Personal Injury Verdict and Settlement News

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Wrongful Death

$3 Million Indiana Wrongful Death Settlement Reached After Allegedly Impaired Truck Driver Killed Cyclist

A 32-year-old father riding his bicycle home from work was struck and killed at a marked intersection by a truck driver who was allegedly under the influence. The case resolved pre-suit for $3,000,000 the full amount of all available underlying and excess insurance coverage according to a press release from Crossen Law Firm in Carmel, Indiana.What Happened: A Fatal Bicycle-Truck Collision in Indiana According to Crossen Law Firm, the victim was cycling through a pedestrian crosswalk at a marked intersection. He was wearing high-visibility long pants and a reflective jacket to make himself visible to passing motorists. Despite those precautions, a truck driver failed to stop at the intersection and struck the cyclist. The driver was reportedly operating his employer's vehicle and was allegedly impaired at the time of the crash while on his way to work. The collision killed the 32-year-old father, who was unmarried and the sole financial provider for his young daughter.How Crossen Law Firm Secured the Indiana Wrongful Death Settlement Trevor Crossen and his team launched an immediate investigation into the crash, focusing on evidence preservation, the driver's alleged impairment, and employer liability. Because the driver was operating a company vehicle at the time of the collision, the case involved both the driver's individual negligence and potential employer responsibility. Crossen Law Firm pursued both the underlying insurance policy and an excess policy held by the employer. Through what the firm described as "strategic negotiation and aggressive advocacy," Crossen Law Firm resolved the matter without filing a lawsuit recovering the full $3 million in available insurance coverage. "This was a completely preventable tragedy," said Trevor Crossen. "Our client was doing everything right wearing high-visibility clothing and using the designated pedestrian crosswalk. No family should have to experience the loss of a loved one because someone chose to drive impaired."Why the Pre-Suit Resolution Matters Resolving a wrongful death case before filing suit is not common, particularly at full policy limits. Pre-suit resolutions spare grieving families from the emotional toll of prolonged litigation depositions, courtroom testimony, and years of uncertainty. In this case, the pre-suit settlement also meant faster financial relief for the victim's daughter. According to Crossen Law Firm, the $3 million recovery will provide long-term support for the child's education, living expenses, and future needs. For plaintiff attorneys evaluating similar cases, the result underscores the value of early and thorough investigation. Preserving evidence of impairment, establishing employer liability, and identifying all available insurance layers were critical steps that made a full-limits recovery possible without the cost and delay of litigation.Indiana Wrongful Death Claims Involving Impaired Drivers Crashes involving allegedly impaired drivers often carry both criminal and civil consequences. While a criminal case focuses on punishment, a wrongful death settlement like the one Crossen Law Firm secured here focuses on compensation for the surviving family. In Indiana, families pursuing a wrongful death claim do not need to wait for the outcome of any criminal proceedings. Civil cases operate on a lower burden of proof preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt which means a settlement or verdict can be reached even if criminal charges are reduced or dismissed. Evidence of impairment can also strengthen the civil case significantly. Toxicology results, field sobriety test records, and witness testimony about the driver's behavior before the crash all become critical tools for plaintiff attorneys building a wrongful death claim. In this case, Crossen Law Firm cited its early investigation into the driver's impairment as a key factor in reaching the full-limits Indiana wrongful death settlement without litigation.Indiana Wrongful Death Settlements: What Families Should Know Indiana's wrongful death statute allows the personal representative of a deceased person's estate to file a claim on behalf of dependents and next of kin. Damages can include lost income, loss of care and companionship, medical and funeral expenses, and the grief and suffering of surviving family members. When a fatality involves an impaired driver operating a commercial or employer-owned vehicle, multiple insurance policies may come into play including the driver's personal coverage, the employer's commercial auto policy, and any excess or umbrella policies. Identifying and pursuing every available layer of coverage is often the difference between a partial recovery and a full-limits result. Plaintiff attorneys who handle Indiana wrongful death cases can create a free profile on Major Verdict to publicly display results like this one making their track record visible to families searching for experienced representation.A Preventable Death, a Measure of Accountability No dollar amount replaces a father. But the $3 million settlement secured by Crossen Law Firm ensures that a young girl left without her sole provider will have meaningful financial support as she grows up. The case also sends a clear message about accountability. When an impaired driver kills a cyclist who was following every safety precaution and an employer's vehicle is involved the full weight of available insurance should be on the table. Major Verdict tracks significant plaintiff settlements and verdicts across all 50 states. Find a plaintiff attorney with a proven trial record in your state.

