Ty Wilson Law January 2019

Give us a call! 1-866-937-5454 Monday–Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST www.TyWilsonLaw.com

FIRST-CLASS MAIL US POSTAGE PAID BOISE, ID PERMIT 411

1 Bull St., Suite 305 Savannah, GA 31401

For many people, preparing for the NewYear’s countdown is the most exhilarating part of the holiday season. You tune your TV to the Times Square ball drop, hand out party hats, confetti, and noisemakers, andmeticulously line up some champagne flutes. What’s left to do? Pop open the champagne! There are many partiers who pop the cork with enthusiastic and careless abandon, while others point the bottle away from their faces and anxiously twist the cork until they hear those bubbles surge to the surface. Turns out, while the latter practice may be slightly less fun, it’s certainly the safer approach. On April 8, 1978, Charles J. Murray was injured when a natural cork stopper spontaneously ejected from a bottle of previously unopened Almaden Blanc de Blancs champagne and struck him in the left eye. He was preparing to serve the bubbly to a party of 40 people, so he placed 12 bottles on a rolling cart and removed Inside This Issue From the Desk of Ty PAGE 1 Talk to Your Teen About Distracted Driving PAGE 1 What Happens to Military Service Dogs? PAGE 2 Staying Safe on Social Media PAGE 3 Citrus and Avocado Salad PAGE 3 Take a Break! PAGE 3 Watch Out for Rogue Champagne Corks This Year PAGE 4

PUTTING THE ‘PAIN’ IN CHAMPAGNE Spontaneously Ejecting Cork Causes Lawsuit

“WARNING: THIS BOTTLE IS UNDER PRESSURE. THE STOPPERWILL EJECT SOON AFTER THEWIRE HOOD REMOVAL. TO PROTECT AGAINST INJURY TO FACE AND EYES, POINT AWAY FROM SELF AND OTHERS WHENOPENING.” When it comes to bubbly-induced mayhem, the greatest potential trouble lies in the eye of the beholder — literally. With an estimated velocity of 60 miles per hour, uncontrolled corks do in fact fly faster than the blink of an eye. To avoid having to explain a not-so-fashionable eye patch at work on Monday, handle those fizzy drinks with care.

the foil and wire retainer from three or four bottles — including the one that eventually injured him. Once he started to roll the cart toward the guests, the cork shot out of the bottle all on its own.

Due to the severity of his injury, Murray sued Almaden

Vineyards, Inc., National Distillers and Chemical Corporation, and Carbo, Inc., alleging that they

were responsible because they failed to include a proper warning label on the bottle. The defendants, however, argued that the cork stopper did not and could not spontaneously eject unless Murray had handled the bottle improperly. The case was argued by both sides for two years, but eventually, Murray won. Almaden Vineyards now prints the following on its bottles:

4 • www.TyWilsonLaw.com

Published by The Newsletter Pro • www.newsletterpro.com

Made with FlippingBook - Online magazine maker