Publications

Events

PLUS Blog Features Cheng, Larkin & Tranen on Using Contracts to Mitigate Risk
When: October 6, 2025
People: Eric G. Cheng, Peter J. Larkin and Daniel E. Tranen
What Capacity Is Your Capacity In?
When: Q3 2025
People: Daniel E. Tranen and James K. Thurston
Professionally Speaking
When: Q2 2025
People: Richard J. Bortnick, Craig Brinker, Anjali C. Das, William F. McDevitt, James A. Murray, Susan Abbott Schwartz, Alexandra E. Skarka, Daniel E. Tranen and Michelle Yee
Coverage Matters
When: Q2 2025
People: Joanna C. Kocol, Shannon L. Santos, David Simantob, Thomas M. Spitaletto, James K. Thurston, Jane E. Young, Julia Grimké Young, Ashley F. Gilmore, Erik J. Tomberg and Daniel E. Tranen
Professionally Speaking
When: February 2025
People: Joseph L. Francoeur, Evgenia (Eve) Mouzouris, Daniel E. Tranen and Rebecca R. Gelozin
Coverage Matters
When: February 11, 2025
People: Jonathan E. Meer, Erik J. Tomberg, Spencer Hoisington, Ashley F. Gilmore, Daniel E. Tranen and Jane E. Young
Coverage Matters
When: November 2024
People: John H. Podesta, Graham R. Pulvere, Daniel E. Tranen, James K. Thurston and Michelle Yang
Professionally Speaking
When: October 2024
People: Carole J. Buckner, Arman Nafisi, Wendy D. Testa and Daniel E. Tranen
Liability Considerations for Products Originating Outside the United States
When: July 30, 2024
People: Daniel E. Tranen and Kathleen H. Warin
Professionally Speaking
When: July 2024
People: Mara Sackman, Robert F. Merlo, Carole J. Buckner, Daniel E. Tranen and Michael S. Weisenbach
The Shifting Landscape of Data Privacy Regulation in the Life Sciences Industry
When: July 15, 2024
People: Daniel E. Tranen and Jana S. Farmer
What If Your Automaker-Manufactured Ventilator Is a Lemon?
When: May 6, 2020
People: Daniel E. Tranen
Pre-trip inspections: Are you doing enough?
When: February 20, 2019
People: Daniel E. Tranen

Publications

Tranen and Martinez Tristani Obtain Dismissal of Product Liability Suit in Puerto Rico

Daniel E. Tranen (Partner-St. Louis, Mo) and Gustavo A. Martinez Tristani (Partner-Miami) obtained dismissal for a large warehouse club client in a product liability lawsuit brought in the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. The plaintiffs, a husband and wife, claimed the husband contracted E. coli after eating carrots purchased at the client’s store in Bayamón, Puerto Rico, resulting in personal injuries and loss of consortium. The plaintiffs alleged that the carrots constituted a defective product under Puerto Rico law and sued under theories of negligence, breach of warranty, and strict liability. Daniel and Gustavo filed a motion to dismiss, arguing the complaint failed to state a cause of action under any of the asserted theories because it failed to adequately allege a breach of duty and because the carrots were not a defective product as a matter of law.  The plaintiffs countered that our client was liable for breaching an implied warranty that products sold for human consumption are fit for human consumption and free of defects. In a nine-page opinion, the trial court dismissed the action with prejudice, holding that the complaint failed to state a cause of action because it failed to allege that the carrots became contaminated with E. coli through a manufacturing process and because they were not a defective product as a matter of law.    

Daniel E. Tranen and Gustavo A. Martinez Tristani

Product Liability

Thurston, Tranen, and Curtis Secure Declaratory Judgment Relief for Insurance Company Client

James Thurston (Partner-Chicago), Daniel Tranen (Partner-St. Louis, MO), and Robert Curtis (Associate-St. Louis, MO) secured a declaratory judgment dismissal on motion on the pleadings for an insurance company client in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri. The plaintiffs in this matter, executives at a company insured by our client, sought coverage for a lawsuit and a demand letter arising out of their provision of personal guarantees to the company for more than $14 million in debt to a lender and a supplier. The client had denied coverage because these personal guarantees were not made in the executives' capacity as officers of the company. The executives argued that they would not have made the personal guarantees but for the fact that they were officers of the company. However, the court agreed with the insurance company client that personal guarantees are personal obligations, and therefore, cannot be made by the executives in their "capacity" as officers of the company, particularly since if they had done so, then it would have been the company guaranteeing its own debt.

James K. Thurston, Daniel E. Tranen and Robert Curtis

Tranen, Wilke and Boston Obtain Unanimous Defense Verdict for Security Company

The St. Louis, Missouri, team of Daniel Tranen (Partner), Julia Wilke (Of Counsel) and Jennifer Boston (Associate) represented a security company client accused to failing to search a psych patient who brought a gun into the hospital emergency department and pointed it at two nurses while they tried to get him to change into hospital scrubs. The nurse plaintiffs argued that the mere fact that he had the gun demonstrated a lapse in security's need to control weapons coming into the emergency department. We convinced the jury that for patients in the treatment area of the emergency department – based on internal hospital policies and the post orders for our client – all searches had to be initiated by hospital staff, and there was no evidence that hospital staff initiated a search. Moreover, the procedures for searches had the search take place after the patient was in hospital scrubs and therefore this particular patient was not yet supposed to be searched under this key policy. Meanwhile, neither nurse plaintiff had requested a search before the gun was discovered, therefore, it was not our client’s fault that the patient had not yet been searched when he revealed the gun to the plaintiff nurses. The plaintiffs requested a verdict of $1 million with both nurses claiming significant PTSD symptoms and damages as a result of the incident. The jury returned a unanimous defense verdict after about an hour (you only need 9 of 12 jurors to reach a verdict in Missouri).

