• 23 Oct 2015 2:33 PM | Kathi McKeown

    KDC's Awards Committee is pleased to announce the 2015 KDC awards recipients:

    Diplomat - R. William Tooms of Tooms & Dunaway, PLLC, London

    Defense Lawyer of the Year - Michael J. Schmitt of Porter, Schmitt, Banks & Baldwin, Paintsville

    Young Lawyers of the Year - Jillian M. House of Ward, Hocker & Thornton, Lexington and Scott E. Burroughs of Ward, Hocker & Thornton, Louisville

    Each of these individuals were nominated by the KDC membership and, after careful deliberation, selected by KDC's Award Committee.  They will be recognized at the Awards Luncheon held in conjunction with the 2015 Fall Seminar.

    Congratulations and thanks to everyone who participated in the nomination process.  Your input is greatly appreciated.



  • 22 Oct 2015 3:48 PM | Kathi McKeown

    KDC welcomes its newest member, Sarah Payne-Jarboe of English, Lucas, Priest & Owsley, LLP, Bowling Green.  Ms. Payne-Jarboe graduated from Vanderbilt University Law School and practices in the areas of Business Litigation, Insurance and Environmental Law.  She is sponsored by KDC member, Aaron Smith.

  • 13 Oct 2015 12:49 PM | Kathi McKeown

    Walters Meadows Richardson, PLLC is proud to announce the opening of their Louisville office.  The insurance defense firm expanded to a second office at 904 Lily Creek Road, Ste. 202, Louisville, KY on October 15th, 2015.  Setareh Millerlile, who was licensed in 2013, and Amanda Petrie, licensed in 1995, are working in the Louisville office.  Ms. Millerlile attended the University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law in Tucson, Arizona.  Ms. Petrie attended the University of Kentucky College of Law.  Both Ms. Millerlile and Ms. Petrie currently reside in Louisville.  WMR is excited about the growth of the firm and looking forward to further success.     

  • 11 Oct 2015 12:42 PM | Kathi McKeown

    Ashley Gillenwater Eade is now practicing with Fultz Maddox Dickens, PLC in their Louisville, Kentucky office.

  • 11 Oct 2015 10:36 AM | Kathi McKeown

    KDC welcomes Ashley Willis Ward of Stites & Harbison, Lexington.  Ashley graduated from law school at Oklahoma, practices in the areas of General Liability, Medical Malpractice and Product Liability, and is a member of DRI.

  • 11 Oct 2015 9:31 AM | Kathi McKeown

    The following is from DRI's weekly e-pub, The Voice


    Kentucky Supreme Court Ruling Aligns with DRI Brief in Nissan Motor Company v. Maddox

    Case Involved Appropriateness of Punitive Damages When Product Exceeded Government Safety Standards

    A September 25, 2015, Kentucky Supreme Court decision aligns with the arguments of DRI’s amicus brief in the case of  Nissan Motor Company Ltd. v. Maddox, a case involving a fatal head-on collision caused by a drunken driver who struck a Nissan Pathfinder. DRI’s Center for Law and Public Policy filed the brief in support of Nissan’s position.

    In the accident, the drunk driver who caused the accident was killed. Of the two occupants in the Pathfinder, the driver, who weighed 170 pounds sustained foot and rib injuries. The passenger, Amanda Maddox, who weighed 240 pounds, suffered significant and extensive internal injuries and multiple fractures. Maddox claimed that the seat belt load limiter, designed to reduce chest injuries by spooling extra webbing in a crash, experienced excessive spooling, allowing her to “submarine” under the seat belt, causing the extensive injuries. Maddox claimed that safety tests were done on out-of-date 170 pound crash dummies that didn’t reflect the weight gains of Americans in recent years.

    Nissan maintains that the 2001 Nissan Pathfinder met or exceeded all applicable government safety standards. In fact, the Pathfinder was given a five-star front passenger safety rating by the government’s New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The load limiter, which is not required by government standards, was added by Nissan as an added measure of protection.

    The trial jury found in favor of Maddox and, in addition to the compensatory award, assessed $2.5 million in punitive damages against Nissan. The award was affirmed by the Kentucky Court of Appeals. The Kentucky Supreme Court granted discretionary review as to punitive damages. In Kentucky, punitive damages may be assessed for “gross negligence,” which has been defined as “outrageous” conduct and “wanton or reckless disregard for the safety of other persons… There must be an element of malice or willfulness or such an utter and wanton disregard of the rights of others as from which it may be assumed the act was malicious or willful.”

    In its brief, DRI argues that “When a manufacturer complies with government safety regulations, voluntarily submits its product for even more stringent government safety and passes those tests with flying colors, those acts are fundamentally inconsistent with the sort of “intolerable conduct” that warrants punitive damages. Punitive damages require clear and convincing evidence of a specific intent to injure the plaintiff, or of wanton or reckless disregard the lives, safety, or property of others. As a general matter, compliance with safety regulations proves that a defendant acted with regard for the safety of others.”

    The Kentucky Supreme Court agreed saying “the evidence presented at trial fails to indicate that such an outcome was the result of Nissan's reckless or wanton disregard for Amanda or those similarly situated.”

    DRI’s was authored by Virginia Hamilton Snell of Wyatt Tarrant & Combs, LLCin Louisville, Kentucky, and Curt Cutting and Eric S. Boorstin of Horvitz & Levy LLP in Encino, California. To read DRI’s brief in its entirety, click here.

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  • 30 Sep 2015 10:44 AM | Kathi McKeown

    KDC welcomes its newest member, Kristen Hannah Fowler of Napier Gault Schupbach & Stevens, PLC, Louisville.  Ms. Stevens is a graduate of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law and practices in the areas of Medical Malpractice and Nursing Home litigation.  She is sponsored by KDC member, Clay Stevens.

  • 25 Sep 2015 12:45 PM | Kathi McKeown

    Effective October 5, 2015, O'Bryan, Brown & Toner, PLLC's Louisville office will be located 401 S. Fourth Street, Suite 200, Louisville, Kentucky 40202

  • 21 Sep 2015 3:17 PM | Kathi McKeown

    Don't forget to check out our fantastic sponsors as your legal needs arise.  Click the "Sponsors" tab for a full list of sponsors; click their logo and it will take you directly to their website.

  • 17 Sep 2015 5:15 PM | Kathi McKeown

    KDC members, Barry Miller, Casey Stansbury and Christina Vessels are now practicing with the law firm of Manzec Raskin & Ryder, Lexington.


 
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