[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y ] [Search | Free Show | Home]

Historical Court Cases

This is a blue board which means that it's for everybody (Safe For Work content only). If you see any adult content, please report it.

Thread replies: 163
Thread images: 13

File: 1-43[1].jpg (34KB, 500x500px) Image search: [Google]
1-43[1].jpg
34KB, 500x500px
>women spills coffee in her lap
>sues mcdonnalds for $2.9 million dollars for medical bills + pain and suffering
>media shitstorm
>famous songwriters and comedians all mock it
>Law gets passed making it so that people can't sue for "pain and suffering"

>What really happened
>women was served 200 F degree coffee and accidentally spilled it on herself
>the coffee burned off 20 pounds of flesh and left wounds that would get me banned for gore posting if posted.
>women spends 2 years in recovery
>sues McDonald for $2.9 million, only wins $640,000
>the majority of damages in the case were punitive due to McDonald's' reckless disregard for the number of burn victims prior to Liebeck
>New tort reform laws are passed lowering the amount of money corporations have to pay out in punitive damages

Post some history making court cases.
>>
>>2844874
>spilled it on herself
>>
File: IMG_0118.jpg (56KB, 805x453px) Image search: [Google]
IMG_0118.jpg
56KB, 805x453px
>Fire, fire, fire, fire. Now you’ve heard it. Not shouted in a crowded theatre, admittedly, as I seem now to have shouted it in the Hogwarts dining hall. But the point is made. Everyone knows the fatuous verdict of the greatly over-praised Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who, when asked for an actual example of when it would be proper to limit speech or define it as an action, gave that of shouting “fire” in a crowded theatre.

>It’s very often forgotten what he was doing in that case was sending to prison a group of Yiddish speaking socialists, whose literature was printed in a language most Americans couldn’t read, opposing Mr. Wilson’s participation in the First World War, and the dragging of the United States into that sanguinary conflict, which the Yiddish speaking socialists had fled from Russia to escape. In fact it could be just as plausible argued that the Yiddish speaking socialists who were jailed by the excellent and greatly over-praised Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes were the real fire fighters, were the ones shouting fire when there really was a fire in a very crowded theatre indeed.
>>
>>2844910
the design of the cup was such that it made it really fucking easy to spill, especially for an elderly women who aren't the strongest of people. Mind you, too, such a flimsy construction would be harmless without the extremely hot coffee put into the cup (which, by the way, was a temperature dictated by McDonald's protocols)
>>
>>2844910
I can make and spill a normal cup of coffee on myself and it will burn, but it won't burn through my flesh like this did.
>>
>>2844874
Is law part of Humanities? Are the principles of justice Humanities? Does this belong more in /biz/?
>>
>>2845007
>is law part of humanities
If you have to ask this question you may actually be retarded
>>
>>2844910
What's key here is not the fact that she spilled on herself but rather whether or not it was reasonable to keep the coffee that hot and whether it represented an unreasonable danger to consumers.

People commenting "LMAO SPILLED IT ON HERSELF" are the victims of a very successful smear campaign funded by one of the largest, most powerful corporations in the world.
>>
>>2844910

>was still far too hot to even drink safely
>>
>>2845007
Read the goddamn first fucking line of the fucking sticky you fucking newfag.
>>
>>2845017
>whether or not it was reasonable to keep the coffee that hot

Keeping coffee that hot was an industry standard and still is.

McDonalds lost because they and their lawyers acted like douchebags in court and the jury sympathised with the old lady, not because of the merits of her case.
>>
File: 5558912[1].png (229KB, 460x360px) Image search: [Google]
5558912[1].png
229KB, 460x360px
>>2845051
>McDonalds lost because they and their lawyers acted like douchebags in court and the jury sympathised with the old lady, not because of the merits of her case.
>Source: my ass

Other documents obtained from McDonald's showed that from 1982 to 1992 the company had received more than 700 reports of people burned by McDonald's coffee to varying degrees of severity, and had settled claims arising from scalding injuries for more than $500,000.

Source: Gerlin, Andrea (September 1, 1994). "A Matter of Degree: How a Jury Decided that a Coffee Spill is Worth $2.9 Million" (PDF). Wall Street Journal. Retrieved June 18, 2015.
>>
>>2845100
>700 people
>Out of all the cups of coffee McDonalds sold in 10 years

To quote from the trial "statistically insignificant"


>Hot beverages such as tea, hot chocolate, and coffee are frequently served at temperatures between 160 degrees F (71.1 degrees C) and 185 degrees F (85 degrees C).
>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18226454

Coffee is still kept that hot.
>>
>>2844874
Less than 25 years ago. Not history

sage
>>
>>2844874
lol didn't this lady have to get skin grafts and shit because the burns were so bad? Coffee doesn't need to be boiling to be kept hot. Fucking McDonald's shills ITT
>>
>>2845144
see me post
>>2844976
it's not just about the temperature but the fact that the cup was poorly designed to handle a dangerously hot liquid and that the customers were not sufficiently aware of the danger they wer in.
>>
>>2845144
>700 preventable burns
>statistically insignificant
I wish /his/ had a spoiler image so I could post what "burns" actually look like.

