The record shows that [minor plaintiff] was afflicted with TEN on January 5, 1998, when she was first examined by [treating physician] and before she was given Children’s Motrin by her mother.Slip op. at 12 (emphasis added).
[Gram] testified that she “went to the medicine cabinet and [] saw Children’s Motrin.” After reading the label on the box for dosage instructions [and presumably nothing else], she “yelled over the balcony to [mom] that I was going to give [minor plaintiff] . . . Cold Formula3 Children’s Motrin and [everybody at the party] were all talking and music and everything. I just assumed [mom] heard me.Slip op. at 8 (footnote omitted). Yeah, right. Turns out that this type of Motrin wasn’t even on the market back then. Id. at 8 n.3.
- “[Minor plaintiff’s] medical records do not mention anyone giving her Children’s Motrin in [the time period Gram testified about]. This is highly significant because the [treating physicians] urgently sought any information of this nature from family members, including [Gram], when [minor plaintiff] was first admitted to that hospital.” Slip op. at 15.
- The only supposed “corroboration” for Gram’s story was “inadmissible . . . hearsay” that one doctor supposedly heard from another doctor who had since died. Id. at 15-16. The deceased doctor's written records did not document the information supposedly conveyed. Id. at 16.
- “[Plaintiff mom] did not discover [Gram’s] role in this case until October 2006” – eight years after the fact. Id.
- Gram’s providential testimony appeared only after the timing problem threatened plaintiffs’ case. “[Gram] testified that when [plaintiff mom] called her about this, [Gram] told her: ‘Don't you remember that I gave [minor plaintiff] the Children's Motrin [earlier?]' Plaintiffs thereafter filed an amended complaint and amended interrogatories, and [plaintiff mom] gave another deposition, imparting this new information.” Id. at 16-17.
- Mom and Gram tried to blame the court for the eight-year gap. “[T]hey both responded in a manner that suggested they were legally prevented from doing so. This was not the case.” Id. at 17. There was no “gag order” or “other legal bar” during Gram’s eight years of silence. Id.
- Gram couldn’t keep her story straight. “At her deposition, [Gram] testified that she had given [minor plaintiff] one dose; at trial, she testified that she probably gave her two doses.” Id.
Zundel thus carries a lesson (beyond those implicated by Ethical Rule 3.3(a)(3)) – that we on this blog shouldn’t take everything we do here too seriously. The law in all its wonders is great as far as it goes. But sometimes, perhaps more often than our posts make it appear, cases turn on the original and still most basic function of a jury trial: determining who’s telling the truth.
2 comments:
I read this slip op. before reading your analysis. The tone of your writing here leads me to question your judgment a little. Sure, the case appears to have turned on the jury's assessment of the grandmother's credibility, in the face of facts that significantly undermined that credibility. Still, if I were a juror on a case breaking the rule about looking up information about the drug on the internet and came across your post, your use of flip terms such as "fun", "dollar signs", "Gram", "aim was bad", "oops", "scramble time" and "bad witnesses" in connection with an infant child blinded and burned by a rare disease would seriously prejudice me against you and other defense attorneys. I would wonder, are they all this cold and amused in the face of such a tragedy, regardless of whether it was caused by the drug? As a client, I might wonder if your clearly superior command of legal research would outvalue your sometimes intemperate choice of words.
I remember my father-in-law telling me that managers at the Downsville dam would be sure to order sufficient oil for the machinery and for the worker's cars, as steeling the oil was acceptable to the otherwise honest men. So it is with asbestos claims, claims against drug companies, and the first responder claims in New York City. It is a fascinating phenomenon.
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