Jury Awards $15.6M in Lawsuit Betwwen BrothersPublished: Saturday, March 17, 2007 The verdict was handed down Thursday before Judge Tom Piccione of Common Pleas Court and is one of the largest ever in Lawrence County, said county prothonotary Helen Morgan. Stephen Piper was severely injured in a crash Feb. 22, 2003, in a car driven by his brother, Kyle. The brothers were ages 15 and 17, respectively, at the time of the crash. According to court papers, the brothers were traveling on the U.S. Route 422 bypass in Union Township when Kyle Piper lost control of the car on an icy patch of road. Police reports state he was going too fast for the road conditions. The lawsuit was filed by parents Joyce and David Piper on behalf of their son, Stephen. Stephen Piper suffered a severe brain injury and is unable to communicate and is partially paralyzed, said the family's attorney Dallas Hartman of New Castle. Will need lifelong care "This young man has profound, profound injuries. What you have is a 6-foot-2-inch, 160- pound, 3- or 4-year-old," Hartman said. Hartman said the family did not lightly decide to pursue litigation, but was essentially forced into it. Hartman said it's not uncommon to have family members sue other family members in this type of situation to get payment from the insurer. "Under our system, your rights are the same if you are in a car accident with your husband or you are hit by a drunk driver. We have insurance companies to protect us," he said. Hartman said insurance companies, though, often try to use a familial relationship to an injury victim's disadvantage when they go after a claim. "The law is blind to who it is who hurts us," he said. He said when small amounts are to be paid, insurers are less likely to force a lawsuit. Mark Dombrowski, spokesman for Erie Insurance, said company officials have not yet decided how to proceed in this case. "We are the insurance company of the defendant, but we were not named in the lawsuit," he said. The company did provide Kyle Piper with an attorney for the lawsuit. He also retained a private attorney. No animosity "It was doing the right thing for Stephen. It's often difficult, but if everyone had done the right thing on behalf of Stephen in the beginning, this would have never gone to trial," he said. There are still multiple, ongoing lawsuits involving the family and Erie Insurance, he said. "They love both their sons with every ounce of their being," he said of the parents. |

