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Houston Personal Injury Attorney Case Results:

DISCLAIMER: Please note that every case is different and these verdicts and settlements, while accurate, do not represent what we may obtain for you in your case.

Girl, age 3, fell from second-story balcony, broke leg

Slips, Trips & Falls

Girl, age 3, fell from second-story balcony, broke leg

 

Settlement: $325,000.00
Attorney fees:  $108,333
Litigation expenses:  $28,000
Case Type: Fall from Height, Premises Liability - Apartment , Premises Liability - Apartment Building
Case: Nova Hicks, Individually and as Next Friend of Lillyanna Romero, a Minor v. Mangum Terrace Apartments, d/b/a Mangum Terrace, LLC, and Delta I Investments, LLC, No. 2004-73219
Venue: Harris County District Court, 129th, TX
Judge: S. Grant Dorfman
Date: 12-18-2005

PLAINTIFF(S)
Attorney:
  • Brian A. Beckcom; Vujasinovic & Beckcom LLP; Houston, TX, for Lillyanna Romero


Expert:
  • None

DEFENDANT(S)
Attorney:
  • Fred Shuchart; Kroger, Myers, Frisby & Hirsch; Houston, TX, for Delta I Investments LLC
  • Sio Ramirez; Kroger, Myers, Frisby & Hirsch; Houston, TX, for Delta I Investments LLC


Expert:
  • None

Facts:
On Dec. 7, 2004, plaintiff Lillyanna Romero, 3, and her mother, Nova Hicks, went to visit a friend at Mangum Terrace Apartments in Houston. While Hicks was visiting with her friend in a first-floor apartment, Lillyanna climbed the outdoor stairs to the second floor. She went under or through a balcony railing and fell about 6 feet onto the pebble surface below.

The property was owned by Delta I Investments.

Hicks, individually and on behalf of her daughter, sued Delta I Investments LLC, Houston, on a premises liability theory, claiming that the balcony railing gaps, which were 7 inches instead of the 4-inch maximum under the Houston Building Code, were unreasonably dangerous.

The plaintiff also sued the prior owner, Mangum Terrace Apartments, operating as Mangum Terrace LLC, but it did not answer.

Delta I argued that Lillyanna crawled under the railing, and that there was no regulation governing the vertical space under a railing.

Delta I also contended that Hicks failed to supervise her child properly; that, because the complex was 40 years old, it was grandfathered out of the railing requirement; and that, regardless, the railings were not unreasonably dangerous. Also, four witnesses gave written statements saying that Hicks knowingly allowed Lillyanna to climb up and play on the second floor railings, and one witness said that people had told Hicks to supervise Lillyanna and tell her to come down.

Delta I also argued that it had owned the property for only 10 months and that it was in the midst of extensive repairs when the incident occurred.

The plaintiff's attorney argued that the 4-inch requirement was not subject to grandfathering.

 


Injury:
The fall broke Lillyanna's right femur, and her mother rushed her to an emergency room. She required pins and a rod in

her leg and was placed in traction. The pins were removed

during the initial hospital stay, and the rod was removed a few months later. According to her treating doctor, Lillyanna recovered completely, with no likelihood of future complications.

The medical bills that were actually paid were less than $30,000. She also claimed pain and suffering.

 


Verdict Information Delta I settled for $325,000, to be paid by its insurer.