looking for an accident. Most states have some type of law against anything that distracts the driver from doing what the should be doing, paying attention. If all states just enforced the laws they have, we would not see the stupid lawsuits regarding an idiot who decided to talk on their phone, read a newspaper, text on their phone, eat a sandwich, mess with the radio, put on their make up, etc, etc, etc. Seriously folks, use your head for something besides a hat rack.
Re: Almost ready to agree with the suit
And what about the other morons that are fixing their hair, putting on make up, reading the paper, etc. It is not just cell phone. So should I sue the guy that was reading the paper or the person putting on makeup? Give me a break, it is people not the technology……………
wow what a f*cking annoying ad by nokia, sized itself up to cover the whole page, plus 2 other ads of the same thing on the rest of the page…
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Those N900 ads are everywhere right now.
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Yeah, well I’m contacting Nokia and letting them know that kind of marketing is bullshit.
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You want to contact the IAB, who approved those ridiculous auto-expanding full-width banner ads as a standard
It’s not Sprint’s responsibility to warn people about the dangers of doing stupid things– there are laws to do just that. That driver is responsible for his own actions, and if he survived the crash he should be the one who pays restitution to the victim’s family.
So THIS is the “moron in a hurry” test people keep talking about?
Like they say...
Cell phones don’t kill people.. people kill people.
HEY sprint is right
this means its nto anyones bother when i urchase a hang gun or rifle
i get wasted at a bar its not the owners responsibility to make sure i dont drive and walk out drunk of his place, try waving your keys around saying im a driving home cause sprint told me i can
this logic then can be said if i get pulled over by coppers driving drunk and have not yet killed anyone that it also is not that cops business and he can call sprint for hte reason why…..
HAHAHAHA
HEY sprint is right
this means its nto anyones bother when i urchase a hang gun or rifle
i get wasted at a bar its not the owners responsibility to make sure i dont drive and walk out drunk of his place, try waving your keys around saying im a driving home cause sprint told me i can
this logic then can be said if i get pulled over by coppers driving drunk and have not yet killed anyone that it also is not that cops business and he can call sprint for hte reason why…..
HAHAHAHA
its now illegal in ontario canada to use a cell while driving
as in sanity
Interesting law suit, considering that i would swear on a stack of bibles that my Sprint phone came with a little yellow flyer warning me that i should use a hands free set while driving, although i could be mistaken i suppose.
Do I see a new commercial on the horizon....?
Theres a suit for that.
(/play off theres an app for that)
time?
I would think something like this happening was only a matter of time. I wonder if the dude that rear ended me had Sprint.
ISP are wilful partners of pirates LoL
Change the charge for accidents where the driver on a phone is at fault to attempted manslaughter. See how many in-car phone calls go to voice mail.
Don’t dismiss this lawsuit quite so quickly. The difference between this and earlier ones is that time has passed and there’s more information. On the one hand, all the wireless companies clearly sold these devices as useful in cars. Their buildouts focused on highways, their ads kept showing the advantages of carrying out business while driving. Meanwhile, studies *that they themselves funded in many cases* showed the hazards. In response, for years they put CYA warnings in the booklets – where they knew no one would read them.
The argument will be that it’s as if, hmm, a ski resort ran repeated ads showing people with previous skiing experience using some kind of new-fangled skis on a special course with no instruction, then put a warning at the end of those books of local attractions they put in rooms saying “Don’t go out on the slopes until you’ve learned how to ski” – and then claimed to someone injured “Oh, you should have known better.”
Well, maybe – but this isn’t even such a great analogy, since the actual hazards from cell phone use are much less obvious than those of skiing. Everyone jumped on “hands-free” operation as the issue, because *that* seemed like the obvious hazard. Except that it wasn’t, and isn’t. While it doesn’t *feel* like “just talking on the phone” has much of an effect – how many of the previous posters here *don’t* use their cellphones while driving? – the fact is objective measurement shows it does.
Laws are supposed to be unambiguous. It’s fine to say that general laws about distracted driving are enough – but how do you know when such a law has been violated? Is it a law you trot only when there’s already been an accident and you want *something* to charge an idiot driver with? Or do you want something that might actually be effective in preventing accidents? Frankly, I don’t all that much care if people do stupid, dangerous things that only harm themselves – but I damn well *do* care what they do when they share the road with me.
— Jerry
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Let me guess, you’re the plaintiff’s attorney who represented Phyllis A. Engleson in the case I cited above. I can hear your arguments now…
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Well, I’m going to get serious for moment and respond to this argument:
Back in the 70s nearly everyone drunk alcohol and drove. Now, most people are aware that drinking and driving is bad and most people do not do it. What caused this change in attitude among drivers?
Was it dramshop lawsuits against the producers and servers of alcohol? Did that cause people to decide drinking and driving was a bad idea? Not even a little bit. Those lawsuits shifted the blame away from the drivers, leaving them off the hook for the vast majority of damages.
What caused the mental shift were tough laws against the perpetrators of the dangerous condition, the drunk drivers. After a few of your buddies serve prison time for drunk driving, your eyes tend to open a bit to reality.
So in this instance, exactly how does holding phone companies liable for people yakking on their phones, stop people from yakking on their phones?
So, we now know that Jennifer Smith is the dumbest person in the world. Closely followed by her lawyer. The RIAA must be relieved at this news.
personal liability does it exist anymore?
This will just mean more warning labels on products, more warnings on packages and more warnings in user manuals.
I recently bought a desk lamp for my son. It came with not one but two warning labels on the cord that essentially warned me that electricity is dangerous. I kid you not. There was also a label on the hood of the lamp that stated the bulb could get hot – naturally it was a pain in the ass to remove that label. Half the ‘manual’ was nothing but warnings.
Warnings? Really?
Churches and government then should warn anyone thinking of getting married that 100% of divorces are caused my marriage.
distracted driving
Accidents occur every day across the nation and are caused by a variety of reasons, including excessive speed, failure to obey rules of the road, reckless driving, driving under the influence, and distracted driving. So I suggest proper care should be taken while driving as life is precious.