Dallas Jury Returns Combined $10.9M Verdict Against Choctaw Nation in Casino Bus Death
Attorney Frank L. Branson: Choctaw Nation responsible for safety of all passengers on its casino's charter buses
DALLAS, May 2, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- A Dallas County jury returned a combined $10.9 million verdict against the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma for its role in a deadly 2013 crash of a charter bus that was carrying elderly North Texas residents to the Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant, Oklahoma.
"The Choctaw Nation can't simply farm out its passengers and other key bus operations without consideration for the safety of its charter bus operators and drivers," says lead trial lawyer Frank L. Branson. "This jury spoke loud and clear, and hopefully this verdict forces the Choctaw Nation to take the safety of North Texas residents seriously. They are the most precious cargo that the Choctaw Casino carries every single day."
Jurors deliberated more than four days before awarding a combined $10.9 million verdict on May 2 for the deaths of 83-year-old Alice Stanley and 69-year-old Paula Hahn. The Law Offices of Frank L. Branson represented the estate and surviving children of Ms. Stanley, who was hospitalized for 10 days before dying from her injuries, which included a traumatically amputated arm and numerous broken bones sustained when she was partially ejected from the bus. Jurors awarded $4.9 million to the estate and family of Ms. Stanley and $6 million to the estate and family of Ms. Hahn, who was represented separately by Spencer Browne of Reyes Browne Reilley.
The Choctaw Nation offered to settle the Stanley lawsuit for $50,000 before trial and aggressively contested its responsibility for the crash, arguing that passenger safety was the sole duty of the charter bus company, Cardinal Coach Lines, and its driver. To reach their verdict, jurors made a key finding that the Choctaw Nation retained the right to control the charter bus and its driver and thus bore responsibility for the safety of the casino's passengers on the charter bus. In addition to Mr. Branson, the Branson trial team included Chip Brooker and Debbie Dudley Branson.
The crash occurred April 11, 2013, before the Cardinal bus had even left the Dallas-Fort Worth area with a group of 45 senior citizens on a day trip to the casino. According to trial testimony, a woman who organized the trip on behalf of the Choctaw Nation did not ensure that basic safety measures were followed inside the bus. Witnesses also testified that bus driver Loyd Rieve was distracted immediately before the bus veered into guard barrels on northbound George Bush Turnpike in Irving, swerved across multiple lanes, hit a concrete barrier and flipped over. All told, three passengers were killed and dozens more were injured.
The Law Offices of Frank L. Branson maintains a reputation for courtroom excellence based on significant verdicts and settlements for clients in high-stakes litigation and business disputes. The firm's record verdicts and recoveries stem from cases involving trucking and transportation injuries, dangerous and defective products, construction accidents, commercial plane crashes, explosions and burns caused by gas and electric power utilities, medical negligence, workplace catastrophes and business disputes. Visit http://www.flbranson.com to learn more.
For more information, contact Robert Tharp at 800-559-4534 or [email protected].
SOURCE The Law Offices of Frank L. Branson
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