December 2008 Archives

St Louis Truck / Bus Accident Lawyer Retained to Represent Personal Injury Victims of St Louis Missouri School Bus Accident

December 18, 2008, by Benjamin J. Sansone

On December 11, 2008 a St Louis City school bus transporting Carnahan high school students was involved in a violent crash. The official reports are vague, however, personal injury attorney Ben Sansone represents one of the students that was seriously injured and taken to Cardinal Glennon hospital. According to her, the bus driver attempted to pass traffic, accelerated quickly and then in order to avoid crashing into other vehicles ran off the road and crashed into a post and some utility structures. St Louis Missouri Bus Accident - Story on MyFoxSTL.com

On behalf of my client and as a St Louis Missouri injury lawyer, I will be pursuing damages against the bus company, who exactly that is is still under investigation and significant updates will be posted to this blog. However, it is clear that the bus driver was negligent, additionally, there may be additional issues, as in truck accident cases, of negligent retention, hiring, or training of the bus driver.

Missouri bike accident lawyer - Bicycle accidents are on the rise in Missouri

December 15, 2008, by Benjamin J. Sansone

As a St Louis Missouri personal injury lawyer and a bicyclist, one of the main areas of personal injury law that I focus on are bike and motorcycle accidents. If you select the bicycle accidents tab of my blog and the motorcycle accidents tab, you will see that I have discussed this topic at length and have some current cases up on appeal in an attempt to make the laws more favorable to Missouri bicyclists.

I keep track of the multiple cases of serious injury and often death that occur in Missouri on a weekly basis, below are just a few of the articles across Missouri from this week discussing bike and motorcycle injuries.

Missouri Motorcycle Accident - Man injured after losing control of motorcycle
The accident occurred around 3 pm today about a mile south of Carl Junction, according to a report from the Missouri Highway Patrol. ... Missouri Motorcycle Accident Article

Missouri bicyclist dies in collision with vehicle, patrol reports the accident occurred when the bike rider rode his southbound bicycle into the path of an eastbound 2002 Chevrolet Suburban ... SEE Missouri bike accident article.

Ballplayer's Cousin Makes Plea Deal In Deadly Wreck Killing Missouri Bike Rider. Wilfredo Pujols pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, resisting arrest and two counts of fleeing the scene of a motor vehicle accident which resulted in the death of a teenager crossing the road on a bicycle after Pujols ran a red light while fleeing from police. See article discussing the wrongful death Missouri bike accident.

Missouri Medical Malpractice - Statute of Limitations - Tolling and Exceptions to the 2 Year Statute of Limitations

December 10, 2008, by Benjamin J. Sansone

As any Missouri personal injury lawyer would know, the statute of limitations to bring a Missouri medical malpractice lawsuit is generally 2 years from the date of the alleged Missouri medical negligence. This rule is laid out in Missouri Statute 516.105, Actions Against Healthcare Providers.

However, patients often do not know there was any negligence on behalf of a doctor or other medical care provider until it is too late, i.e. more than 2 years or so close to the 2 year limit that proper investigation needed to prepare a lawsuit is impractical; being that a medical malpractice lawsuit in Missouri requires a "certificate of merit" by a medical professional in the same area of medicine. This often takes weeks, if not months to get.

There are several exceptions that can toll the start of the two years, one of the primary exceptions is the "failure to inform exception" laid out in Missouri Statute 516.105(2). If the alleged medical malpractice is the failure to inform a patient of test results, then the 2 years runs from the actual discovery of the adverse test results or when the patient "in the exercise of ordinary care should have discovered such alleged negligent failure to inform."

Once such case is currently pending in St Louis County Circuit Court. In the pending case, the patient had a mammogram in 2002 that revealed she had breast cancer, however, the doctor never informed the patient of the adverse test result; therefore, she did not discover she had breast cancer until almost 3 years later when she had a subsequent mammogram in early 2005. Undoubtedly, the cancer was much more severe and progressive in 2005 than it was in 2002; leading to more invasive, aggressive, and drawn out medical treatment.

The Defendant hospital and doctor tried to have the case dismissed claiming that the patient should not be able to recover because the case was not filed until August 2005, 3 years after the failure to inform; moreover, the defendants argued that the exception should not allow the statute to toll an extra year because the patient should have investigated or found out about the error on her own much sooner.

The defendant's filed a motion for summary judgment on the issue, and an order was recently entered that allowed justice for this poor woman to still be in reach. The Judge held that the statute of limitations does not bar the case, but that a jury should be able to decide whether or not she should have investigated or got a subsequent test sooner.

Often we are bombarded with the propaganda that personal injury trial lawyers file unjust cases against doctors, when this could not be farther from the truth. Healthcare providers have more legal protections than any other individuals or entities under the Missouri Tort system; yet in this case a doctor clearly failed to inform a patient she had cancer and still attempts to blame the patient and claim the lawsuit is illegitimate.

St Louis Missouri Motorcycle Accident and Injuries - Driver Inattention and Struck Motorcyclist when Changing Lanes - Uninsured Motorist Claim

December 1, 2008, by Benjamin J. Sansone

Recently, two of my clients were injured in St Louis Missouri as the result of a driver changing lanes and sideswiping my two clients who were traveling on a custom Bad Boy motorcycle. The motorcycle is nine feet long and three feet of the motorcycle was past the other vehicle's front end, yet the driver still negligently failed to keep a careful lookout and caused a collision after violating the motorcyclist's right of way by entering his lane and side swiping the motorcycle, causing the St Louis Missouri motorcycle accident. The driver ended up with a fractured ankle and foot and the passenger ended up with very serious injuries to her neck, back, arms, and legs, likely requiring surgery.

As an experienced St Louis Missouri motorcycle accident personal injury lawyer, I have investigated and represented numerous clients that were injured on a motorcycle in Missouri motorcycle accident cases and Illinois Motorcycle accident cases. Most cases are simply the result of a car or truck driver's inattention or simple failure to look for smaller vehicles on the road, as a motorcycle versus car or truck accident rarely results in injury to the car or truck driver.

From the perspective of a Missouri injury attorney, the most common causes of motorcycle accidents and collisions is the failure of a car or truck driver to yield to a motorcyclist coming through an intersection and the car or truck driver makes a left turn on a green right in front of the motorcyclist, thus causing a collision; or commonly, I see a fact scenario as described in the case above, blind or inattentive lane changes striking the motorcycle.

In the above case, my clients were struck by a driver who did not have insurance, therefore the claim becomes a UM claim or uninsured motorist claim. Basically, in Missouri everyone with insurance has a minimum of $25,000 in UM coverage, meaning if you are injured by an uninsured motorist the injured motorcyclist makes a claim through their policy under their uninsured motorist coverage. Under Missouri injury law, the insurance company essentially takes the place of the uninsured motorist. If an injured person has several auto policies they can often stack the polices, meaning, if you have 2 cars with minimum coverage each, the injured party can make a claim against both policies thus stacking the limit from $25,000 to $50,000 of insurance coverage. This can quickly become a complicated area of personal injury and insurance law based on policy provisions and case law pertaining to stacking, anti-stacking clauses in some policies, set off clauses, other insurance clauses, and the specifics of each fact scenario that may preclude coverage or act to open up additional coverage from other insurance sources.