>Hot beverages such as tea, hot chocolate, and coffee are frequently served at temperatures between 160 degrees F (71.1 degrees C) and 185 degrees F (85 degrees C).
You just made the case against McDonald's.
>McDonald's operations manual required the franchisee to hold its coffee at 180 to 190 degrees Fahrenheit.

>At 190 °F (88 °C), the coffee would cause a third-degree burn in two to seven seconds.

> Liebeck's lawyers presented the jury with evidence that 180 °F (82 °C) coffee like that McDonald's served may produce third-degree burns (where skin grafting is necessary) in about 12 to 15 seconds. Lowering the temperature to 160 °F (71 °C) would increase the time for the coffee to produce such a burn to 20 seconds. Liebeck's attorneys argued that these extra seconds could provide adequate time to remove the coffee from exposed skin, thereby preventing many burns.
>>
>>2845175
Her decision to put the cup of coffee between her legs in a car (parked though, contrary to the myth) and her choice of clothes contributed more to her injuries than cup design.

McDonald should have settled, not acknowledged liability but paid for her medical bills. She didn't deserve more.
>>
>>2844874

Crawford v. Washington has always been an interesting case for me. It is a good example of a decision that had much wider implications than the circumstances of the case itself. The Supreme Court ruled that an audio recording could NOT be submitted into evidence unless the person who produced the audio recording was present for the trial itself so that she could be cross-examined. This case happened in 2004. It didn't seem like a huge deal at the time, but it had HUGE implications for how forensic evidence is handled.

Before then, it was possible for a forensic investigator to simply submit a report in writing which would then be used as evidence during the trial, without the investigator actually having to show up in court. This was confirmed during the 2008 case, Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, where it was explicitly spelled out that "the analysts who write reports that the prosecution introduces must be made available for confrontation." Through these two cases, the Confrontation Clause, a long-ignored constitutional right for a defendant to "be confronted with the witnesses against him" was brought back from extinction.
>>
>>2845186
The counter to statistics is not an emotive picture m8.

>Liebacks lawyers said
Is actually bullshit.
>When tap water reaches 140º F, it can cause a third degree (full thickness) burn in just five seconds.
>http://www.burnfoundation.org/programs/resource.cfm?c=1&a=3

The risk is not significantly lowered by dropping the coffee to a less palatable temperature.

Coffee is still served that hot today. Industry standard is to brew at 200 and serve at 180.
>>
Are there any good academic papers on how juries tend to assess legal damages? I'm particularly wondering what sorts of cases they tend to be exceedingly generous in compensation and what types of cases they tend to be more stingy, or if there are no great statistical patterns and it all depends on the type of jury selected.
>>
>>2845007
Geography is a humanity
>>
>>2845173
No it was because of the burns were on her worn genitals
>>
>>2845186
>quoting a guy who sold out to make blacks in his novel funny Xdddd
>>
>>2845200
You seem to be consistently missing the point that it's not a question of whether she's the one who hurt herself or not, the point is that the coffee being sold posed a serious injury hazard that would not be reasonably expected by the average consumer.

I mean yeah, my first reaction when hearing of this case was "well duh, coffee is hot you dumb bitch," but the actual injuries go well beyond what I initially assumed to be "just" some burns, and I'm certain they were far more serious than what most people would have imagined a coffee burn to be.
>>
>>2845263
>not be reasonably expected by the average consumer
>>
If I knew a cup of fucking coffee was hot enough to burn my flesh clean off, I would never be buying it in the first place.
>>
File: 220px-Timothyevans.jpg (15KB, 220x296px) Image search: [Google]
220px-Timothyevans.jpg
15KB, 220x296px
>>2844874
>dude's wife is murdered
>he gets blamed
>sentenced to death
>dies
>turns out it was some other dude
>death penalty is removed from Britain
>>
>>2845007
>Does this belong more in /biz/?

/biz/ is a shit board where people try to rip off out of their literal pennies gains by shilling imaginary coins that won't be worth a shit within the year.
>>
>>2844910

200 fucking degrees.

Why was it that hot? That's not normal temperature for coffee.
>>
>>2844874
>the plantiff was (((Stella Liebeck)))
>>
>>2845226
I don't know of any papers, and I don't actually deal with personal injury cases myself, but I have a few colleagues who do, and it's an article of faith that jurors who have never sat on a jury before give more generous damages assessments.
>>
>>2845246
That affects the quote, how?
>>
>>2846047

Farenheit. That's ~90' celcius.
>>
Miller v Jackson will always have a dear place in my heart due to mai boi Deming's glorious speech about how GOAT cricket is.

Otherwise, my second favourite would be Bradshaw v Unity Marine. I love it when Judges shit all over lawyers, and this one is legendary for that.