Daniel E. Tranen and Jennifer Boston

Murphy-Petros, Thurston, Tranen and Butterfield Score Team Victory before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Melissa Murphy-Petros (Of Counsel-Chicago, IL) Jim Thurston (Partner-Chicago, IL), Daniel Tranen (Partner-St. Louis, MO), and Chad Butterfield (Partner-Las Vegas, NV) convinced the Nevada District Court that coverage was not available under a $5 million D&O policy for the putative claims by a bankruptcy litigation trustee against a former officer (Kay). Kay allegedly breached his fiduciary duties to an insured entity when he failed to uncover the criminal fraud of its former CEO (Rogas). The Court followed Wilson Elser’s arguments that Kay’s breaches were “arising from” Rogas’s prior fraud and, therefore, fell within the purview of the exclusionary language of a warranty letter executed by Rogas, wherein he represented that “no insured” (including Rogas) had knowledge or information of any act or error that might give rise to a claim. Following briefing and oral argument by Melissa, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed, holding that despite two non-imputation clauses in the policy and allegations of wrongdoing by Rogas after the warranty letter, “the broad language excluding any claim ‘arising from’ pre-execution knowledge” was sufficient to bar any coverage to Kay under the policy. This three-office victory evidences the successful collaboration between Wilson Elser’s coverage, litigation and appellate attorneys on an economical basis without having to use additional local counsel.

Melissa A. Murphy-Petros, James K. Thurston and Daniel E. Tranen

Events

PLUS Blog Features Cheng, Larkin & Tranen on Using Contracts to Mitigate Risk
When: October 6, 2025
People: Eric G. Cheng, Peter J. Larkin and Daniel E. Tranen
What Capacity Is Your Capacity In?
When: Q3 2025
People: Daniel E. Tranen and James K. Thurston
Professionally Speaking
When: Q2 2025
People: Richard J. Bortnick, Craig Brinker, Anjali C. Das, William F. McDevitt, James A. Murray, Susan Abbott Schwartz, Alexandra E. Skarka, Daniel E. Tranen and Michelle Yee
Coverage Matters
When: Q2 2025
People: Joanna C. Kocol, Shannon L. Santos, David Simantob, Thomas M. Spitaletto, James K. Thurston, Jane E. Young, Julia Grimké Young, Ashley F. Gilmore, Erik J. Tomberg and Daniel E. Tranen
Professionally Speaking
When: February 2025
People: Joseph L. Francoeur, Evgenia (Eve) Mouzouris, Daniel E. Tranen and Rebecca R. Gelozin
Coverage Matters
When: February 11, 2025
People: Jonathan E. Meer, Erik J. Tomberg, Spencer Hoisington, Ashley F. Gilmore, Daniel E. Tranen and Jane E. Young
Coverage Matters
When: November 2024
People: John H. Podesta, Graham R. Pulvere, Daniel E. Tranen, James K. Thurston and Michelle Yang
Professionally Speaking
When: October 2024
People: Carole J. Buckner, Arman Nafisi, Wendy D. Testa and Daniel E. Tranen
Liability Considerations for Products Originating Outside the United States
When: July 30, 2024
People: Daniel E. Tranen and Kathleen H. Warin
Professionally Speaking
When: July 2024
People: Mara Sackman, Robert F. Merlo, Carole J. Buckner, Daniel E. Tranen and Michael S. Weisenbach
The Shifting Landscape of Data Privacy Regulation in the Life Sciences Industry
When: July 15, 2024
People: Daniel E. Tranen and Jana S. Farmer
What If Your Automaker-Manufactured Ventilator Is a Lemon?
When: May 6, 2020
People: Daniel E. Tranen
Pre-trip inspections: Are you doing enough?
When: February 20, 2019
People: Daniel E. Tranen
Privacy Settings
Your Privacy Choices
We value your privacy. Under privacy laws in your jurisdiction, you have the right to control how your personal information is used, including the right to opt out of the “sale” or “sharing” of your personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising. You may also limit the use of your sensitive personal information.

Below, you can review and adjust your cookie and data sharing preferences. For more information about how we use your data, please see our Privacy Policy.

Your Rights and Choices

Opt Out of Sale or Sharing: You may opt out of the sale or sharing of your personal information for advertising and analytics purposes by turning off Advertising & Targeting Cookies. We will honor your choice and will not sell or share your personal information for these purposes unless you enable these cookies again. Wilson Elser does not sell or share personal information in any other manner.

Limit Use of Sensitive Personal Information: If we collect sensitive personal information, you may limit its use to only what is necessary to provide requested services by adjusting your preferences here. Please contact privacy@wilsonelser.com with any questions.

Global Privacy Control: We honor browser-based opt-out signals, such as the Global Privacy Control (GPC). If we detect such a signal, your opt-out preference will be automatically applied.

These cookies are essential for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually set in response to actions made by you, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in, or filling in forms.

These cookies enable the website to provide enhanced functionality and personalization. If you do not allow these cookies, some or all of these services may not function properly.

These cookies allow us to count visits and traffic sources so we can measure and improve the performance of our site. They may be set through our site by us or our analytics partners to understand your interests and deliver more relevant content to you. If you do not allow these cookies, we will not know when you have visited our site