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Wrongful Death
Man working on furnace install

$10 Million Georgia Settlement in Carbon Monoxide Death from Defective Furnace Installation

The family of Catherine Harris, a LaGrange, Georgia woman who died of carbon monoxide poisoning, has reached a $10 million wrongful death settlement with the heating company that allegedly installed and serviced her furnace improperly. The settlement, reached June 5, 2026, resolves Harris, et al. v. Extreme Heating & Air, LLC, filed in the State Court of Troup County, Georgia. Harris's adult children, LaTonya Harris and Robert Harris Jr., brought claims for wrongful death, negligence, and gross negligence against the company, its owner Christopher Lentz, and technician Michael Smith. The family was represented by Matt Kahn of Butler Kahn, along with Caroline W. Herrington and Virgil L. Adams of Adams, Jordan & Herrington, P.C.Case at a Glance Settlement: $10 million Case Type: Wrongful death (carbon monoxide poisoning) Court: State Court of Troup County, Georgia (Civil Action No. 25-CS-567) Settlement Date: June 5, 2026 Plaintiffs: LaTonya Harris and Robert Harris Jr. (adult children of Catherine Harris) Defendants: Extreme Heating & Air, LLC; Christopher Lentz (owner); Michael Smith (technician) Plaintiff Attorneys: Matt Kahn (Butler Kahn); Caroline W. Herrington and Virgil L. Adams (Adams, Jordan & Herrington, P.C.)What Happened to Catherine Harris? According to the complaint, Extreme Heating & Air installed a new furnace at Catherine Harris's LaGrange home in June 2024. When the system malfunctioned in November 2024, a technician allegedly turned the gas supply back on without completing necessary safety steps, including venting system checks and gas leak inspections. The plaintiffs alleged that the failure caused exhaust to discharge into the basement and throughout the home. Harris died two days later. Her death was attributed to acute carbon monoxide toxicity. The lawsuit also alleged the company failed to complete the furnace's venting system conversion to liquid propane, leaving the home exposed to dangerous levels of the gas.What Did the Plaintiffs Allege? The complaint asserted that the defendants were responsible for the death through negligence and gross negligence, faulting both the original installation and the later service call. Central to the case was the claim that the technician restored the gas supply without checking for leaks or confirming the venting system was safe. "Homeowners trust heating contractors with their safety," said Matt Kahn of Butler Kahn. Caroline Herrington of Adams, Jordan & Herrington emphasized the hidden nature of the hazard. "Carbon monoxide is colorless and odorless, and families often have no warning until it is too late," she said.Why This Settlement Matters Carbon monoxide deaths tied to heating equipment are often preventable, which is part of what makes cases like this one resonate. The legal team advocated for proper installation procedures, qualified professionals, exterior venting, and functioning carbon monoxide detectors as basic safeguards for any home with gas appliances. For the plaintiff bar, the result shows how a contractor's documented departure from safety procedures, especially during a service call, can establish liability in a wrongful death claim. The $10 million figure reflects both the preventability of the death and the strength of the negligence theory in Georgia. Major Verdict tracks significant plaintiff verdicts and settlements across all 50 states. Browse the latest results or find a plaintiff attorney with a proven trial record in your state.Frequently Asked Questions Q: Can you sue an HVAC contractor for a carbon monoxide death? Yes. When a heating contractor's improper installation, inspection, or repair allows carbon monoxide to enter a home, the family of a person who dies can bring a wrongful death claim for negligence. In this case, the family settled for $10 million against the company, its owner, and a technician. Q: What is the difference between a settlement and a verdict? A settlement is an agreement to resolve a case before or during trial, while a verdict is a decision reached by a jury. This $10 million resolution was a settlement, meaning the parties agreed to it rather than having a jury decide the outcome. Q: Why is carbon monoxide so dangerous in the home? Carbon monoxide is colorless and odorless, so people often have no warning before they are affected. That is why exterior venting, proper installation by qualified professionals, and working carbon monoxide detectors are critical safeguards in any home with gas appliances.