However, if I had to pick a "serious" case, I'd go for Hamed & Ors v R. Basically the court ruled that video evidence obtained from criminal trespass by the police was inadmissible. It helped to constrain the Police Force to what they were legally allowed to do (even though Parliament just changed the law after the fact), and I just like it for some reason I can't quite explain.
>>
File: 1488143981580.jpg (40KB, 640x480px) Image search: [Google]
1488143981580.jpg
40KB, 640x480px
>>2844912

>Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
>Overrated

>MFW

Who the fuck said this?
>>
>>2845051
190 F. is not an industry standard. The company that had the service contract on that MacDonald's advised them that it was a Bad Idea, and refused their technicians to refuse service on any coffee maker turned that high.
>>
>>2846189
>Otherwise, my second favourite would be Bradshaw v Unity Marine. I love it when Judges shit all over lawyers, and this one is legendary for that.
Is that the one where one (or more?) of the briefs were written in crayon? I vaguely remember that name, but I can't connect it to anything.
>>
>>2847028
>citation desperately needed
>>
>>2844910
ofcourse she does, how are you supposed to hold a paper mug with 200 degree coffee in it?
>>
>>2847206
It was part of the discovery during the lawsuit. I believe the docu 'Hot Coffee' references it and provides an online source. Sorry, I am not on my home computer. MacDonald received similar warnings from the company that made the styrofoam cups and the one that made the lids.
>>
>>2847033
That's the one, although it's the Judge saying that their submissions were so shit that both counsels must have drafted their submissions on the back of a handkerchief in crayon, and entered into a secret agreement (complete with hats and secret handshakes) to misguide the court.

I think one counsel didn't even submit any authorities, and the one that did cited only one that was cited incorrectly. It just such a cluster fuck.

Actually, I've just remembered another case from my last moot: Chinese Herald Ltd v New Times Media Ltd. Features a defendant missing 3 or 4 deadlines for defense submissions, representing themselves and claims that another newspaper advocates open murder in the streets. Fucking fantastic read desu.
>>
There was a US Supreme Court decision in the 1890s in which a guy who imported tomatoes into the US said he didn't have to pay tariffs on it because it was a fruit and not a vegetable.

The court decided that a tomato was indeed a fruit, but for the sake of tariffs it was a vegetable.
>>
>>2845221
You're overstating things - the "industry standard" is to brew BETWEEN 180 and 205 and serve BETWEEN ~160 and 180 degrees F. You're also apparently under the impression that "industry standard" is some kind of magical spell that protects you from lawsuits, but it's not; if the temperature you brew your coffee at & the design of the cups poses a substantial hazard, you're going to get sued, and you're going to lose.

Other retailers like Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks and Burger King frequently get sued for serving beverages hot enough to cause severe burns as well. Not just coffee, but tea, hot chocolate, and cider, too. Hell, this isn't even the only McDonalds hot coffee lawsuit - not even close. They don't always lose, but they often do (Or more often, they simply settle out of court for a big fucking chunk of money. The reason the Liebeck lawsuit is famous, by the way, is that McDonalds for some reason refused to do that, and ended up paying hundreds of thousands of dollars more than Liebeck was actually seeking.)

When you serve coffee in a paper cup, meant to be consumed in a car, with a very tight lid that needs to be pried open to add the sugar packets and cream that you provided, IF THAT COFFEE SPILLS (because it is GOING to spill sometimes), it should not cause third degree burns requiring skin grafts. The fact that it's an "industry standard" is not a reliable defense when you're endangering your customers.
>>
>>2844912
>Yiddish speaking socialists
kek
>>
>>2846166
So almost boiling. Because that's normal coffee, right?
>>
I wanna see the pictures.
>>
>>2844874
Could somebody talk of Nuremberg trials?

[spoiler]
>Nuremberg
>berg
>BERG
[/spoiler]
>>
>>2844874
20 lbs of flesh is about 40 cups, or 2.5 gallons. You're telling me 8oz, 1 cup, of near boiling liquid destroyed 2.5 gallons worth of old woman pussy and thighs? Bullshit. Something's not right somewhere OP.
>>
>>2845186
You do realize that 700 accidents in the past 10 years in every McDonalds is going to give you a rate of 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001% accidents per day right?
>>
>>2847883
You do not want to see the images.
>>
>>2847883
>>2847894
McShill is loving it.
>>
>>2847883
>measuring flesh in gallons
Literally what?

But yeah, dude - I'm sure the hospital gave her excessive skin grafts as part of a nefarious plot to screw McDonalds out of $20,000 (the amount she originally asked for), to be divided up equally amongst the doctors.
>>
File: IMG_0538.png (395KB, 750x1334px) Image search: [Google]
IMG_0538.png
395KB, 750x1334px
>it was 200 degrees
>we had a thermometer to measure the temperature at the moment of the burn
>ignoring 200 degrees is the average temperature to brew coffee
>>
>>2847298
Americans have always hated taxes, what do you expect?
>>
File: IMG_0539.jpg (132KB, 800x728px) Image search: [Google]
IMG_0539.jpg
132KB, 800x728px
Gave the Soviets nuclear parity which would ultimately reshape the Cold War and world politics.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_and_Ethel_Rosenberg

>Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were United States citizens who were executed on June 19, 1953 after being convicted of committing espionage for the Soviet Union. They were accused of selling the United States' top secret plans for building a nuclear bomb to the Soviet Union. At the time, the United States was the sole country in the world with the knowledge and resources to build nuclear bombs.