Commercial Trucking Crash
Sexual Assault

Plaintiff Verdict Against Uber Highlights Momentum as Lyft Cases Move to MDL

A federal jury’s $8.5 million verdict against Uber is being viewed by plaintiff-side attorneys as a pivotal development in rideshare sexual assault litigation, as related lawsuits against Lyft are now moving forward under a newly formed multidistrict litigation in California. The verdict came in the first bellwether trial within Uber’s passenger sexual assault litigation, where a jury awarded damages to plaintiff Jaylynn Dean following allegations that she was sexually assaulted by her driver. Dean’s legal team, led by Sarah R. London of Girard Sharp, Alexandra Walsh of Anapol Weiss, and Deborah Chang of Chang Klein, argued that Uber failed to adequately protect riders or warn them about known risks associated with sexual assault on its platform. Jurors ultimately found Uber liable under an apparent agency theory, concluding that the driver acted as the company’s representative from the rider’s perspective, despite Uber’s classification of drivers as independent contractors. While the jury rejected claims related to negligence and product design, legal observers noted that the apparent agency finding cuts through a defense frequently relied upon by rideshare companies. The same day the verdict was returned, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ordered the consolidation of 17 federal sexual assault lawsuits against Lyft into a single proceeding in the Northern District of California. The panel determined that the cases involve shared factual questions centered on passenger safety and Lyft’s response to reports of sexual misconduct. According to the consolidation order, plaintiffs allege Lyft was aware of the prevalence of sexual assault involving its drivers but failed to take sufficient preventative action. Those allegations include inadequate driver screening and supervision, failures to respond appropriately to complaints, and the absence of standardized safety measures or app-based protections. The Lyft litigation has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Rita F. Lin in San Francisco. The panel selected the venue based on the number of pending cases already filed in the district and Lyft’s corporate presence there. Lyft opposed consolidation, pointing to related proceedings in state court, but the panel concluded that federal coordination was necessary to prevent fragmented litigation across multiple jurisdictions. The Uber verdict has also drawn attention from plaintiff-side practitioners nationwide. Commentators noted that early bellwether results often shape the trajectory of mass tort litigation, and a plaintiff win at this stage may strengthen leverage for future cases. Attorneys have emphasized that apparent agency theories focus on how companies present themselves to the public, rather than how they structure contractual relationships behind the scenes. As Uber prepares to appeal and Lyft cases move forward in coordinated federal proceedings, plaintiff attorneys are closely watching how courts continue to evaluate corporate accountability and passenger safety obligations in the rideshare industry.

Premises Liability

$36.4 Million Bronx Verdict After Worker Suffers Traumatic Brain Injury at Foodtown Supermarket

