Posted On: October 30, 2008

San Diego Personal Injury Lawyers

Based in San Diego’s North County, Randy Walton and Scott Barber represent individuals all over San Diego County in matters of personal injury and wrongful death. Whether you live in Escondido or El Cajon or Chula Vista, or anywhere else, Randy and Scott can help you obtain monetary justice for the injuries you have suffered.

Personal injuries, or course, can arise in a variety of circumstances, but usually occur due to car accidents, construction mishaps, dog bites, slip-and-fall incidents, medical malpractice, nursing home abuse, or assault and battery. For over a decade our attorneys have been handling claims on behalf of injured people, and all cases are taken on a contingency fee basis. That means that we do not earn a fee unless there is a monetary recovery.

For more about our firm visit our website at www.WaltonBarber.com.

Home and hospital visits are available, and consultations about cases are always free.

Posted On: October 28, 2008

Food Poisoning: New Case Law Allows Inferences

San Diego victims of food poisoning, who suffer personal injury as a result, can now prove the cause of their illness through inferences. In Sarti v Salt Creek, Ltd. [No. G037818. Fourth Dist., Div. Three. Oct. 27, 2008.] a California Court of Appeal held that a plaintiff may prove food poisoning via an inference that the food caused the illness.

The Sarti plaintiff ate raw Ahi tuna at the defendant restaurant. She became nauseous and chilled the next day and then developed diarrhea which continued for the next ten days. She soon was unable to move her legs and having a hard time focusing her eyes. She was taken to the hospital where a neurologist diagnosed a variant of guillain-barre syndrome (a disease that damages peripheral nerves). She was tested, and found to have campylobacter bacteria. Expert testimony would later indicate that Sarti's guillain-barre was an idiosyncratic immuno-suppressant reaction to the constant diarrhea brought on from campylobacter.

Ms. Sarti, who was about 21 years old at the time she came down ill, never completely recovered. She had to use a walker for eight months, and to this day retains only about 40 percent of what would have been her normal endurance.

After trial, the jury returned a verdict of $725,000 in economic damages and $2.5 million in pain and suffering. The judge, after announcing he agreed with the jury's decision, nonetheless overturned the verdict stating he felt obliged to follow the holding of Minder v. Cielito Lindo Restaurant (1977) 67 Cal.App.3d 1003. Minder held that a plaintiff may not prove a food poisoning case by an inference that the food caused the particular illness.

The Sarti court examined the reasoning behind Minder and held that it was erroneous and no longer good law. In particular, the court found that the Minder court had misinterpreted prior cases in reaching its holding. As a result, plaintiffs may now prove the cause of their food poisoning via a reasonable inference that the food eaten was contaminated. This greatly reduces the burden on those who have become ill as a result of poor sanitary practices at a restaurant.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 27, 2008

North County Cities Ranked for Traffic Safety

Car accident injury and fatality statistics from 2007 were released yesterday by the California Office of Traffic Safety, and show a wide disparity among Northern San Diego County cities.

Escondido seemed to fair the worse, ranking third highest among 52 cities of similar size in alcohol-related accidents per vehicle mile. Faring better was Carlsbad, who ranked 41st lowest in the same category. The ranking are based on the number of people injured or killed in automobile accidents each year.

The purpose of the study was to assist cities in identifying problems with traffic safety, and to help the state in assigning federal tax dollars to the cities that need it most.

A copy of the study can be found here (.pdf).

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 21, 2008

Cheerleading Injuries Cause for Concern

A wrongful death lawsuit was filed yesterday for the death of a 14-year-old girl who died after she ruptured her spleen while perform a cheerleading stunt. Studies have found that over 16,000 cheerleaders are injured every year, and cheerleading accounted for half of all "catastrophic" injuries suffered by female high school athletes over the last 25 years.

The $2 billion cheerleading industry has almost no standards or oversight, according to consumer attorneys, yet encourages and promotes activities that are inherently dangerous, including stunts where young girls are thrown more than 15 feet off the ground. Moreover, cheerleading is now popular with girls much younger than high school aged, and the level of difficulty of cheerleading stunts has grown more extreme in recent years. There are numerous documented incidents of brain injuries, fractures, and other debilitating injuries resulting from cheerleading stunts.

According to cheer safety advocate Kimberly Archie, "the state of cheerleading today is a national crisis." Archie started the National Cheer Safety Foundation to promote more regulation and awareness of the dangers. It's not uncommon for high schools and cheerleading school to hire "coaches" whose only experience in the industry is that they were cheerleaders themselves. And frequently they are hired shortly after high school and have little or no formal training.