>They also were accused of providing top-secret radar, sonar, and jet propulsion engines to the Soviet Union.[1][2][3]

>Other convicted co-conspirators were imprisoned, including Ethel's brother, David Greenglass, who supplied documents from Los Alamos to Julius and who served 10 years of his 15-year sentence; Harry Gold, who identified Greenglass and served 15 years in Federal prison as the courier for Greenglass. Klaus Fuchs, a German scientist working in Los Alamos and handled by Gold, provided vastly more important information. He served nine years and four months, convicted in Great Britain.[4][5]

I love how wikipedia identifies Fuchs as German in the opening summary but fails to note all the other conspirators were Jews until later. Funny innit?
>>
>>2848006
Are you being obtuse on purpose or by accident?

BREWING coffee at that temperature does not mean that you have to SERVE it at that temperature, and if you do, the container should accommodate that in some way to minimize risk. Yes, beyond just slapping a useless warning on it saying "lol, coffee's hot btw." For instance, designing a lid that you can easily add cream/sugar through without having to prize it off in your car with the cup held inches above your body.

There are steps that McDonalds (and other retailers) could take to prevent incidents like this or at least lessen their frequency and they've chosen not to, because, frankly, it's cheaper (and certainly vastly easier) to just pay a couple tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars every now and then as a settlement then you get hit with this year's lawsuit. Companies make that kind of calculus all the time. But if they do, the lawsuits are part of the package deal, and they are not "frivolous."
>>
File: George_Remus.jpg (15KB, 261x300px) Image search: [Google]
George_Remus.jpg
15KB, 261x300px
>>2844874
Famous bootlegger in Cincinnati Ohio, cops can't do shit to him just pays them off. Wife tries to get a divorce, on the way to finalize the papers George runs her cab off the road and shoots her in broad daylight next to a park next to 20 witnesses. he owned all the cops and got list of jurors and payed them off, didn't go to jail, showed how corrupt system was
>>
>>2848027
I still hear people saying that the Rosenbergs were executed unfairly. Their reasoning usually goes along the lines of 'something something reds under the beds, something something witchhunt'. The underlying attitude being that communist sympathisers act out of good intentions, and if it might sometimes have negative consequences they were just too naive and pure to cope with the real world (while fascist sympathisers are all just evil).

Those people gave the power to build weapons that could kill HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE to a monster like Stalin. They were literally responsible for bringing humanity to the brink of the apocalypse. In my view it was probably the most justified execution in history, ever. And I mean in all of history. The only shame is that their co-conspirators didn't go with them.
>>
>>2845902
kek
>>
>>2848118
>Wife tries to get a divorce, on the way to finalize the papers George runs her cab off the road and shoots her in broad daylight next to a park next to 20 witnesses
In fairness, his wife did steal all his money and hired a hitman to kill him
>>
>>2848178
>Their reasoning usually goes along the lines of 'something something reds under the beds, something something witchhunt'.
Dude, the key witness literally admitted he committed perjury when he gave the testimony that implicated them, and the whole trial was mismanaged in a dozen different ways.

Don't get me wrong, without a doubt Julius was guilty (Ethel, well, that's murky) but the thing about the rule of law in a democratic country is that it's not enough to know that somebody's guilty, you also have to prove that they're guilty in a fair trial, and their trial was botched. That's why people say they were unfairly executed. What's that famous quote about them? They were both guilty and framed?

There's also the fact that the information they passed to the Soviets was of marginal value. Other people passed extremely valuable data to the Soviets, but not them (and even without any of them the Soviets would have eventually developed the bomb regardless). They didn't
>give the power to build weapons that could kill HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE to a monster like Stalin
- with or without the Rosenbergs, the Soviets would have had the bomb about when they did. They simply weren't key players in the atomic espionage program.
>>
File: joaquin-phoenix-shock-signs.gif (932KB, 245x150px) Image search: [Google]
joaquin-phoenix-shock-signs.gif
932KB, 245x150px
>>2844874
>>2845186
>>2846047
>>2846166
>>2847700
>>2847883
>>2847900
>>2847904
>>2847925
>Look up pictures of Stella Liebeck
Oh my God. That poor woman.
>>
>>2848178
They also prevented the US from using nuclear weapons that would have killed "HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE" whenever they felt like it.

What if the Soviets hadn't had nuclear weapons? What would have stopped the US from nuking China during the Korean war? Or Cuba? or the Soviet Union?

