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National Trial Team to Host 2026 Mock Trial Invitational
February 5, 2026
Eugene Boulé (Partner-New York, NY) and Suzanne Swanson (Of Counsel, New York, NY) successfully defended one of New York's largest health care providers in a trial in Richmond County Supreme Court for alleged assault, battery, wrongful arrest, malicious prosecution and intentional infliction of emotional distress by the hospital’s security staff. After a trial that included testimony from eight current and former employees of our client, the plaintiff, the plaintiff's wife and a psychologist, the jury returned a unanimous defense verdict on six separate causes of action against the hospital and its staff. Plaintiff's father was a patient at the hospital and plaintiff visited him up to three times per day for several days preceding the incidents that led to a violent altercation between the plaintiff and security. Plaintiff claimed that a doctor intentionally stopped giving his father pain medication in retribution for the plaintiff unwittingly giving a sandwich to a patient who was scheduled to undergo surgery, leading to his distress and persistence in pursuing the hospital staff for treatment of his father. The plaintiff was banned from entering the hospital, which resulted in an altercation with security.
Special thanks to Daphney Lebrun who worked tirelessly in contacting and arranging meetings with more than 20 witnesses in the week prior to trial, and to Suzanne Swanson who did a masterful job in discovery, preparing the case for trial and providing critical support during the trial.
Eugene T. Boulé and Suzanne S. Swanson
Eugene Boulé (Partner-New York, NY) and Elizabeth Scoditti (Associate-New York, NY) successfully defended New York's largest health care provider in a premises liability action in Richmond County Supreme Court. The jury returned a verdict in favor of a Staten Island hospital following a one-week trial. The plaintiff claimed she seriously injured herself when she was forced to walk on an uneven, 12-inch wide strip of concrete where no signs or barricades were present to prevent pedestrian access. She further alleged that this strip of concrete was similar in color to the adjacent walkway, thereby appearing to be an extension of the walkway and that the hospital failed to take any measures to ensure this area was safe. Gene and Elizabeth argued that no reasonable person would assume the 12-inch strip was a walkway, and therefore it was not foreseeable that the plaintiff or anyone else would have walked on it. They also presented the jury with other sensible routes the plaintiff could have taken if she were acting reasonably. The jury concluded that the plaintiff failed to meet her burden of proof with credible evidence and found no negligence on the part of the hospital. The settlement demand to the hospital was never less than $1.25 million throughout the trial.
Eugene T. Boulé and Elizabeth Scoditti