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#1
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Patch lawsuit re-visited: A RATIONAL basis for a verdict
To return for a moment to the Brandon Patch lawsuit, which ended in a "failure to warn" verdict against H & B that seems irrational to most of us:
If the bat involved in the Patch incident was in fact a BESR-certified bat, here's the case I would have made against the bat-maker: A. Minimization of risk was the primary stated reason of the NCAA for enacting the BESR standard. NCAA documents prove that, first and foremost, BESR was a bat-safety std. B. From the outset, bat-makers competed to exceed the original intentions and performance thresholds of the BESR bat-safety test. [see note below] C. Therefore, the bat that generated Patch's injury was intentionally designed to exceed a safety std. intended to curb exit velocity and increase response times for pitchers. D. BESR bats should be affixed with following warning label: "Warning: This bat has been designed to exceed the BESR bat-safety test." _________________________________ Note from "B." above: From the outset, bat-makers sought to out-fox and out-perform the BESR bat-safety std. '"Meanwhile, George Manning of Louisville Slugger openly admits that 'We became aware of how they were going to test, and our goal was to satisfy what players wanted and still pass the test.' .... 'The test is flawed,' Manning says, 'but it isn't clear to them [the NCAA] that the test is flawed.' " " [ESPN.com, "Bat controversy lingers over NCAA", 3/19/00] http://espn.go.com/gen/s/2000/0329/453294.html
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Skip Last edited by skipper5; 11-06-2009 at 09:50 AM. |
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#2
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You wouldn't have been able to make that argument.
The plaintiff's attorney filed a motion that was sustained by the court that there would be no mention of BPF, BESR or BBCOR before we went to trial. So we could not say our bats met a safety standard. Just for clarification, George Manning was talking about the machine invented by Steve Baum (Baum Hitting Machine), not the BESR. At the time the NCAA was using his machine to administer the test and it was flawed. Last edited by BMH; 11-06-2009 at 01:16 PM. |
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#3
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I like your argument, but still feel that it should reasonably fail in that the person intended to read the warning is the batter, not the fielder. Perhaps a third party beneficiary argument could be made, but I still think that the lawsuit should have been based upon a theory of intentional infliction of emotional distress, straight negligence or gross negligence. The bat manufacturer knew, or reasonably should have known, the purpose of the standards set forth and its intent to protect fielders. Nevertheless, they intentionally manufactured bats which could circumvent the regulations. As such, they should be liable. That's my two cents on a better theory of the lawsuit.
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#4
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A bat company pres. wrote:
"Using the variables in different combinations can create a bat that performs better on the field while passing the test.... The job of the organizing bodies is to level the playing field by providing rules and the job of the designer is to beat (not break) the rule in a way that give the player the edge they are looking for and stay within the rules." "The problem (or advantage, depending which side of the fence you are on) is that the administrators are not technically apt enough to stay ahead of the design engineers." IOW, a bat designer's goal is to surpass bat-safety performance regulations, but without getting caught (which would keep the bat off the market). I despise lawsuits, bubblewrap, etc. But I'm beginning to see a legitimate basis for batted-ball litigation. Parents give their informed consent for their sons' participation in at-risk activities. Bat-makers intentionally design their best bats to out-perform (on the field) bat-safety regulations (that bats conform to in the lab). Are most parents of pitchers aware of this? I doubt it. Therefore, properly informed consent is in most instances lacking. If my own son got clocked by a batted-ball, I would have no moral basis whatsoever for a lawsuit. My consent is fully informed.
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Skip Last edited by skipper5; 11-06-2009 at 01:56 PM. |
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#5
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My car is designed to drive speeds in excess of all posted speed limits. My car has no warning system (or stickers) for letting other drivers know this. If I am speeding, hit another car and kill the driver, is the car company at fault?
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#6
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Does this "Bat Company President" have a name?
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#7
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#8
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The automobile lobby, however, would set up a web-site that maintained that all cars go the same speed, and that there is no correlation between mph and the frequency and severity of auto accidents.
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Skip Last edited by skipper5; 11-06-2009 at 03:09 PM. |
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#9
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#10
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Sometimes I get complaints from parents when I run sports activities and ask them to sign a nastily worded waiver. So I back off and put something more pleasant.
