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Defense Digest

On the Pulse…Erie, Pennsylvania, Office Profile

Defense Digest, Vol. 30, No. 4, December 2024

December 1, 2024

In the run up to the 2024 presidential election, Erie County was featured as the “bellwether” or “pivotal” county that could determine the outcome of the election. Erie County’s history of voting for the winner in the last four presidential elections mirrored the outcome in Pennsylvania and created a blitz of media coverage and campaign appearances from both parties to try to win the all-important votes. Why Erie?

Erie County is located along the shores of Lake Erie in northwest Pennsylvania, equidistant from Buffalo and western New York, Cleveland and eastern Ohio, and Pittsburgh in the southwest part of the state. The county features the metropolitan area of the City of Erie, where Marshall Dennehey has its office, with rural areas surrounding the city. The County’s 270,000 residents have strong blue-collar roots, with industrial employers such as Wabtec, the successor to General Electric’s locomotive plant, and with expanded white-collar employers, including Erie Insurance Company, the area’s largest employer and a Fortune 500 company. Several universities, the largest medical school in the country, and a strong tourist economy based on the recreational opportunities centered on Presque Isle State Park attract people from all across the area to Erie. These characteristics make Erie County an important area in politics and in law. 

Erie has been home to a Marshall Dennehey office for 27 years, since opening in 1996. The Erie office serves 10 counties in northwest Pennsylvania, along with western New York State. Its downtown location has witnessed the transformation of the city core into a vibrant entertainment, office, and residential area. During this time, the attorneys and staff in the Erie office have provided its clients with defense representation in litigation across all practice areas of the firm.

Our office is currently staffed by five attorneys and two paralegals. This team of experienced professionals enables Marshall Dennehey to service clients in all areas of litigation. The practices of our attorneys include casualty, professional liability, employment and workers’ compensation, and health care. 

Thom Lent is the senior attorney in the office, and he directs the health care group. Thom has defended and tried numerous medical malpractice lawsuits on behalf of individual physicians and medical professionals, medical practices, long-term care facilities, and hospitals. He also has taught at the local medical school, and he enjoys moonlighting in a band featuring local attorneys. 

Pat Carey handles both professional liability and casualty work, and he spends most of his time defending local municipalities in litigation involving public officials, law enforcement, and prisons. His practice is primarily in the Federal District Court in Erie. 

Our office is staffed by two associates, Lori Mason and Emily Downing, who work in all areas of the firm’s practice, but primarily in professional liability and casualty. Lori’s experience as an assistant district attorney, public defender, and in corporate law brings a well-rounded perspective to her work defending individuals and businesses in litigation. Emily worked in the Erie County District Attorney’s Office for several years, where she was involved in several trials with outstanding results. Her background in law enforcement has enabled her to make a smooth transition to the defense of civil rights and public employment cases. 

My practice is unique in that I have handled all types of cases for our clients, including premises and vehicular liability, employment and workers’ compensation, and professional liability. My current practice focuses on defense of employment litigation for public and private entities, along with defending professionals in real estate, insurance, legal, law enforcement, and financial liability cases. 

Our office also partners with the firm’s offices in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and New York State to provide further depth and expertise to its work and to handle cases in the Erie region. The collaboration among the attorneys and staff in these offices provides our clients with the unique capability of having local attorneys who know the judges, attorneys, and jurors, with the breath of expertise from other offices to complement the work. 

Marshall Dennehey’s presence in Erie and northwest Pennsylvania is unique in that it gives us the opportunity to provide strong defense representation to our clients in Pennsylvania and New York in a variety of practice areas and disciplines with the support of a 500-plus attorney regional law firm. This has enabled the Erie office to maintain its hold in the area as a premier defense litigation law firm, pivotal to the success of Marshall Dennehey.  


 

Defense Digest, Vol. 30, No. 4, December 2024, is prepared by Marshall Dennehey to provide information on recent legal developments of interest to our readers. This publication is not intended to provide legal advice for a specific situation or to create an attorney-client relationship. ATTORNEY ADVERTISING pursuant to New York RPC 7.1. © 2024 Marshall Dennehey. All Rights Reserved. This article may not be reprinted without the express written permission of our firm. For reprints, contact tamontemuro@mdwcg.com.

Firm Highlights

Thought Leadership

U.S. Supreme Court Decides Key Issue Regarding Interstate Freight Broker Liability