A Bronx County jury has awarded $36,398,000 to a worker who suffered a traumatic brain injury and serious orthopedic injuries after slipping on cooking oil applied to a makeshift ramp inside a Parkchester supermarket. The verdict, returned February 4, 2026 in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Bronx County, is the largest premises-accident personal injury verdict in the Bronx in more than seven years, and the largest personal injury verdict on record in New York State for an individual undocumented immigrant worker. Case at a Glance Verdict: $36,398,000 Case Type: Premises Liability / Traumatic Brain Injury Court: Supreme Court of New York, Bronx County Judge: Hon. Wilma Guzman Verdict Date: February 4, 2026 Case No.: 31210/2017E Plaintiff: Honorio Rosario-Silverio Defendants: PPC Commercial, LLC; 1489 Food Corp. d/b/a Foodtown Supermarket (Parkchester, Bronx) Plaintiff Attorneys: Mitchell Proner and Daisy Koch, Proner & Proner (Manhattan)What Happened in the Foodtown Basement On October 14, 2017, Honorio Rosario-Silverio was working at a Foodtown supermarket in the Parkchester section of the Bronx. His employer, a non-party to the lawsuit, had been hired to install a commercial rack refrigeration system in the store's basement. To move the heavy equipment downstairs, workers placed a metal plate over the basement stairway to create a makeshift ramp. According to evidence presented at trial, cooking oil was then applied to the surface of the ramp so the refrigeration components would slide down more easily. The plaintiff contended the oil was supplied at the direction of the supermarket owner to speed up the work. While positioned at the top of the ramp to guide the equipment, Rosario-Silverio slipped. The oil that had coated the ramp had also worked its way onto his shoes. He fell down the incline. At Jacobi Hospital, he was treated and discharged with four stitches to his forearm. It appeared, initially, to be a minor injury. It was not.A "Minor Injury" That Changed Everything Over time, Rosario-Silverio was diagnosed with significant shoulder and cervical spine injuries requiring surgery. He was also diagnosed with a mild traumatic brain injury. The plaintiff's team presented advanced neurological evidence to establish the brain injury objectively. A brain-injury expert testified that DTI MRI imaging and NeuroQuant volumetric analysis, technologies that measure structural changes in brain tissue, confirmed trauma and placed Rosario-Silverio at increased risk for early dementia. A neuroradiologist corroborated those findings. The treating cervical spine and shoulder surgeons each testified that the surgeries performed were caused by the 2017 fall, not a separate accident in 2020 that the defense attempted to use to shift blame. The jury's damages award reflected the full scope of the injury: $5,000,000 - past pain and suffering $20,000,000 - future pain and suffering $10,000,000 - future medical expenses $468,000 - past lost earnings $930,000 - future lost earningsHow the Defense Fought and Why the Jury Disagreed The defense contested nearly every element of the case. On liability, they argued the supermarket owner was not present during the work and that all means and methods were controlled solely by Rosario-Silverio's employer. They also claimed he chose to walk up the ramp rather than use the adjacent staircase, making his own fall the product of his own decision. On damages, the defense presented a neurologist and neuroradiologist who testified that Rosario-Silverio had sustained no brain or neck injury and was capable of returning to work. They pointed to a 2020 accident as the true source of his orthopedic complaints and argued the plaintiff was seeking double recovery. Throughout the trial, the defense also attacked Rosario-Silverio's credibility directly, emphasizing that he was undocumented, paid off the books, and had