No urge to text

Coulda.  Woulda.  Shoulda.  But didja?

Apple didn’t.

On 12 December 2008 Apple Inc. sought a patent over a smartphone lockout mechanism.  Despite having such a patent, it did not implement it in the iPhone 5.  On 30 April 2014 Ashley Kubiak was driving in Texas when her iPhone 5 received a text message.  She looked down to read it.  The distraction caused her to collide with another vehicle, killing two people and catastrophically injuring a third.  Kubiak was convicted of criminally negligent homicide and sentenced to 180 days imprisonment with five years probation: State v Kubiak, Tyler Morning Paper, 12 August 2014 (4th Texas Jud’l Ct, 2014).

Grim Reaper phone
Image from here

The accident victims and their representatives sued Apple, alleging that it had negligently failed to design the lockout device into the iPhone.  Specifically they argued that receiving a text message causes “an unconscious and automatic, neurobiological compulsion to engage in texting behavior.”  Apple successfully applied to dismiss the claim: Meador v Apple Inc (US Dist. Ct., Schroeder J, 17 August 2017, unreported).  The plaintiffs appealed.

The US 5th Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal.  The Court noted that it was to apply the law of the forum state as well as that court be determined, without adopting any novel approaches to the law.  In this case the key issue was whether the lack of a lockout device had caused the accident.  That is, would common, practical experience consider it to be a substantial factor.  The Court noted that

No Texas case has addressed whether a smartphone manufacturer should be liable for a user’s torts because the neurobiological response induced by the phone is a substantial factor in her tortious acts. To our knowledge … no court in the country has yet held that, and numerous courts have declined to do so. As such, no authority indicates to us that Texas courts, contemplating reasonable persons and ordinary minds, would recognize a person’s induced responses to her phone as a substantial factor in her tortious acts and therefore hold the phone’s manufacturer responsible.

As a result, for the Court to find that Texas law would view a smartphone’s effect on a user as a substantial factor in that person’s wrong would be an impermissible innovation of state law.

Meador v Apple Inc., 911 F.3d 260 (5th Cir. 2018)

Did anyone subpoena Bob the Builder?

Watching Bob the Builder is not an adequate substitute for having a construction industry White Card.

On the weekend of 13-14 September 2014, 16 year old Alex Hayes entered a construction site in Kentucky with some friends.  They consumed whiskey and marijuana.  A little after 1am they began to leave.  Alex climbed onto a piece of equipment, started it and began to drive it up a floodwall.  The machine tipped over and caused severe injuries to his right leg.  Hayes’ parents sought compensation on his behalf from the the property developer and its construction contractor.

bob-the-builder-mini-playsets-assorted
This is not a training resource (Image from here)

It was common ground that Alex was trespassing at the time of the accident.

Kentucky statute law provides that [KY Rev Stat § 381.232 (2013)] –

The owner of real estate shall not be liable to any trespasser for injuries sustained by the trespasser on the real estate of the owner, except for injuries which are intentionally inflicted by the owner or someone acting for the owner.

The rigour of this provision is moderated by Kentucky’s doctrine of “attractive nuisance”.  This doctrine says that a landowner is liable for harm to children trespassing on land, if that harm is caused by an artificial condition on the land and if –

  1. The place is one where the possessor knows children are likely to trespass;
  2. The possessor knows of the condition and should realize it poses an unreasonable risk of death or injury to such children;
  3. The children, because of their youth, do not appreciate the danger;
  4. The value of the condition for the possessor and the cost of eliminating the risk are slight relative to the risk to the children; and
  5. The possessor fails to exercise reasonable care to eliminate the danger or protect the children.

The defendants sought summary dismissal of the claims which was granted: Hayes v DCI Properties – D KY LLC (Campbell Circuit Court, Judge Stine, 22 July 2016, unreported).  The plaintiffs appeal was dismissed: Hayes v DCI Properties – D KY LLC (Kentucky Court of Appeals, Combs, Lambert and Nickell JJ, 16 June 2017, unreported). The plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court of Kentucky.

The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal.  It was noted that Alex was licensed to drive a car, that he was an average high school student, and that earlier in the evening he had taken steps to prevent one of his friends injuring himself on a machine.

Although we no longer adhere to a strict age cutoff, e.g., children under fourteen years of age, a child must be unable to appreciate the risk involved in intermeddling with the condition. The evidence in this case clearly demonstrates that Alex not only was capable of appreciating but also in fact did appreciate the risk of operating a piece of heavy machinery.

As a result, Alex was not entitled to rely on the attractive nuisance doctrine.

Hayes and Hayes v DCI Properties LLC, __ S.W.3d __ (KY, 13 December 2018)

When natural medicine goes bad…

By and large, people have a right to choose what healthcare they and their family receive.  Some people opt for non-standard forms of medicine.  As early as the 1870s some westerners were prepared to go on record regarding the efficacity of Chinese cures (see Ex Parte Yee Quock Ping (1875) 1 VLR 112).  Where naturopathy is concerned, I can’t imagine my thoroughly practical friend – and Naturopath-in-Training – Madison ever recommending something  anything she thought would be useless or (worse) harmful.  Nevertheless, sometimes the process goes astray.

In early 2015 a baby in New South Wales was diagnosed with eczema.  His mother was advised by a medical practitioner that the condition could be managed but not cured.  She consulted a naturopath, who told her that it could in fact be cured.  The child was being breast fed and (so the reasoning ran) his eczema could be caused by the mothers diet and toxins in her body.  She recommended the mother take up a raw food diet.  Over the next month both mother and child lost significant weight.  Despite not seeing the child, the naturopath assured the mother that this was normal and that her baby was fat and needed to lose weight.  Astonishingly, in mid-May 2015 the naturopath advised the mother to fast and adopt a water-only diet.

A few weeks later the child’s mother took him to a General Practitioner.  He was referred to a hospital where he was found to be in a critical condition.  It was concluded that he would have died within days without medical care.  His weight had dropped from 8 kilograms to 6.4 kilograms (17.6lbs to 14.08lbs).  It was uncertain whether he would suffer permanent developmental delays due to the experience.

The child’s mother was charged with failing to care for a child.  The Crimes Act 1900 (NSW), §43A(2) provides that

A person:

(a) who has parental responsibility for a child, and

(b) who, without reasonable excuse, intentionally or recklessly fails to provide the child with the necessities of life,

is guilty of an offence if the failure causes a danger of death or of serious injury to the child.

Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.

The naturopath was charged with aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring the mother’s crime.  She pleaded guilty.  The District Court accepted that she was remorseful and she had meant well.  However, Berman DCJ pointed out that –

 

Well intentioned but seriously misguided advice is, as the facts of this case demonstrate, capable of causing great harm and even death to vulnerable children. Those giving such advice need to have it made clear to them that if they give such advice they need to make sure that it is not going to do harm and if they continue to give such advice they need to continue to ensure that no harm is being caused.

It is a serious matter, but not necessarily a crime, to tell a breast feeding mother to restrict her diet. It is even more serious when such advice continues after being told that both the mother and child have lost weight. And it is serious indeed and highly criminal for such advice to continue to the state where a child was at risk of death within a few days, in circumstances where the person giving the advice hadn’t even seen the state the child was in as a result of his or her advice being followed.

 

The naturopath was sentenced to be imprisoned for 14 months, to serve a minimum of 7 months.

R v Bodnar [2018] NSWDC 76