Cement Mason Gets
$2.5 Million for Injury
July, 2002
By Jennifer Batchelor
A 12-member jury of the Philadelphia County Court of Common
Pleas has awarded $2.5 million to a permanently disabled cement
finisher who was injured while unloading concrete from a 73,000
pound truck.
Feldman Shepherd Wohlgelernter & Tanner member Alan
M. Feldman, who represented the plaintiff and his wife along
with Feldman Shepherd associate Daniel J. Mann, said the jury
found defendant JDM Materials 100 percent negligent and made
the lump sum award after deliberating for approximately six
hours. The jury also awarded $25,000 to the plaintiff's wife.
Damages in Baker v. JDM Materials included medical expenses,
lost wages, and pain and suffering. According to Feldman,
the defense offered $25,000 before trial and $500,000 after
learning the jury had rendered a verdict.
According to Feldman, the plaintiff, Michael Baker, suffers
from chronic back pain and will never be able to return to
his job as a cement mason, or to any job for that matter.
On Jan. 5, 2000, Baker was working at a construction site
in Philadelphia, a pretrial memorandum said. He was preparing
sidewalks and curbs for a new McDonald's restaurant and Amoco
gas station. The concrete for the job was supplied by JDM
Materials, a subsidiary of Morrissey Construction.
Feldman said Baker was pulling concrete down a chute extending
from the back of a cement mixer at the time of the accident.
As he was working, the cement truck suddenly lurched backward,
throwing Baker from the concrete island on which he was standing
to a pavement subgrade that, according to the pretrial memorandum,
was approximately two to three feet below the island. Baker
hyperextended his knee and jammed his back, Feldman said.
Knee surgery followed that month, and Baker was referred
to a spinal surgeon for his back injuries. Dr. Alexander Vaccaro
performed a four-level decompression laminectomy, which is
designed to relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerve root
of the lumbar spine. However, Feldman said Baker still suffers
from chronic pain and is under the care of a pain management
specialist.
In addition, Baker takes Oxycontin, methadone and other powerful
pain medications that, according to his attorney, leave him
drowsy, unable to concentrate and subject to fatigue. Feldman
also said the plaintiff wears a Transcutaneous Electrical
Nerve Stimulation device, intended to relieve pain, at all
times. He cannot sit or stand comfortably for more than 10
or 15 minutes at a time without changing positions, and is
unable to drive for more than 10 or 15 minutes.
"I think it was apparent to the jury that he was in
pain," Feldman said. "The jury appreciated that
he was in agony and very uncomfortable."
The plaintiff contended that the driver of the cement mixer
should not have moved the truck when he had reason to know
that people were working behind it.
Baker also argued that the truck should not have moved without
a signal.
According to the pretrial memorandum, construction site engineer
and plaintiff's witness Robert S. Sleece opined that there
was a breach of the applicable standards of care when the
cement truck moved without warning and despite the presence
of workers nearby.
According to Feldman, the defense argued that the driver
of the truck did receive a signal to move, and in fact, that
it was Baker who gave the signal.
"That was one of the principle issues at trial and we
addressed it as well as we could," Feldman said. "And
I believe the jury found that my client was someone who had
done this work for 28 years, had been a very reliable and
dependable employee, had never had a work injury in 28 years
and was adamant that he had never given a signal for the truck
to move and never would under the circumstances where he was
working at the rear of the truck."
An independent witness gave conflicting testimony about the
accident, Feldman said.
"What we tried to do as trial counsel was ask the jury
to find that evidence that had the ring of truth as distinct
from evidence that was not logical or reasonable," Feldman
said. "And we believe that the jury certainly spent time
carefully considering the evidence -- they were out for a
while -- and that they found the truth and rendered a fair
award."
Baker was 48 when the accident occurred two years ago.
"He loved being a cement mason," Feldman said,
"and pointing out the buildings in Philadelphia that
he helped to build. It was his life, and he doesn't know what
to do with himself now."
The plaintiff plans to file for delay damages, which Feldman
estimated at $114,000. Defense attorneys were unavailable
for comment before press time.
The July 18 verdict was rendered before Judge C. Darnell
Jones Jr. Law Offices of John R. McHaffie, Philadelphia, senior
trial attorney Leigh J. Bechtle and trial attorney Kristen
A. Morris represented the defendant.
$2,525,00 Verdict – negligent
operation of cement truck – truck suddenly moves causing
plaintiff to fall – knee injury with surgery –
lumbar injury – four-level lumbar decompression laminectomy
performed – chronic pain syndrome. |