Monday, February 4, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
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$109 million personal-injury award in Western Pennsylvania offers insight into tort system

Carrie Goretzka with husband Michael and daughters Chloe (left) and Carlie. She was fatally burned by a downed power line in her yard in 2009.
Family photo
Carrie Goretzka with husband Michael and daughters Chloe (left) and Carlie. She was fatally burned by a downed power line in her yard in 2009.
Story Highlights
  • Carrie Goretzka was fatally burned by a downed power line in her yard in 2009.
  • Goretzka's death became the focus of high-stakes litigation between a team of plaintiffs' lawyers from Philadelphia and the West Penn Power Co.
  • Jurors were satisfied that the $109 million award was appropriate.
Carrie Goretzka with husband Michael and daughters Chloe (left) and Carlie. She was fatally burned by a downed power line in her yard in 2009. Gallery: $109 million personal-injury award in Western Pennsylvania offers insight into tort system

When Carrie Goretzka's two young girls ran out onto the porch of their suburban home 30 miles east of Pittsburgh in the late afternoon on June 2, 2009, what they saw was a scene of unrelenting horror.

"Mommy, Mommy," yelled the oldest child, 4-year-old Chloe. "Mommy is on fire. Mommy is on fire."

Moments earlier, Carrie Goretzka had stepped outside her home in Irwin, Pa., to call the power company to report an outage and downed line on her property. She either stumbled into the line or it fell on top of her - no one knows for sure.

What is certain is that 7,200 volts coursed through Goretzka's body for 20 minutes before a utility crew turned off the current.

Now, Goretzka's death has become the focus of high-stakes litigation between a team of plaintiffs' lawyers from Philadelphia and the West Penn Power Co., a subsidiary of FirstEnergy, a $16 billion-a-year conglomerate with power plants and transmission lines in six states, including Pennsylvania.

In December, an Allegheny County Common Pleas Court jury in Pittsburgh awarded the Goretzka family $109 million in compensation, the largest award in a personal-injury case in Pennsylvania history, according to the family's attorney, Shanin Specter, son of late U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter.

On Friday, West Penn Power asked the judge in the case to overturn the verdict, citing what it said were numerous legal and evidentiary errors, including "inflamed rhetoric of plaintiffs' counsel."

The case has drawn the attention of legal experts, not only because of the size of the verdict, but also because the trial record provides a detailed glimpse into the workings of the tort system in high-stakes disputes.

Moreover, Specter and the jurors have spoken in unusually blunt terms about the litigation.

According to Specter, nearly four weeks into the trial and one day before the case went to the jury, the company and the plaintiffs' team agreed to settle the lawsuit for $50 million and a commitment from the utility to fix improperly installed wire splices along 26,000 miles of its system in Western Pennsylvania. The company backed out of the deal the next day, Specter said.

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He asserted at trial that West Penn customers had been plagued by an epidemic of downed wires because its workers had employed improper and easily remedied splicing techniques.

"It's a pretty simple case," Specter said. "A power line fell on a clear day and killed a beautiful woman in front of her kids and her mother-in-law. It is as clear a case of liability as there could be."

 

Clear responsibility

Virtually no one but the company, which declined to comment on the case, disputes the family's claim that West Penn is responsible for Goretzka's death.

The power line that killed her had collapsed in the Goretzka family's yard twice before, yet Specter introduced evidence that no serious attempt was made to find out why the line failed.

Even longtime critics of the plaintiffs bar, such as the American Tort Reform Association, which last year branded Philadelphia the nation's number-one "judicial hellhole" because of what it said were lawsuit abuses, said the company appeared to be to blame for Goretzka's death. The association has since withdrawn its Philadelphia designation, citing what it said was an improved legal climate.

Yet the case also has raised important questions about how juries, once they establish liability, mete out punishment. Juries in personal-injury cases have no real guidelines on punitive damages, and, strictly speaking, the sky is the limit. Such awards are sometimes overturned or reduced on appeal. Plaintiffs lawyers contend that high awards in civil cases serve as a powerful check on reckless conduct.

The system has drawn fire from critics, who claim the open-ended nature of punitive damages creates an opportunity for skillful trial lawyers to hike awards by manipulating the emotions of jurors.

The cumulative effect is to create costs that everyone ends up paying.

"Some lawyers are extremely good at creating emotion," said Victor Schwartz, general counsel of the American Tort Reform Association and a partner at the Kansas City firm of Shook, Hardy & Bacon L.L.P. Schwartz said huge jury verdicts had the potential to create economic harm.

"It's like [late U.S. Sen.] Everett Dirksen said: 'A billion here, a billion there, sooner or later it adds up to real money,' " Schwartz said.

 

A fallen line

On the day of the accident, Carrie Goretzka, 39, a bookkeeper whose husband, Michael, was away at work, was chatting with her mother-in-law, JoAnn Goretzka. Both were watching over the Goretzkas' two children, daughters Chloe and 2-year-old Carlie.

The power went out about 4 p.m., and Carrie Goretzka spotted a downed power line in the trees, which had caught fire near the family's split-level house.

She stepped out of the house to call the power company on her cellphone. A short time later, according to Specter, part of the power line came in contact with her. Although there were no witnesses, the company suggested at trial she might have stumbled into the downed line.

Goretzka died in the hospital three days later with burns over 85 percent of her body.

For the jury, it wasn't even a close call: A decision took just 90 minutes.