The US and possibly NATO being the only nations to have nuclear weapons is more dangerous than the Russians and Chinese having them.
>>
>>2848763
>drink pure vinegar because it's called Vinegar wine
>throat is fucked and have to breathe through a tube
>sue TESCOS for millions despite NHS paying for all bills
>>
>>2844874
25 year rule, motherfucker.
>>
>get boiling hot coffee
>drink it while driving in your car
>spill coffee and burn yourself
>the legislative rather forces warning signs on coffee cups than making it illegal to be a retard at the steering wheel
>>
>>2847894
all accidents are avoidable and unnecessary

you might think differently about this if you had been one of the victims
>>
>>2848178
>Those people gave the power to build weapons that could kill HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE to a monster like Stalin.
remind me again, which countries have ever actually used nuclear weapons in anger? Was it the soviet union under Stalin?
>>
>>2848824
>out of anger

Yeah okay
>>
>>2844976
>>2845006
>>2845017
>>2845022
>>2846047
Everyone knows that that coffee is far too hot to drink safely when it has first been served.

if you're going to order a hot beveragemade with near boiling water (because that is how you make coffee ) you need to take responsibility for making sure you don't get burned.

ANY time you make coffee and pour it in a cup there is potential for you burning yourself.


>>2847225
"paper" coffee mugs aren't just one layer of paper. they're designed to be heat insuators so you can hold it
>>
>>2848817
They weren't driving but who the fuck holds coffee in between their legs, all cars have this thing called a cup holder
>>2848818
There's a difference between complaining about Irish terrorism and faulty wires burning your house down
>>
>>2845207
9/10 post my dude.
>>
>>2847894

You do realize that if I murder one random McDonalds customer every year, that gives you a rate of 0.0000000000000000000000000000001% murders per customer, right?
>>
>>2848006

>brewing = serving

Last night I had a pizza that had to be in the oven at 250 degrees celcius. Guess at what temperature I ate it?
>>
>>2849224
Guess when McDonald's expects you to drink it
>>
>>2844910
The cup design was bad and the jury took into consideration the reasonable amount of fault the plaintiff had in the incident, 20%.

McDonald's had had over 700 prior burn incidents for unreasonably hot coffee, cups too hot to hold, and so on (200f was the official policy, at the time. Milk curdles and it can cause 3rd degree burns. That is unreasonable) which went unheeded and unresolved.

The jury wanted to send a message to companies like McDona;d's, fining them one day's worth of their coffee sales. McDonald's appealed the decision and the judge later lowered the amount of damages, if I remember correctly.

cont.
>>
>>2849776
Do you have your home coffee maker make coffee right into the cup, then take a sip of it moments after the brew is done?
>>
>>2849776

After its served? They have burgers ready and waiting until someone orders them. There is absolutely no need to serve the coffee right after its brewed.
>>
>>2849797
Corporations, fearing further precedent-setting lawsuits against them, launched a massive public relations campaign to belittle and ridicule anyone suing a corporation.

Paying public relations firms to invent terms such as "lawsuit lottery", and lobby for "tort reform", these corporations were able to convince much of the public to support laws directly against their best interests.

Now, many statutory caps exist regarding the amount of damages which can be legally awarded to a victim. This has gone so far that even medical malpractice has come under the "tort reform" umbrella, with hospitals and doctors banding together to lobby for statutory caps in all states, even sending lying letters to their long-time patients, claiming they'd have to close their practice if the patients didn't vote in the reforms.

To put it plainly, you can now have a leg wrongly amputated and be awarded no more than $120 thousand dollars, by law, which the defendant will then appeal and obstruct the awarding of, until you only have $75 thousand, years later, which mostly goes to legal fees.

That's why I disagree with >>2844910
>>
>>2848178
>Those people gave the power to build weapons that could kill HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE to a monster like Stalin
Based on this Oppenheimer should have been executed for giving nuclear power to a monster like Roosevelt
>>
>>2849800
I don't drink coffee, I have got chocolate and tea, I put the kettle to boil, mix it in as soon as it's gone, then take it to my desk and sit down, then drink when needed, testing with a spoon at first.
I fail to see the problem with this method
>>2849809
Then burgers would complain about cold coffee like they complain about not enough ketchup
>>
>>2847883
The only reason it burned her so much in the first place is because it got stuck in her old granny diapers or some shit.
>>
>>2850201
Source but it makes sense
>>
>>2848878
There's a difference between burning your tongue or your skin a little from spilt coffee and suffering severe burns that require skin grafting. Nobody in their right mind would ever imagine that coffee could do that.
>>
>>2850785
Oh yeah m8, I just splash my tea around willy nilly.

Perfectly fucking harmless this boiling water.
>>
>>2850810
That's what I'm saying. People know hot coffee can burn you but, again, we usually associate 3rd degree burns with children spilling boiling water all over themselves and not from a cup of coffee one drinks while on the go.
>>
>>2850757
It wasn't a diaper. She was wearing tight sweatpants, which absorbed the liquid and held it against her skin.
>>
>>2849797
>McDonald's had had over 700 prior burn incidents

Statistically insignificant. 700 over 10 years in every McDonalds restaurant is nothing.