not fully reported his earnings for tax purposes. The jury rejected those arguments in full. "This verdict reflects the jury's recognition that serious brain and orthopedic injuries are real and life-altering, even when defendants try to dismiss them as minor, unrelated, or the product of a later incident," said Mitchell Proner, trial counsel for the plaintiff. "The defense highlighted his immigration status, his off-the-books earnings, and a subsequent accident, but the evidence showed that what happened in that supermarket basement permanently changed Mr. Rosario-Silverio's life."Why This Verdict Matters This result is significant on two levels. First, the medical evidence strategy. The plaintiff's team used DTI MRI imaging and NeuroQuant analysis, tools not yet routine in courtrooms, to make an invisible injury visible to a jury. When the initial ER records showed only a forearm laceration, the defense had a compelling narrative. Plaintiff counsel dismantled it with objective imaging that the defense's own experts could not credibly refute. Second, the plaintiff's background. Defendants repeatedly raised Rosario-Silverio's undocumented status and off-the-books employment as reasons to discount his claims. The Bronx jury declined to do so. The result sets a clear record: immigration status does not diminish the value of a human life or the accountability of a property owner under New York premises liability law. For plaintiff attorneys handling traumatic brain injury or premises liability cases in New York, this verdict is a study in how to overcome a defense built on credibility attacks, competing causation theories, and a thin initial injury record. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys publicly document their trial results and settlements, building a searchable record of what juries actually award. Browse the latest verdict news or find a plaintiff attorney in New York with the trial record to back it up. Plaintiff attorneys with results worth showcasing, create your free profile on Major Verdict and let your record speak for itself.FAQ Q: What is a mild traumatic brain injury and how do attorneys prove it in court? A: A mild traumatic brain injury, or mild TBI, refers to a brain injury that may not appear on standard imaging like a CT scan or conventional MRI but causes real, lasting neurological changes. In court, plaintiff attorneys increasingly rely on advanced imaging tools such as DTI MRI, which maps the structural integrity of white matter tracts in the brain, and NeuroQuant volumetric analysis, which compares brain structure against age-matched norms. In this case, those tools provided objective evidence of brain damage that overcame the defense's claim that Rosario-Silverio had sustained no neurological injury. Q: Can an undocumented worker sue for personal injury in New York? A: Yes. Under New York law, immigration status does not bar a person from bringing a personal injury claim or recovering damages. Undocumented workers are entitled to the same premises liability protections as any other person injured on someone else's property. Lost earnings claims can be more complex, but juries are not permitted to reduce awards based on a plaintiff's immigration status alone. This verdict reinforces that principle at a historic scale. Q: What is premises liability and when does it apply to a workplace accident? A: Premises liability holds property owners responsible for maintaining safe conditions on their property for people who are lawfully present. Even when a worker is employed by a contractor rather than the property owner, the owner can be held liable if an unsafe condition on the property, such as an oil-coated makeshift ramp, caused the injury. In this case, the jury found PPC Commercial and Foodtown Supermarket liable despite their argument that the plaintiff's employer controlled all means and methods of the work.

