woodlandfarms
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2006
- Messages
- 6,137
- Location
- Los Angeles / SW Washington
- Tractor
- PowerTrac 1850, Kubota RTV x900
Why be responsible for your actions when suing can alleviate that need.
EUGENE, Ore. A jury in Lane County decided Thursday that Deere & Co. and a local distributor weren't liable for a 2006 accident that amputated the leg of a toddler.
The jury of six women and six men reached the verdict after 10 days of testimony and eight hours of deliberation, rejecting arguments from lawyers on behalf of now 6-year-old Isabelle Norton.
The family was seeking more than $11 million in damages, but jurors rejected the arguments by a 9-to-3 vote.
Norton was injured in 2006 as a 4-year-old when her father, Kirk, was mowing the lawn at their Springfield home and accidentally backed over her leg, causing it to be amputated.
The family's lawsuit alleged that John Deere, the world's largest agricultural-equipment maker, was negligent in designing the mower with a switch that allows the driver to keep the blades spinning while driving in reverse.
The lawsuit also named the seller, Ramsey-Waite Co. of Eugene, alleging the company did not adequately instruct Kirk Norton in the safe operation of the mower.
Eugene lawyer Don Corson said when the suit was filed that other manufacturers have made safer designs, and the suit aimed to persuade Deere to do the same.
EUGENE, Ore. A jury in Lane County decided Thursday that Deere & Co. and a local distributor weren't liable for a 2006 accident that amputated the leg of a toddler.
The jury of six women and six men reached the verdict after 10 days of testimony and eight hours of deliberation, rejecting arguments from lawyers on behalf of now 6-year-old Isabelle Norton.
The family was seeking more than $11 million in damages, but jurors rejected the arguments by a 9-to-3 vote.
Norton was injured in 2006 as a 4-year-old when her father, Kirk, was mowing the lawn at their Springfield home and accidentally backed over her leg, causing it to be amputated.
The family's lawsuit alleged that John Deere, the world's largest agricultural-equipment maker, was negligent in designing the mower with a switch that allows the driver to keep the blades spinning while driving in reverse.
The lawsuit also named the seller, Ramsey-Waite Co. of Eugene, alleging the company did not adequately instruct Kirk Norton in the safe operation of the mower.
Eugene lawyer Don Corson said when the suit was filed that other manufacturers have made safer designs, and the suit aimed to persuade Deere to do the same.