>unreasonably hot coffee

Untrue. We continue to serve coffee today at around 180 (which was the rough temp that the coffee was)

>The jury wanted to send a message to companies l

The Jury were fuckwits who got butthurt because McDonalds didn't show enough compassion to an old lady.
>>
>>2850829
>we usually associate 3rd degree burns with children spilling boiling water all over themselves

Replace child with old lady and that is literally what happened.
>>
>>2845207
Excellent post
>>
>>2850861
...From a kitchen stove with parents not watching, a context where the parents are responsible because they knew the danger but weren't vigilant enough. On the other hand this lady was handed a product she didn't expect to give her third degree burns.

>Statistically insignificant. 700 over 10 years in every McDonalds restaurant is nothing.
So just because something's a statistic means that it's permissible to accept permanent disfigurement in several hundreds of customers and take no action to prevent it?
>>
>>2850895
>>2850853
>>
>>2850853
>>2850895
>700 prior burn incidents
Does the average american mentally develop past the age of 5? I don't normally side with big business on consumer disputes, but this is next level. How exactly is McDick responsible for retarded burger's lack of basic motor functions.
>>
>1994
reported
>>
>>2846166
its like 97 C, dude
>>
>>2848027
>the Jews being overly involved in Communism and Bolshevism is a /pol/ meme
>>
>>2844874
To add to this, she originally seeked only ~$20,000 for the expenses she had to pay for and will pay. Instead McDonald offered $800.

$800 for losing 20% of body weight through skin grafting, 20% of skin/body was burned (groin area).

Were corporates really that inhumane, greedy and arrogant at that time?
>>
>>2848878

There is a world of difference between "hot" coffee and fucking scalding hot coffee.

They could have served it at half the temperature it was and it still would have been "hot coffee" without also melting through your fucking dick in case of an accident.

You're trying to play devil's advocate because this is 4chan, but you're failing.
>>
File: 1487116956101.jpg (30KB, 600x600px) Image search: [Google]
1487116956101.jpg
30KB, 600x600px
>>2852049
Then why is that the temperature used everywhere? Should they have served it at half temperature because it was an old lady?
>>
>>2845007
Do you even know what /biz/ is about? It's a board about virtual currency that was created to stop people spamming /g/.
>>
>>2852064
>Then why is that the temperature used everywhere?

Why do you think this is an argument? Even if it that temperature is used everywhere, fast-food restaurants also get sued for 3rd degree burns due to selling excessively hot beverages to customers all the time.
>>
File: 1487026215673.png (8KB, 420x420px) Image search: [Google]
1487026215673.png
8KB, 420x420px
>>2852082
Your definition of "all the time" being a drop of water in an ocean.

I wonder why the vast majority of people who buy hot coffee don't get burned or bring about lawsuits? Really makes me think. Maybe some people are just responsible coffee handlers I guess.

Hmmmmm
>>
>>2850895
>So just because something's a statistic means that it's permissible to accept permanent disfigurement in several hundreds of customers and take no action to prevent it?
The point of that statistic is to say that burning oneself on the coffee is the equivalent of getting your dick stuck in a fan, an event which is brought about by such a perfect storm of stupidity and misfortune, that one would need to go to absurd lengths to idiot proof everything.
>>
>>2852564
>spilling a drink is analogous to getting your dick stuck in a fan

0.03 nuggets have been deposited in your meal
>>
>>2845200

t. Machiavelli
>>
>>2852102
yes, and the fact that work-related injuries don't happen to everyone at a workplace means that if someone does get injured it was obviously their fault and they have no possible case
>>
>>2852687
> it was obviously their fault

Yes many times that's exactly the case
>>
>>2844910
Look at the pictures of her burnt fanny and tell me she didn't deserve every single cent.
>>
>>2844874
>>Law gets passed making it so that people can't sue for "pain and suffering"
What? You can still do that.
>>
>>2850895
>So just because something's a statistic means that it's permissible to accept permanent disfigurement in several hundreds of customers and take no action to prevent it?
Yes and no. You have to realise that 00 out of all the customers that have been served coffee at McDonalds is so ridiculously insignificant, statistically, that on average a 1-store coffee shop would literally never have an issue with a customer getting burnt even with exactly the same regulations as McDonalds. Obviously everything reasonable should be done to prevent harm to customers, but that statistic is utterly meaningless.
>>
>tfw you will never survive a painful accident because of your own incompetence, convince the courts it was not your fault and live the rest of your life rich as fuck

Everyone knows the risks when buying hot drinks, shit is hot, make sure lid is secure, wait for it to cool down, how can someone who survived life for so long fuck up on the basics of hot is hot?
>>
Tbh it was entirely her dumbass fault for being old and physically inept. She deserved absolutely no recompensation.

>>2845200
>her choice of clothes contributed more to her injuries than cup design.