Wrongful Death
Workplace Death
Auto Accident

Jury Awards $373,922 in Virginia Car Accident Verdict After Henrico County Sideswipe Collision

A Henrico County jury awarded $373,922 to the plaintiff in Stuart v. Presley on January 21, 2026, after a sideswipe collision that the defense described as minor and that caused minimal visible property damage. The Virginia car accident verdict came after the insurance carrier, Safeco, offered just $20,000 to settle the case, making the jury's award nearly 19 times the pre-trial offer. The case was tried before Judge Rondelle D. Herman in Henrico County Circuit Court. Plaintiff attorneys Sharif Gray, Gray Broughton, and Zachary Grubaugh of Gray Broughton Injury Law in Richmond represented the injured party.How the Sideswipe Collision Led to Surgery The plaintiff was involved in a sideswipe collision in Henrico County that produced minimal property damage. Despite the low-impact appearance of the crash, the plaintiff sustained a torn rotator cuff that required surgical intervention. The defense admitted liability just hours before trial, shifting the entire dispute to damages. The central question for the jury became whether the collision actually caused the plaintiff's shoulder injury or whether the condition existed before the crash.The Defense Strategy: Pre-Existing Injury and Treatment Gap The defense built its case around two arguments. First, a defense orthopedic expert testified that the plaintiff's torn rotator cuff was pre-existing. The expert pointed to the fact that the plaintiff had undergone rotator cuff surgery on his other shoulder just over a year before the collision. Second, the defense highlighted a nine-month gap in treatment between the collision and when the plaintiff sought care for the injury at issue. The defense argued this gap undermined the claim that the crash caused the rotator cuff tear. These are common defense tactics in low-property-damage cases. Insurance carriers frequently rely on prior medical history and treatment gaps to minimize the value of a claim or deny causation altogether.Why the Jury Rejected a $20,000 Offer and Returned $373,922 Safeco's highest settlement offer before trial was $20,000. The case proceeded to a one-day jury trial, and the jury returned a verdict of $373,922 for the plaintiff. The gap between the carrier's offer and the jury's award is striking. It suggests that the jury found the plaintiff's testimony and evidence about the injury more credible than the defense's pre-existing condition argument. It also reflects what plaintiff attorneys across the country see regularly: carriers undervaluing claims involving low property damage, only to face significantly larger verdicts at trial.What This Virginia Car Accident Verdict Signals for Plaintiff Attorneys The Stuart v. Presley result is a useful data point for attorneys handling cases where the defense leans on minimal property damage to suppress settlement value. Several aspects of this case stand out for practitioners. The defense conceded liability on the eve of trial, a move that can sometimes work in the defense's favor by focusing the jury solely on damages. Here, that strategy did not pay off. The jury awarded nearly 19 times what Safeco had offered. The nine-month treatment gap and prior shoulder surgery on the opposite side gave the defense real ammunition, yet the jury still returned a six-figure verdict. This outcome suggests that when the surgical evidence supports causation, juries can see past treatment gaps and prior injury history. For plaintiff attorneys who handle disputed-causation cases, this verdict from Henrico County Circuit Court sends a clear message. Taking a case to trial can produce results that far exceed what the carrier puts on the table. Browse the latest verdict news on Major Verdict to track outcomes like this one. Verdicts like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself. If you or someone you know has been injured in a car accident, find a plaintiff lawyer on Major Verdict with a proven trial record in your state.

