Press Releases
Wilson Elser Elevates 41 to Partnership in 2026
January 12, 2026
Obtained summary judgment in favor of foundation/ excavation contractor in construction defect case involving a trip and fall on a New York City sidewalk.
Successfully filed a motion to dismiss general contractor on statute of limitations grounds in a slip and fall in a construction zone.
Obtained summary judgment for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in a case involving a slip and fall on ice by an airline employee at Newark Airport.
Obtained a defense verdict at trial for a school bus company serving as second chair trial counsel in a case where the plaintiff alleged a traumatic brain injury after being pushed by a classmate while on the bus home from school.
Obtained summary judgment in favor of foundation/ excavation contractor in construction defect case involving a trip and fall on a New York City sidewalk.
Successfully filed a motion to dismiss general contractor on statute of limitations grounds in a slip and fall in a construction zone.
Obtained summary judgment for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in a case involving a slip and fall on ice by an airline employee at Newark Airport.
Obtained a defense verdict at trial for a school bus company serving as second chair trial counsel in a case where the plaintiff alleged a traumatic brain injury after being pushed by a classmate while on the bus home from school.
Brian Del Gatto (Partner-Phoenix, AZ) and a Madison, New Jersey, team comprising partner Andrew Heck, of counsel Elyse Tormey, and associate Mellis Bakir, defended a wrongful death case in which the bus driver closed the front door on the decedent’s arm and drove away, causing the decedent to fall and be run over. He died several days later in the hospital, allegedly as a result of his injuries. The plaintiff sued our Canadian client, the largest municipal bus manufacturer in North America and the successor in interest to the legacy manufacturer of the bus, claiming product liability based on the allegation that the accident was a result of the door's defective design. After setting the tone early with extensive pre-answer motion practice, extensive discovery followed. Brian and the team moved for summary judgment after the discovery deadline lapsed, prior to the setting of any trial date, based on a number of grounds, including that expert testimony was necessary but lacking, and that expert opinion, even if it had been provided, would fatally lack sufficient factual support. The team strategically filed a summary judgment motion prior to its due date, so that it would be pending at the time another hearing would be conducted, at which they suspected efforts may be made to blow out discovery deadlines. When that suspicion proved accurate, the team leveraged the prejudice that would arise from extending discovery after we showed our hand in filing our motion into a prohibition on new discovery being admissible with respect to the client. Lacking the ability to use new discovery to right the ship and faced with an unassailable motion, all adversaries permitted that motion to proceed unopposed, and summary judgment was entered on the client's behalf. This aggressive strategy saved the client – which had a high self-insured exposure – significant defense costs for trial, as well as the always possible, albeit remote, adverse shock verdict.
Brian Del Gatto, Andrew J. Heck, Elyse S. Tormey and Mellis Bakir