This. The ol' lady should have knew there was a possibility she'd get her crotch dissolved and had the foresight to put on hot coffee resistant clothing. Like c'mon, it's common fucking sense. Anyone who doesn't meticulously plan out their day to prevent the occasional accident is an idiot.
>>
>>2853270
>Anyone who doesn't meticulously plan out their day to prevent the occasional accident is an idiot.
Dank sarcasm, bro. Then I assume you think it would be just as absurd for McDonalds to go out of their way to lower the risk of such an unlikely accident?
>>
>>2849218
lost my sides
>>
>>2852102
dumb frogposter
>>
>>2853287
Whether the over 700 cases of burns experienced by other customers are statistically insignificant is largely irrelevant. McDonald's had previously settled claims for over 500,000 big ones for injuries sustained from scalding. With that context, are you still going to try to argue that initially refusing to settle for 20,000 for the medical expenses, and then continuously refusing to settle until they lose and a poor old lady's name gets dragged through the mud isn't a dick move on McDonald's part?
>>
All this "SHE SPILLED IT" fixation is just turning a blind eye to the fact that HUMANS ARE ONLY HUMAN and that ACCIDENTS HAPPEN.

The reason the aviation industry is practically the safest in the world is because they design everything from the ground up to take the human factor out of things to the greatest possible extent, with no single point of failure, and make sure the system protects against failure.

Because at the end of the day even veteran professionals with hundreds of thousands of hours of experience are only human and can easily fall victim to simple human mistakes like losing track of how much time has passed, or becoming fixated on solving a single problem at the cost of the greater picture, or being unable to challenge authority, because that's how the human brain is engineered.

We like to think we have total control over ourselves and total free will, and therefore total responsibility over what we do, but we really don't, and well-designed systems should be designed to protect people from their own failures.

One example:

In WW2, B-17s kept crashing on the runway on landing, even though there were no apparent mechanical problem with the planes. An investigation found that on the instrument panel, the levers to control the landing gear operate the flaps were next to each other and effectively identical. Pilots, weary after long flights, were confusing the two, retracting the wheels and crashing. The solution was not to blame the pilots, but to attach a wheel to the handle of the landing lever and a triangle to the flaps lever, making each easily distinguishable by touch alone. The problem was solved.

In this case, human beings’ propensity to make mistakes when they are tired is much harder to fix than the design of levers. People have limits, and many of their mistakes are predictable effects of those limits. Rather than trying to perfect people, it is better to design systems that minimise or mitigate inevitable human mistakes.
>>
>>2853351
nobody cares faggot
>>
>>2849130
Not all cars have cup holders, not all cupholders are usable.
Mine for instance will only hold a soda can or else it gets in the way of my shifting
>>
>>2853374
I'm sure all those people who were burned by McDonalds serving near-boiling drinks for no good reason cared.
>>
>>2853374
Wow, somebody's mad that reality doesn't line up perfectly with their "muh 100% personal responsibility" Ayn Rand fantasy land.
>>
>>2853388
>being triggered that no one wants to read your fucking essay of a post
>>
>>2853395
Keep the [autistic screeching] coming, anon.
>>
>>2853395
Not that guy but I will explain his post to you.

People make mistakes. This is a fact of life. Circumstances influence peoples' propensity to make mistakes despite their experience with a given system.

You can approach this by being a "muh free will and personal responsibility " douchebag, or by adapting the system to minimise mistakes. Aviation being a good example of the latte,r you being a good example of the latter.
>>
>>2853424
You being a good example of the former, of course
>>
Dunno if it's been posted yet, but that one where the old lady put her cat in a microwave to dry it and sued the company always cracks me up.
>>
>>2848027
They were jews but surely that's just a coincidence lol
>>
>>2853424
Doesn't coddling people encourage lazy behavior and overall poorer performance? For example, why should I take the effort to learn proper spelling if the autocorrect is going to fix it all anyway?
>>
File: 1403788948624.jpg (544KB, 1683x1725px) Image search: [Google]
1403788948624.jpg
544KB, 1683x1725px
>>2854004
>Doesn't coddling people encourage lazy behavior and overall poorer performance?
Yea man. Everyone should build there own operating system instead of relying on wangblows or apple. And instead of having a reply button everyone should have to craft packets by hand with the data they want to send. Fucking technology making everyone soft.
>>
>>2844910
Iirc the cup was softer due to the heat, too. You could force some from the top by trying to hold and lift it.
>>
>>2845144
>>2845186
McManager passing by. McDonald's hot brewed beverages including their hot coffee and both sweet, unsweet, and iced coffees are all brewed at 205 degrees F.
>>
>>2847298
Fucking government.