CBS recently did a story on this very subject:


The personal injury and wrongful death law firm of Walton Law Firm LLP represents clients throughout Southern California, including the counties of San Diego, Riverside, Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Ventura. Contingency fee arrangements available and consultations are always free.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 16, 2008

Hospitals and Physicians Prevented From “Balance Billing”

Personal injury lawyers frequently spend significant time every case dealing with medical liens. These liens can be asserted by any medical provider or insurer who provided or paid for care, but has not been paid for such care. Usually the lien attaches if there is a monetary award from a third party.

Under a new California law, hospitals and physicians are prevented from billing the patient for sums that are not paid by insurance. "Balance billing" occurs when an insurance provider, under a contract with a hospital or physician, only pays a percentage of the total bill. In some cases, the hospital or physician would then go after the patient for any balances owed, even though the patient has full health coverage.

If this sounds surprising, or unfair, it is. Imagine being a faithful insured, paying your premiums, and then having to go the emergency room only to find that your insurance company won't pay for all of the treatment. This is the surprise many personal injury victims get after suffering a harm.

This is really a dispute between hospitals and insurance companies. The insurance companies claim that the hospitals over-charge for the services provided, and the hospitals claim that insurance companies usually pay far less than what is reasonable and customary. The victim in this immoral tussle is too often the patient.

This is a good law that no doubt will be promptly attacked by both the insurance companies and the hospitals.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 9, 2008

Motorcycle Accidents and New Riders

Fatal motorcycle accidents and new riders just seem to go together far too often. I don't know about you, but as a long-time rider I always notice reports of motorcycle accidents in the paper when I read it each morning. (That and my mom still clips them out and sends them to me hoping I'll stop riding. 23 years later you'd think she'd learn.)

I've noticed a disturbing trend the last few days: new riders dying in accidents involving high-speed and super bikes.

This morning's paper contained a perfect example of what I'm talking about. A 24 year-old motorcyclist died yesterday on Sabre Springs Pkwy. He was traveling at high-speeds, estimated to be in excess of 100 mph, when he lost control, rode up the center median and hit a tree. According to the police, "[t]he impact disintegrates the motorcycle and the motorcyclist was thrown onto the pavement. He was pronounced dead at the scene."

According to the police he had received his motorcycle learner's permit 5 days prior to the accident. What was he riding? A 2007 Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Folks, if you're just learning to ride, please learn on something with less power than a super bike. Get an SV650, a Ninja 250, a Harley Sportster, etc. Something that's manageable while you learn to control the throttle and how to ride a motorcycle. And take the MSF course.

Please.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 7, 2008

Fatal Bus Accident Driver Had History of Negligent Driving

The driver of a bus that crashed last Sunday in Williams, California had a long criminal history and several motor vehicle offenses. Despite this history, he was allowed to drive a busload of senior citizens traveling to a casino when he veered off the road and into a ditch. Eight people died in the accident, and at least thirty were injured.

Though critically injured, the driver, Quintin Watts, has been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence. In addition to Watts questionable past, the bus he was operating belonged to a corporation who state registration has lapsed, and the bus itself had invalid license plates and ID numbers.

Remarkably, the driver's mother even feared for the passengers when she heard her son would be carrying passengers. She told reporters she and her husband did not want her son driving because, "he wasn't the best driver."

Watts has a conviction for failing to wear a seat belt, and was also was convicted of speeding and failing to appear in court on Dec. 30, 2005, and Feb. 22, 2006.

Walton Law Firm LLP represents victims of auto accidents, dog bites, construction accidents, and all other personal injury cases, including those who have suffered wrongful death.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: October 2, 2008

Lawsuit Filed In San Diego Walkway Collapse

Personal injury victims of the walkway collapse in San Diego on August 28th have filed the first lawsuit arising from the accident. The lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles on behalf of Tyrone and Tina Allen, despite the fact the couple lives in San Diego. The lawsuit names Paramount Scaffold Company of Carson, and Allgire General Contractors, of Carlsbad, as defendants.

According to reports, Mr. Allen suffered significant and paralyzing injuries in the accident, and remains hospitalized at Scripps Mercy in Hillcrest. A total of 16 people were injured in the incident, which was caught on tape (we've blogged about this previously, click here to see the video).

No doubt there will be more lawsuits filed as a result of this accident, and the cases may very well be consolidated into a single case in San Diego. We'll keep updating this story.

Bookmark and Share