But after reading the baloney about this bat suit and about a recent little league sliding suit I am probably going to go back to the nasty wording which basically says: "Your child might die doing this activity and you waive you're right to sue me." |
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#11
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From West.net: INTENTIONAL INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS The elements of a prima facie case for the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress are: (1) outrageous conduct by the defendant; (2) the defendant's intention of causing or reckless disregard of the probability of causing emotional distress; (3) the plaintiff's suffering severe or extreme emotional distress; and (4) actual and proximate causation of the emotional distress by the defendant's outrageous conduct. (Alcorn v. Anbro Engineering, Inc (1970) 2 Cal.3d 493, 497-498 Because #1 is the biggest stretch, I will take that last. #2: It is well known among bad manufacturers that the BESR parameters were put in place for the protection of fielders by putting limitations on exit speed. It would be easy to establish that the bat companies intend to manufacture bats to technically passed the test, but violate the intent of the regulations. This is an action in reckless disregard of the probability of causing the consequent emotional distress. #3: A given when a child is killed #4: With expert witnesses, it can easily be argued that, if the bat were not "hot" in violation of the regulations, the child would have had enough reaction time to avoid the injury involved. #1: An argument could certainly be made that intentionally circumventing safety rules to make a more desirable bat is outrageous. Nevertheless, whether a jury could buy intentional infliction of emotional distress or not, they could easily go for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
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#12
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Is there such a thing as negligent infliction of emotional distress?
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#13
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Yeah, I know I'd get some feedback if I wrote anything even remotely nasty to the parents. I'm pretty careful in my wording of emails, etc., to my teams.
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#14
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I should add that, even though is a cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress stands a much lesser chance of winning, plaintiffs' attorneys have a duty to their client include any reasonable cause of action in the complaint that they file, and I guarantee you intentional infliction of emotional distress would be included in a complaint under the circumstances. The reason you will often see intentional torts in complaints is that it opens the door for punitive damages. If the jury awards punitive damages, the award to the plaintiff can be astronomical.
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#15
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Yes. Most any complaint that has a cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress will also have a cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress, as is much easier to establish negligent infliction.
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#16
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Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. |
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#17
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Do you have any opinions on this matter or are you just interested in mine?
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#18
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I made sure I didn’t say anything about LS. Why did you? Quote:
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I saw what you were responding to, but I’m still trying to figure out what you’re saying. I get the strong feeling you want to encourage people to take legal action, and are attempting to guide them in how to do that. Quote:
That might be simplistic and naive, but I honestly get pretty fed up with people who give their informed consent for their child to be put in what they believes to be harm’s way, then want everyone else to say the bats are a bad thing so they can feel good about themselves. What a crock of crap! All that’s happening, is that people are arguing over the definition of dangerous. Rather than attempt to get it defined so some substantive compromise could be accomplished, all that happens is a bunch of hollering from both sides.
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Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. |
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#19
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There is the bat. But there is also the supplements. IMHO these are about equal in determining danger from a batted ball with aluminum.
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#21
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Following that thought for a moment, why isn’t anyone taking any kind of shots at CR, USSSA, or any of the other organizations who have done literally nothing ON THEIR OWN for the safety of players. The best example I can think of is pitch counts. Didn’t say you shouldn’t mention their name. Just said I wasn’t referring to them. Quote:
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But, while I happen to believe they are to some degree more dangerous, I try to keep in mind that not every non-wood bat is one of the super hot variety, and not every player has access to one either. I prefer to try to keep things in perspective so that I can make at least semi-intelligent decisions. Intellectually I know that a non-wood bat has the potential to hit a baseball hard enough to kill a human being, given a specific set of circumstances. But, I also know the same is true for wood. So, while I know there is some higher degree of potential danger in non-wood, I don’t believe that additional degree of danger is enough for me to get ulcers worrying about it. What I do get ulcers about though, is that I believe the performance of SOME non-wood bats is enough that it skews the balance of the offence vs the defense in a baseball game, and that can easily be proved/disproved with empirical data. To me that threatens the integrity of the game, much more than the safety of the players. Quote:
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What we’re really talking about here is the rules, and that the different baseball organizations all feel the need to have different ones. While no one other than MLB in the entire world plays by the Official Baseball Rules, everyone uses them as the basis for their rule set. Sadly, there’s nothing about non-wood bats in OBR because only wood is allowed. That means every other organization can develop their own rules, and that’s exactly what’s happened. If those organizations really wanted to make a huge leap forward for the game, they’d get together and decide on a basic rule set, and make sure there was a bat standard in it, so everyone would be using the same one.
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Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. |
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#22
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#23
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Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. |
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