That reminds me of the one where Marvel successfully argued that mutants are not humans, and therefore X-Men toys are not dolls for the sake of taxes.
>>
>>2848780
You're working under the false premise that communists are people
>>
>>2849218
Yes and it's not statistically significant which was the whole point you dumb fucker. They tried to argue that coffee spills were a common mishap, when it really isn't.
>>
>>2854706

You misunderstand the concept of statistical significance.
>>
>>2853224
Again, the damages from such an accident are so egregious and the costs to design a cup are so little that it's unreasonable that it wasn't fixed earlier.
>>
>>2847298
Just decision
>>
Why should they not design the system so that an accidental spill does not cause mutilating injuries? Should we all go back to using straight razors instead of safety razors because it's your own responsibility if you accidentally slash your own throat?
>>
>>2853351
I enjoyed your post Anon.
>>
>>2853351
Edgy frogposters are more interested in finding fault and making sure people are punished for their mistakes than in addressing why mistakes happen.
>>
>>2853374
I cared.
>>
>>2846189
>Bradshaw v Unity Marine
Loling hard at the Court's description of the pleadings.
>>
Of course, if the U.S.A. had a proper single payer health care program none of this would be necessary.
>>
>>2848039
Where do the lines of producer consumer responsibilities meet? Seems most people are trying to justify a near complete lack of end-user responsibility while "da evil corporashuns" should bear it all. Maybe McDonalds should hire black people in their washrooms to wipe cusomters asses after they take a mcdump because the shit stains might ruin their underwear causing them emotional trauma.
>>
Has there ever been a court case where a man was found to be defending his life from a cop whom was proven to be committing a crime at the time of the incident therefore at the moment of the fatal shot the cop was not a cop but in fact a criminal outlaw?
>>
>>2856901
There was a poacher in Idaho who shot and killed two game wardens and pleaded self defense and was successful.. Does that count?
>>
>>2856896
End user responsibility ≠ this coffee is served at a temperature that will mutilate you if your hand slips or a child runs into you while you are holding it or any of a million ways it could spill that have nothing to do with muh personal responsibility.
>>
>>2845207
Sereiously, you are a better man than i, you know your law. Cudous to your education of me and several others.
>>
>>2856896
>Look ma I posted it, my newly minted bowel movement I call a strawman
>>
>>2856930
All people know coffee is hot. It is reasonable to assume a freshly brewed pot of coffee is super hot. Sucks what happened but that old woman was careless.
>>
>>2846953
Realistically, this opinion in Schenck is probably his best known, but it is also one of his worst, for two reasons: first, he poses a hypothetical that almost everyone would agree on (shouting fire in a crowded theater), then uses that to justify banning protesting the draft, a much more contentious and less obvious conclusion. Second, it shows the limits of his legal realism approach, as he points to the political situation and the exigencies of war as justification for jailing people who protest the draft.
>>
>>2848006
Used to work at Starbucks, can confirm coffee is brewed at that temp.

>>2848039
Starbucks makes its lids really tight. However, coffee is coffee and is hot. It is SERVED hot too. If you want cream to cool it down or some ice you can always ask for it free of charge.

>>2849224
If you go to a pizzeria they'll probably bake it at that temp. and then serve it to you. With coffee its a little different, as it has been proven that taste and temperature sometimes go hand in hand (just google this). This is also true with coffee.
>>
>>2856975
Can you not imagine any way a hot liquid could spill from a badly designed cup that makes spills easier other than "well she was careless"?
>>
>>2856975
>Everyone knows knives are sharp. It is reasonable to assume it can stab you. There is no need to make knife handles with proper friction and grip, it's people's fault for being stupid enough to be careless with a knife and stab themselves.
>>
>hurr durr people are dumb so companies need to literally babysit them or they will sue
No one is falling for it >>>/leftypol/
>>
>>2857048
What was so out of place with the cups? Shouldn't we see more accidents if anyone could fall victim of it's poor design? It was a terrible fuck up, but I don't see how the design had anything to do with it.
>>
>>2857162
The company that made the styro cups sent MacD a letter stating the cups in use were inappropriate for that temp. Ditto the lid company. You should see the docu 'Hot Coffee'. It has sources in the special features.

The higher than normal temperature that store was using was part of marketing research project sponsored by Corp.
>>
>>2857156
>Can't argue the point.
>Puts opponent in a group he doesn't like.
>Wins argument.

Teach me your ways.
>>
>>2849776
This, does McDonalds have to instruct people to drink their coffee after it has cooled? Do we need fucking instructions for the obvious. She was 70 something years old, she had decades to learn this.
>>2846051
Well that explains it.
>>
Anyone want to see what 250 degree liquid can do to your body? I have a recent pic of a gnarly burn on my foot. I couldn't imagine getting burned like this on my cocknballs.
>>
>>2856837
It's truly a beautiful ruling
>>
Technically, she was scalded, not burned.
Thread posts: 163
Thread images: 13


[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y] [Search | Top | Home]

I'm aware that Imgur.com will stop allowing adult images since 15th of May. I'm taking actions to backup as much data as possible.
Read more on this topic here - https://archived.moe/talk/thread/1694/


If you need a post removed click on it's [Report] button and follow the instruction.
DMCA Content Takedown via dmca.com
All images are hosted on imgur.com.
If you like this website please support us by donating with Bitcoins at 16mKtbZiwW52BLkibtCr8jUg2KVUMTxVQ5
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties.
Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.
This is a 4chan archive - all of the content originated from that site.
This means that RandomArchive shows their content, archived.
If you need information for a Poster - contact them.