Complaint

What is a Complaint?

A complaint is, “The first or initiatory pleading on the part of the plaintiff in a civil action. It corresponds to the declaration in the common-law practice. Its purpose is to give defendant information of all material facts on which plaintiff relies to support his demand.” (Black’s Law Dictionary 356. 4th Ed. Rev. 1968). It is what formally initiates a lawsuit and outlines a plaintiff’s allegations against a defendant. 

What is a Complaint?

What is a Complaint?

Complaints are meant to be concise, clear, and factual outlines of what charges a plaintiff intends to pursue and what damages it is seeking to obtain. They are not supposed to confuse or ambush the defendant. The contents of a complaint must be understandable to both parties, and the defendant must be able to construct a proper response and defense. In addition to the strictly legal charges contained in a complaint, the plaintiff must also make factual allegations specific to the facts of the case that they are pursuing in the complaint. They serve to back up the legal claims being asserted.

If an important fact or charge is left out of the complaint, it can not be used in the plaintiff’s case. It is important for all involved parties that the contents of the complaint are accurate and understandable. Anything else is improper, and not up to legal requirements. Effective communication through a complaint is a necessity.

More information about Complaint

Widespread Hospital Infection from Dirty Surgical Tools

Scranton, PA, March 30, 2012 — Pennsylvania medical malpractice lawyer Marion Munley called attention today to an investigative report indicating that hospital administrators and others in the medical field know that dirty surgical instruments are causing many dangerous infections in hospital patients.

A 4,200-word investigative report by the Centers for Public Integrity says hospital managers, surgical equipment manufacturers, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have been grappling with growing recognition that reusable medical devices are not being cleaned properly between procedures.

“The Centers for Public Integrity report about contaminated surgical instruments implicates hospitals, device manufacturers and oversight agencies in this alarming scandal,” said Munley of Munley, Munley & Cartwright, P.C., a Scranton-based Pennsylvania personal injury firm.

“Not only could hospitals be guilty of in how they clean surgical instruments, […]

Read More

More information about Complaint

$4.34 Million Awarded To Veteran Paralyzed After Spinal Surgery

A 66-year-old veteran who alleged he was left paralyzed from spinal surgery at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in West Los Angeles has been awarded $4.34 million by a federal judge, according to Courthouse News Service.

In October 2005, Alvin Johnson had spinal surgery to correct a ruptured disc at the VA medical center, according to the article. Doctors injected Surgifoam, a material which absorbs blood and other fluids, into the space created once the ruptured disc was removed.

According to the , the doctors did not remove all the excess foam and it expanded, pressing against the spinal cord. When the veteran’s daughter was notified two and a half hours later, Mr. Johnson had no feeling from his neck down and was nearly completely paralyzed.

An MRI showing the spinal cord was compressed was ordered by another doctor, but Mr. […]

Read More

More information about Complaint

HIPAA- A Barrier Between You & Your Medical Records?

Back in 1996, when the Health and Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was signed into law, the intention of the law (especially Title IV) was to protect a patient’s right to privacy, reduce fraudulent activity, streamline data systems and improve the health insurance system overall.

For years prior to the law’s passage, there was no federal standard for obtaining your medical records. Without the patient’s knowledge, records were being given to insurance companies, sent to landfills or just flat-out lost. Alerted by highly publicized lapses in medical record confidentiality (a garbage truck crash that sent medical records flying all over the highways, a doctor selling a computer without deleting patient information from the hard drive, and the list went on and on), lawmakers decided a better system was needed. So the whole theory behind HIPAA regs are that your medical records are just that, yours, […]

Read More
Search
Categories
Archives
LCA
PA Bar Association
top 100
Super Lawyers
Best law firms
best lawyers
top 1% of trial lawyers
av
Irish Legal
BBB Accreditation Badge The information contained on this website does not create an attorney-client relationship nor should any information be considered legal advice as it is intended to provide general information only. Prior case results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
855-866-5529
Back to Top