Tuesday, July 1, 2025

BRING YOUR CASE TO A CLOSE WITH CUMMINS MEDIATION

     BRING YOUR CASE TO A CLOSE



DANIEL E. CUMMINS, ESQ.

570-319-5899

dancummins@CumminsLaw.net


Contact CUMMINS MEDIATION SERVICES to set up your Mediation to bring your case to a close.

Who better to get an insurance company to increase their award
than the writer of Tort Talk and
an insurance defense attorney trusted by carriers to get them out of trouble?

HERE'S A SAMPLING OF JUST SOME OF THE FIRMS
WHO PREVIOUSLY SECURED SETTLEMENTS AT MEDIATIONS WITH CUMMINS MEDIATION SERVICES:

HOURIGAN, KLUGER & QUINN
LENAHAN & DEMPSEY
ABRAHAMSEN, CONABOY & ABRAHAMSEN
POWELL LAW
CEFALO & ASSOCIATES
LAW OFFICES OF JAMES D. FAMIGLIO
FOLEY LAW FIRM
NEEDLE LAW
OSTROFF GODSHALL
FISHER & FISHER
BLAKE & WALSH
CAPUTO & MARRIOTTI
HAGGERTY, HINTON & COSGROVE
SLUSSER LAW
VINSKO & ASSOCIATES
BISCONTINI LAW FIRM
MECADON LAW
LAW OFFICES OF LEO JACKSON
SOBO & SOBO

MARKS O'NEILL, O'BRIEN, DOHERTY & KELLY
RAWLE & HENDERSON
POST & SCHELL
SWARTZ CAMPBELL
BENNETT BRICKLIN & SALTZBURG
CIPRIANI & WERNER
MINTZER SAROWITZ, ZERIS, LEDVA & MEYERS
SHAY, SANTEE, KELHART & DESCHLER, LLC
McCORMICK & PRIORE
THOMAS, THOMAS & HAFER
SCANLON, HOWLEY & DOHERTY
MARGOLIS EDELSTEIN
MARSHALL DENNEHEY
ELLIOTT GREENLEAF
COLEMAN LAW OFFICES
PennDOT
SELECTIVE INSURANCE IN-HOUSE COUNSEL OFFICE
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE IN-HOUSE COUNSEL
TRAVELERS INSURANCE IN-HOUSE COUNSEL

Local Rule Adopted in Monroe County Regarding Submission of Exhibits at Hearings and Trials (Effective Today, July 1, 2025)


Here is a LINK to the new Monroe County Local Rule of Administration 5103, entitled “Custody of Exhibits. Special Provisions,” which goes into effect today, July 1, 2025.

This rule requires lawyers to put the exhibits that they intend to introduce during their hearing or trial on a USB flash drive.

The attorney presenting the exhibits will then either display the exhibit up on a screen in the courtroom, or provide paper copies of exhibits as duplicates of what is on the flash drive.

In any event, under the rule, the flash drive will be the exhibit that is introduced.

Under the rule, the presiding judge may waive the flash drive submission requirement for good cause shown.

It is noted that the rule has technical requirements for the maximum size of each file on the drive, that being 50 MB.

The rule also requires lawyers to save each exhibit as a separate file on the flash drive.

If an exhibit exceeds the 50 MB limit, it has to be split up.

The rule also requires that the flash drive have a separate file for an index of exhibits.

The rule otherwise specifies what audio, video, documents and photograph files must be used.

It has been reported that the rationale for the rule is that, on appeal, the record before the trial court will be transmitted electronically to the appellate court. Absent the use of the above procedure, any paper exhibits would have to be digitized by court staff before the record could go up on appeal, which puts a burden on the courthouse workers, especially when there is a large trial record.

It has been noted that the court is also trying to reduce paper storage in the courthouse.

Again, this rule goes into effect on July 1, 2025.

Note also that a similar local rule is already in effect in the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas.

Monday, June 30, 2025

Nursing Home's Effort to Have Lawsuit Dismissed By Virtue of an Arbitration Clause Denied


In the case of Perry v. Saber Healthcare Holdings, LLC, No. 2024-CV6608 (C.P. Lacka. Co. June 6, 2025 Nealon, J.), Judge Terrence R. Nealon of the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas addressed various Preliminary Objections filed in a nursing home malpractice case.

According to the Opinion, the Plaintiff sustained injuries as a result of a fall.  Thereafter, the Plaintiff, through his daughter pursuant to her Power of Attorney, asserted claims of negligence, breach of contract, and other claims against the facility.

Among other issues, the Defendant facility raised Preliminary Objections asserting that the cause of action filed was required to instead be submitted to binding arbitration pursuant to an arbitration agreement executed by the daughter at the time the father was admitted to the facility.

The court ruled that, since the Power of Attorney that the father provided to his daughter expressly stated that the daughter was not authorized to enter into any arbitration agreement on his behalf with any skilled nursing facility or personal care home, the daughter could not bind her father to any arbitration agreement.

Judge Terrence R. Nealon
Lackawanna County 


Accordingly, Judge Nealon found that there was no enforceable arbitration agreement in place. As such, the Preliminary Objection seeking to have this case transferred to arbitration was overruled.

The court otherwise ruled that certain negligence allegations submitted on behalf of the Plaintiff were not barred by the gist of the action doctrine even though some of the claims presented in this case were based in contract. The court found that the claim for negligent hiring, supervision and retention were collateral to the contract and not contingent on the breach of any terms of the admission agreement.

The court otherwise sustained the demurrer filed against the Plaintiff's claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress given that the Complaint did not allege conduct that was so outrageous in character and extreme in degree as to exceed all possible bounds of decency and be regarded as atrocious and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.

Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.

Trial Court Judge Addresses Post-Trial Issues Including Issues With Verdict Slip and With Bifurcation of Trial


In the case of Major v. Five Star Equipment, Inc., No. 2020-CV-3550 (C.P. Lacka. Co. May 9, 2025 Nealon, J.), the court addressed several post-trial issues after a defense verdict in a case involving a pedestrian who was hit by a motor vehicle.

Of note, the court addressed various issues raised with regards to the content of the Verdict Slip and factual cause questions, as well as with respect to the bifurcation of the liability and damages phases of the trial.

After providing a thorough review of the applicable law, Judge Terrence R. Nealon of the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas ruled that there were no errors with regards to the content of the Verdict Slip and the various questions presented to the jury on that slip.

The court otherwise noted that the bifurcation of the trial was warranted under the circumstances presented in the case, including the fact that counsel had underestimated the number of days it would take to try the case during the pre-trial proceedings.

Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.


Source: “The Legal Intelligencer Weekly Case Alert” on www.Law.com (June 4, 2025).

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Court Rules that Defendant's Summary Judgment on Plaintiff's Claims Also Eradicates Cross-claims by Co-Defendant


In the case Robinson v. Phila. Intern. Airport, 263 C.D. 2002 (Pa. Cmwlth. June 9, 2025 Fizzano Cannon, J., McCullough, J., and Hannah Levitt, J.) (Op. by Fizzano Cannon, J.), the court granted the interlocutory appeal and addressed Motions In Limine in a municipal liability personal injury case.

This matter arose out of a slip and fall incident at the Philadelphia International Airport.  The Plaintiff apparently took a trip prior to her flight.

In this appeal, the court noted that, where summary judgment had been granted against the Plaintiffs’ claims against the municipal Defendant, that Defendant could not be held liable for purposes of contribution or indemnity relative to the Co-Defendants.

The court more specifically noted that, where the municipal Defendant had secured summary judgment on the common law ground that it did not have actual or constructive notice of the condition on the land that the Plaintiff claimed was responsible for her injury, that Defendant likewise could not be held liable for indemnity on the cross-claims asserted by the Co-Defendants.

The Commonwealth Court additionally noted that, because the non-municipal Defendant did not oppose the municipal Defendant’s summary judgment motion against the Plaintiff’s claims, which claims were also the basis of the non-municipal Defendant’s crossclaims, that non-municipal Defendant was found to have waived any right to contest the granting of summary judgment.

That waiver and the entry of summary judgment precluded the non-municipal Defendant from later moving to have the municipal Defendant added to the verdict sheet under the Fair Share Act. This was so because the municipal Defendant, by virtue of summary judgment decision, had already been adjudicated as not being a joint tortfeasor with the Co-Defendant relative to the claims of the Plaintiff.

The Court ruled that a subsequent trial judge’s Order granting the non-municipal Defendant’s Motion In Limine to allow evidence against the municipal Defendant and to place it on the verdict sheet therefore violated the coordinate jurisdiction doctrine. As such, the court on appeal ruled that the non-municipal Defendant could certainly assert that it was not liable on the Plaintiff’s claims at trial, but that Defendant could not argue that the municipal Defendant was liable.

Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.


I send thanks to Attorney James M. Beck of the Philadelphia office of the Reed Smith law firm for bringing this case to my attention.


Source of image:  Photo by Alex P on www.pexels.com.

Appellate Court Addresses Applicability if an Absolute Auto Exclusion in a Business General Liability Policy


In the case of Chris Eldredge Containers v. Crumb & Foster Specialty Ins., 2025 Pa. Super. 92 (Pa. Super. April 24, 2025 Lazarus, P.J., King, J., Lane, J.) (Op by. Lazarus, P.J.), the court addressed a coverage issue in this declaratory judgment action involving various coverage issues, including the applicability of an automobile exclusion in a business policy in a case involving an accident that involved a service truck driven by an employee of the carriers' insured.

The appellate court noted that it was proceeding under a de novo standard of appeal, meaning that it was not limited by the trial court's rationale and could affirm or reverse the trial court decision on any basis.   

The Pennsylvania Superior Court ruled that the absolute auto exclusion, which excluded coverage for bodily injury under the policy for any incident arising out of the use of an auto, was found to be ambiguous in the context of this policy and was, therefore, found to be not enforceable.

The Superior Court additionally ruled that the ownership clause in the absolute auto exclusion was found to be ambiguous when it failed to specify whose ownership, maintenance, use, or entrustment served to trigger that exclusion.

In the end, the appellate court reversed the trial court decisions and found that the carriers did owe a duty to defend and indemnify its insured under the facts presented.

Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.


Source: “Court Summaries” in the Pennsylvania Bar News By Timothy L. Clawges (June 9, 2025).


Source of image:  Photo by Vlad Deep from www.unsplash.com.

Trial Court Grants UIM Carrier's Motion to Sever and Stay a Companion Bad Faith Claim in a Post-Koken Case


In the case of Bixler v. Erie Insurance Exchange, AD No. 2024-CV-11155 (C.P. Butler Co. June 5, 2025 Streib, J.), the court issued an Order in a post-Koken case granting the UIM carrier’s Motion to Sever and Stay the bad faith claim from the UIM claim. The court did not issue any Opinion with this Order.

Anyone wishing to review a copy of this Order may click this LINK.

I send thanks to Attorney Joseph Hudock of the Pittsburgh office of the law firm of Summers, McDonnell, Hudock, Guthrie & Rauch, P.C. for bringing this case to my attention.