Freight brokers are intermediaries.  They connect shippers of goods with trucking companies that transport those goods.  Freight brokers match a load of freight with a trucking company and oversee the logistics of the transportation. For a number of years there has been a division among the Federal Circuits regarding the potential liability of freight brokers when the trucking companies that they retain for interstate loads are involved in accidents.  At the center of this division was the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act of 1994 (FAAAA).  Some Federal Circuit Courts have held that state law negligent hiring claims against freight brokers were preempted by the FAAAA .  Other Federal Circuits Courts have held that even if preemption applied, the “safety exception” in the FAAAA saved state law negligent hiring claims from federal preemption.  On May 14, 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed the conflict in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, LLC, et al, No24-1238. In that case freight broker C.H. Robinson selected Caribe Transport to haul an interstate load. The commercial truck driver employed by Caribe Transport allegedly caused an accident and the plaintiff, Montgomery, was seriously injured. Montgomery brought an action against the driver, Caribe Transport and C.H. Robinson. The allegation against C.H. Robinson was that it negligently retained Caribe Transport when it knew, or should have known, that it was an unsafe company. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that Montgomery’s claims against C.H. Robinson were preempted by the FAAAA. The plaintiff appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.  The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision focused primarily on the safety exception in the FAAAA.  That provision provides that the FAAAA preemption “…shall not restrict the safety regulatory authority of a State with respect to motor vehicles.” C.H. Robinson argued, as freight brokers historically have, that their function was not “with respect to motor vehicles” because they do not own trucks or employ drivers. They are merely intermediaries, connecting entities who need freight moved with entities who can do that job. Therefore, C.H. Robinson argued that preemption applied, not the safety exception. The U.S. Supreme Court did not accept that argument. The Court focused on the meaning of the phrase “with respect to” in the safety exception. The Court held that it means “referring to”, “concerning” or “regarding”. Therefore, writing for a unanimous Court, Justice Barrett concluded that “[r]equiring C.H. Robinson to exercise ordinary care in selecting a carrier therefore “concerns” motor vehicles—most obviously, the trucks that will transport the goods. So, Montgomery’s negligent-hiring claim falls within the FAAAA’s safety exception, which saves it from preemption.” Justice Kavanaugh, in his concurring opinion, noted the effect this ruling may have on freight brokers and their insurers throughout the country: Importantly, the Court's decision today should not be read to mean that brokers will routinely be subject to state tort liability in the wake of truck accidents. As even plaintiff's counsel stressed, brokers should be able to successfully defend against state tort suits if the brokers have acted reasonably and arranged transportation with reputable trucking companies. Tr. of Oral Arg. 27-29. In plaintiff's counsel's words, the brokers "just have to hire carriers that actually have a reasonable policy," and "the broker is not going to have a problem if it's asking the hard questions of the carrier." Id., at 42, 45. In addition, the proximate-cause requirement in typical state tort law should help protect brokers from excessive liability. Id., at 25. That said, the brokers rightly caution against naivete. In the real world, as the brokers forcefully respond, state tort law can be unpredictable, and the costs to brokers of litigation and insurance may be significant even when brokers prevail in lawsuits. Moreover, the costs of litigation and insurance, as well as the costs of brokers' conducting more substantial inquiries into trucking companies, will cascade through the economy and be paid in part by American consumers in the form of higher prices. The concerns expressed by the brokers are legitimate and weighty. The key point here is that freight brokers can no longer claim they are protected from negligent retention claims by the FAAAA (in cases involving interstate transportation). The challenge will be to determine what is considered ”reasonable efforts” used by brokers when retaining transportation companies. 

Result

No-Cause Jury Verdict Secured in Wrongful Death Trial

We successfully obtained a no-cause jury verdict in a 13-day wrongful death trial. The decedent, a 59-year-old man, was admitted to the emergency room on February 15, 2019, with complaints of abdominal pain, decreased appetite, and constipation, despite the use of laxatives. The patient did not complain of any nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea. He had a significant medical history including diabetes, hypertension, prior coronary artery stenting, morbid obesity (with past gastric bypass surgery), longstanding ventral hernia, and back pain. A CT scan revealed multiple hernias and a potential closed-loop bowel obstruction, leading to a surgery consultation. Our client, an emergency general surgeon, interpreted that the patient did not have a closed loop or any significant obstruction and recommended non-surgical management. The patient was approved to have clear liquids, and had a vomiting incident shortly after, but our client was not notified. The patient was returned to NPO status, and after improving overnight, he was returned to “clears” and additional medical and renal consults were ordered. Our client did not receive any communications from the residents/nurses of any changes in the patient’s condition. On February 18, 2019, two rapid responses were called due to increased heart rate and vomiting. It is believed that the vomiting resulted in aspiration, causing sepsis, ultimately leading to the patient’s death. During the trial, the plaintiff’s sole medical expert highlighted imaging on the wrong hernia, which called into question all of his opinions in the case. We made key objections related to the expert testimony, limiting what the allegations were, and preventing new allegations from being made. After approximately two and a half hours of deliberating, the jury returned a no-cause verdict. 

Thought Leadership

PA Middle District Dismisses Claims Against School District and its Superintendent, Principal, Special Education Director, and Classroom Teacher

A five-year-old special education student was enrolled in the Wyoming Valley West School District and attended the State Street Elementary School during the 2024-2025 school year. The student refused to clean up classroom toys at dismissal. When his teacher allegedly grabbed him by the wrist to walk him back to his seat, the student dropped to the floor and began crying. The teacher then allegedly grabbed the student by the ankle and dragged him across the floor. Following an investigation, criminal charges were not advanced by the county DA, and the school permitted the teacher to return to the classroom. The student’s parents sued, lodging thirteen legal counts under both state and federal law, which sought monetary damages from the teacher, the school district, the superintendent, the principal, and the director of special education. The plaintiff’s 42 USC 1983 claims were dismissed as to the school district for failure to allege a policy or custom violation, and the failure to alleged deliberate indifference in the failure-to-train context. As to the superintendent, building principal, and special education director, the Section 1983 claims were also dismissed for failure to allege personal involvement on the part of the individuals. Regarding an equal protection claim asserted against all defendants, the motion to dismiss was also granted for a failure to advance a plausible equal protection claim, holding that “plaintiffs' single-act allegations do not include a factual basis to even infer that the act was motivated by discriminatory animus rather than some other non-discriminatory impulse.” The court further dismissed the plaintiff’s negligence-based claims including negligence against the teacher and district administrators, NIED, and vicarious liability under the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act (PSTCA). The federal claims under the IDEA, Section 504, and the ADA were also dismissed in various respects. The IDEA claim was dismissed against all defendants with prejudice for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The Section 504 claims against the individual defendants were also dismissed with prejudice, as districts, not individuals, are the recipients of federal funds under Section 504. However, the Section 504 and ADA claims were dismissed without prejudice as to defendant Wyoming Valley West, and the plaintiff was permitted leave to amend.