DUI/DWI Injury Accident

$56.5 Million Verdict for Family of UGA Ph.D. Student Killed by Alleged Wrong-Way Drunk Driver in Georgia

A Georgia judge has awarded $56.5 million to the family of Beth Buchanan, a 23-year-old University of Georgia psychology doctoral student killed in a wrong-way crash while driving her mother to the airport a judgment her family has described as largely symbolic given that the defendant remains a fugitive. Athens-Clark County Judge Charles Auslander issued the award on March 30, 2026, after calculating that Buchanan had approximately 56 years of life ahead of her, each valued at over $1 million. The verdict came in a wrongful death lawsuit filed in 2024 against Cesar Raudales Macias, the alleged drunk driver who prosecutors say caused the crash.The Crash That Killed Beth Buchanan Shortly after 3 a.m. on Feb. 13, 2023, Buchanan was driving her mother, Julie Olson-Buchanan, to the Atlanta airport on University Parkway near Patrick Mill Road SW in Winder, Georgia, roughly 40 miles from downtown Atlanta. According to the lawsuit, Macias, then 25, made an illegal U-turn and began driving the wrong way before slamming head-on into Buchanan's Kia Soul. The impact was catastrophic. One witness at the scene initially thought the car had exploded. Beth Buchanan died at the scene. Her mother survived but suffered serious injuries that required weeks of hospitalization. According to court documents, Julie Olson-Buchanan could be heard on a 911 recording asking whether her daughter was okay and slowly realizing she was not breathing. "Although severe, Ms. Olson-Buchanan's physical injuries were the smallest component of her pain and suffering," plaintiff lawyers wrote in the lawsuit. Her life, the filing stated, will never be the same.Who Was Beth Buchanan Buchanan was a second-year graduate student at the University of Georgia pursuing a doctorate in psychology. In the proceedings, teachers, family members, and friends painted a picture of a young woman of unusual warmth and promise. Judge Auslander captured the testimony in his written order. "One theme, in particular, appeared again and again in the stories shared about Beth: she was a light," Auslander wrote. "Nearly every person who spoke about her described the way she brightened the lives around her. One person even described her as 'golden.' It is rare to be described that way to possess a warmth, brilliance, and kindness that others immediately recognize."The Defendant: A Fugitive Facing Criminal Charges Macias had a blood alcohol content "significantly over the legal limit" at the time of the crash, according to plaintiff attorneys. He was taken to a hospital following the collision but allegedly fled before police could arrest him. He remains a fugitive. Macias faces vehicular manslaughter and DUI charges. The U.S. Marshals Service is actively seeking information on his whereabouts. Because Macias has not been located, the Buchanan family does not expect to collect on the $56.5 million judgment. Plaintiff attorney Rob Snyder of Canella Snyder LLC acknowledged the reality of the situation while framing the verdict in broader terms. "This judgment formally recognizes the immense value of Beth's life and how truly extraordinary she was," Snyder told NBC affiliate WXIA. "This is an important first step towards accountability." The family echoed that sentiment in a statement of their own. "This award is largely symbolic and we do not want it to be mistaken for compensation. No amount of money could ever account for the loss of our daughter or fill the void she left behind," the statement read. "For us, this judgment is about a formal, legal acknowledgment of the beautiful life that was stolen from her and all those who loved her."How Georgia Courts Value Wrongful Death Georgia's wrongful death statute allows the full value of a deceased person's life to be recovered not just lost wages or economic damages, but the full value of the life itself. Judge Auslander's calculation reflected that framework directly: 56 remaining years, each worth more than $1 million. That methodology is notable. In many states, wrongful death recoveries are tied more tightly to economic projections. Georgia's approach gives juries and judges broader latitude to recognize the human cost of a life cut short, including loss of future relationships, experiences, and contributions that cannot be reduced to a salary figure. Cases like this one also illustrate the limits of civil judgments when a defendant cannot be found. A verdict on paper does not guarantee recovery. In cases involving uninsured or absconded defendants, the path to actual compensation is often uncertain regardless of what the court awards.A Verdict That Stands as a Record Whether or not the Buchanan family ever collects, the $56.5 million judgment stands as a formal legal accounting of what Beth Buchanan's life was worth. For the plaintiff bar, cases of this kind demonstrate how wrongful death litigation can serve purposes beyond financial recovery establishing accountability and creating a public record when the criminal justice system has not yet been able to do so. Plaintiff attorneys who handle wrongful death cases across Georgia and nationwide can document results like this on Major Verdict, the only national platform where lawyers publicly showcase trial verdicts and notable outcomes. Browse attorney profiles and results at Major Verdict, or if you are a plaintiff attorney ready to put your record on the map, join Major Verdict today.


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