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Casagrande Introduces Legislation To Nullify Absurd Texting Decision

casagrandeAssemblywoman Caroline Casagrande announced yesterday that she will introduce legislation that will protect the sender of a text message from civil liability if the receiver of the text is involved in a car accident while reading the message.

Thank goodness, and let’s hope that legislation get fast tracked

In what can only be considered a gift to the overpopulated legal community, the Appellate Division of New Jersey’s Superior Court last week ruled that senders of text messages could be liable for accidents that occur while the receivers are reading them “when a texter knows or has special reason to know that the intended recipient  is driving and is likely to read the text message while driving, the texter has  a duty to users of the public roads to refrain from sending the driver a text at  that time.”

What is a “special reason to know?”  That is new legal distinction that will have to be defined in another expensive court decision, unless Casagrande’s common sense legislation is passed and signed into law before the next ambulance chaser gets his law school buddy on the bench to define it.

Imagine the cases, and legal fees, this new legal liability will create.  Imagine the increases in insurance premiums, auto, homeowner’s, and business liability, this will cause.

If a spouse texts “pick milk” to his or her significant other during rush hour, and the receiving spouse gets into a car accident, the couple’s homeowner’s insurance company will get dragged into the law suit filed by the ambulance chaser.

Imagine the deposition questions asked at $250+ per hour per attorney:

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Posted: September 5th, 2013 | Author: | Filed under: Caroline Casagrande, Lawsuit Reform, NJ Courts, NJ Judiciary, NJ State Legislature | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Vote in NJLRA’s Most Obnoxious Lawsuit of 2010 Poll

From the New Jersey Lawsuit Reform Alliance Blog:

The contenders:

 

A teen intentionally drives her car into oncoming traffic, killing a pregnant mom and her 13-year-old son – and then sues the surviving family members for her ‘mental anguish’;

A drunk New Jersey man drives crashes his motorcycle into a car, and then sues the bar for his injuries;

A customer spills hot tea on herself and sues Starbucks;

A fast food restaurant manager sues McDonald’s for making him fat.

Click here to cast your vote!

Posted: December 22nd, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Lawsuit Reform, NJLRA | Tags: , | Comments Off on Vote in NJLRA’s Most Obnoxious Lawsuit of 2010 Poll