Jury foreman George Coulston, an executive from Latrobe, Pa., with a doctorate in engineering and applied science from Yale University, said the jurors were satisfied that the $109 million award was appropriate, given West Penn's conduct. The bulk of that, about $61 million, constituted punitive damages, and to arrive at that sum, Coulston said, jurors decided to take 25 percent of the company's retained earnings - money left over after dividends and other expenses are paid - about $244 million.

The balance of the award - $48 million - was, among other things, to compensate Goretzka's husband and daughters for their loss and the victim's pain.

Though much of the trial was taken up with testimony from witnesses offering technical opinions about whether the company had employed proper splicing techniques, Coulston said that, ultimately, was beside the point.

"The line fell three times," he said. "If they had a strong sense of stewardship for public safety, by the time the line fell the second time, they would have asked themselves, 'Why is this line falling down?' My impression was that it is a very poorly managed company."

And that, says Specter, is exactly the point. Someone, he said, needs to be watching over companies' shoulders, and government regulators often do an inadequate job.

Specter, along with his partner, Tom Kline, runs one of the nation's best-known plaintiffs firms. It has won many big cases, and last year, it gave $1 million toward construction of a new moot courtroom at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Kline & Specter has 35 lawyers - seven of whom also have medical degrees, the better to litigate the firm's substantial flow of medical-malpractice cases.

"I wish I could say that government is the best check on the free-enterprise system," Specter said, "but, unfortunately, it is not."

 


Contact Chris Mondics

at 215-854-5957 or cmondics@phillynews.com.

Chris Mondics Inquirer Staff Writer
email
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Comments  (100)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:05 AM, 02/04/2013
    Award is outta line. Excellent lawyering, though. Don't hate the playa.
    albrock
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:40 AM, 02/04/2013
    The photo looks like Runyan.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:07 AM, 02/04/2013
    $109 M is an atrocious award. Her death was horrible and I am sure there is impact on the children and husband but $109M is abusive. The American legal system is self-destructive with its awards. Let me guess....$100 M would go to the attorneys on both sides?
    jonline
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:00 PM, 02/04/2013
    The company lawyers are most likely in house or hired by the hour. Something on the order of a third to a half usually goes to injured party. The real problem is that, generally, corporate entities are usually more concerned about the fictively legal corporate "person" than about the actually REAL human being.
    This is a case that points to the continuing stupidity of having electrical lines ABOVE rather than BELOW the ground. I know it would be an expensive proposition to get electrical wiring below the ground, but, that is the corporate chant: PROFITS, NOT PEOPLE!.
    BEMiller
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:16 AM, 02/04/2013
    The damages were computed wrong. A doctorate in engineering from Yale does not make you an expert in calculating damages. Besides Yale is a second rate engineering school. The jury foreman does not know what he talking about. The financial statements of a company mean nothing. This case will be thrown out at appeal.
    chippersql
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:24 AM, 02/04/2013
    How much is too much for an agonizing death of a mother, that happened because of carelessness? These corporate types only feel financial punishment, so punish them as much as possible. Does anyone think these two girls will ever be able erase that horrifying image of their mother on fire? It will haunt them for the rest of their lives.
    POF
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:26 AM, 02/04/2013
    The customers of the utility company will be the payers in the end. What's wrong about calling from inside the house anyway, I bet the linemen had told her on the previous occasions how dangerous downed wires are.
    longbikez
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:54 AM, 02/04/2013
    I don't think so. The company's prices are regulated. The company was clearly culpable. It was down three times and they, clearly, just kept fixing it the same way each time. If the linemen told her, that might offer more proof that she didn't stumble, but that something happened that she couldn't help. If she was warned, I'm guessing she wouldn't have been reckless.
    PotteryPete
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:56 AM, 02/04/2013
    Because the company backed out of a $50 million settlement (plus the repairs to the line), they can't expect a $60-70 mil verdict. The gamble would be worth taking. The poor woman was zapped for 20 minutes and lived 3 days. We would euthanize a dog in this situation. This was a preventable death. A horrific death. By the way, @longbikez- you sound like an a''hole.
    iodine
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:56 AM, 02/04/2013
    $5 million for spilling coffee on yourself: this award is in line with that.
    STEPHEN1988
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:38 AM, 02/04/2013
    You mean $5mm for refusing to operate your coffee makers at the manufacturer's suggested temperature range, as well as going well beyond the allowed temperature range for the cups used, despite numerous prior burn incidents. Not to mention that the executives decided that it was worth the risk of getting sued because they make so much money on coffee that they can withstand a lawsuit or two. The $5mm was calculated based on one day worth of coffee sales. It was more about handing out punishment for disregarding your customers. That's the only power civil justice system have -- to punish by giving out awards. Would you rather trust the government in regulating businesses?
    sunzzy
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:54 PM, 02/04/2013
    @sunzzy - I've looked through every conversion formula I could find. How did you turn money, [$] into units of length like millimeters [mm]?? Have you been spending too much time in the Sunzzy? Your grammar by the way, is F'd up. Spend more time awake in schoolzzy.
    bad joe s
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:19 AM, 02/04/2013
    Zap.
    zen
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:29 AM, 02/04/2013
    She walked toward the line? Didn't have a back door? Yes, horrible and all that, and the family should get some money, but what a moron. Especially if the line has fallen before. "Oh, this time I'll go wrangle the power line myself!" I believe they have an award for this. I think it's called Darwin.
    verve
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:20 PM, 02/04/2013
    It's always tricky to come up with the right words when you're trying to think of something to say to a little child who's crying because her mother's on fire.
    Who would have that all would be well with that child if you just took a moment to explain that her mommy was a moron?


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