$6.4 Million Missouri Verdict for Firefighter Injured by Ambulance Company's Gurney

A Jackson County jury awarded $6.4 million to a Missouri firefighter and his wife after finding an ambulance company's gurney directly caused a series of devastating injuries including a brain condition that took three weeks to surface and became the central battleground of the trial. The verdict in Montgomery v. Medevac Medical Response, Inc. was returned January 14, 2026, in Jackson County Circuit Court at Independence, before Judge Kenneth Garrett III. The defendant never offered a single penny to settle.What Happened on January 11, 2017 Buddy Montgomery was a firefighter responding to a call for an unresponsive person in an Independence apartment parking lot. Defendant AMR, operating as Medevac Medical Response, Inc., responded to the same call with ambulance services and provided the gurney used to transport the patient. As Montgomery and a fellow firefighter lifted the patient onto the gurney, it shifted. Montgomery pulled up on the patient to prevent him from falling to the ground. That split-second reaction caused the injuries that would alter the course of his life. Montgomery suffered a SLAP tear to his right shoulder and a herniated disc at C6-C7, both of which required multiple surgeries. Three weeks after the incident, he developed hydrocephalus a serious neurological condition caused by a blockage from a congenital colloid cyst in his brain.The Fight Over Causation The hydrocephalus diagnosis became the defining issue in the case. The defense argued the timing was coincidental that a pre-existing congenital cyst, not the gurney incident, triggered the condition. The plaintiff's team countered that the physical trauma from the incident caused the blockage to manifest. Lead attorney Brett Burmeister of Burmeister Gilmore in Blue Springs credited the treating neurosurgeon with turning the tide on that issue. "Persuading jurors of the causal connection between the incident and our client's hydrocephalus brain injury, which did not manifest until 20 days later, presented the greatest challenge," Burmeister said. "The treating neurosurgeon really went to bat for our client, and I think that made a huge difference with the jury." The defendant also argued that Montgomery and his fellow firefighter bore responsibility for ensuring the gurney was secure before lifting the patient a position the jury ultimately rejected, though not entirely.The Verdict Breakdown The gross jury award was $8 million: $6 million to Buddy Montgomery and $2 million to his wife, Stacy Montgomery, for loss of consortium. The jury allocated 80 percent of fault to Medevac Medical Response and 20 percent to the plaintiff, reducing the net verdict to $6.4 million under Missouri's comparative fault rules. Special damages included: $478,000 in past medical expenses $2.4 million in lost wages and lost household services $1.7 million in future supervision and caregiving expenses The plaintiffs had demanded $5.5 million at mediation. The defendant made no offer. The jury returned a verdict that exceeded that demand by nearly $1 million on a net basis.A Case Built on Expert Testimony Both sides assembled substantial expert panels. The plaintiff's team called eight experts spanning EMS standards, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, economics, vocational rehabilitation, psychiatry, and mental health therapy. The defense countered with four experts, including two neurologists who supported the coincidence theory on the hydrocephalus, and an EMS expert disputing the plaintiff's account of the gurney's role. The depth of expert testimony on both sides reflects how hard Medevac fought this case and how thoroughly the jury sided with the plaintiff on the core liability and causation questions. The plaintiff's legal team included Brett Burmeister and Kristi Burmeister of Burmeister Gilmore in Blue Springs, and Eric Playter of Playter Trial Lawyers in Rayton. The defense was represented by Stephen Fields and Emily Lavine of Brinker & Doyen in St. Louis, and Daniel Huff and Michelle Salandy of Huff Powell Bailey in Atlanta.What This Verdict Signals for EMS and Commercial Liability Cases Cases involving emergency medical service providers present a particular challenge for plaintiff attorneys. Defendants in this space often argue that on-scene personnel share responsibility for equipment failures, and that the chaotic nature of emergency response makes causation harder to establish. This verdict demonstrates that juries are willing to hold commercial EMS operators accountable when their equipment contributes to a responder's injury even when the defense raises a plausible alternative explanation for the most serious diagnosis. For Missouri plaintiff attorneys handling cases involving EMS companies, ambulance operators, or commercial service providers, this outcome is a useful data point on what a well-built expert case can achieve at trial.Track Missouri Verdicts on Major Verdict Results like this one are exactly what plaintiff attorneys across the country use to benchmark cases, evaluate damages strategies, and understand what Missouri juries are willing to award. Major Verdict is a free membership platform built for plaintiff personal injury lawyers. Members can showcase their own trial results and notable settlements on a public profile giving prospective clients a transparent look at their actual courtroom record. If you handle personal injury cases in Missouri, explore Major Verdict membership or browse plaintiff attorneys already posting their results on the platform. You can also explore Missouri personal injury resources and the latest verdict news from across the country.

Commercial Trucking Crash
Premises Liability

LA Jury Returns $3 Million to Man Over Broken Sidewalk in City's Latest Liability Payout

A jury returned $3,000,000 in a civil injury case. The trial date reported was August 13, 2025. LA panel grants $3 million to man over broken sidewalk in city’s latest liability payout - A panel has granted a wedding photographer $3 million after he was injured when he tripped over a damaged sidewalk in Woodland Hills in 2019. Last week, a panel made Payman Heravi $3 million richer. While Heravi started to cry as the panel’s decision was read, they didn’t appear to be tears of joy. Payman says his left arm isn’t fully functional - all because of a severely uneven L.A. city sidewalk. Right now, (the) pain is a lot, Heravi said. Right now, I can’t use my shoulder. In December 2019, Heravi says he was walking down Ventura Boulevard in Woodland Hills and as he checked a text on his phone, he tripped on a several-inch uplift in the sidewalk. Heravi’s attorneys successfully argued that city employees saw the sidewalk was damaged, but didn’t repair it. That should be fixed in a reasonable manner, Heravi’s personal inpanel attorney Max Lee said. If that happened in this case, Mr. Heravi would still be able to do what he loves and not be in constant pain every day. Three surgeries and years of physical therapy later, Heravi says he still cannot return to making a living as a wedding photographer. The panel granted Heravi a total of $3,028,026. As for the sidewalk, it still has not been fixed. In roughly the past five years, the city of Los Angeles has paid out more than $86 million because of lawsuits relating to broken and uneven sidewalks.


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