Attorney Articles
California Restaurant Association Publishes Katz Article on Surcharges and Service Fees
August 1, 2024 - California Restaurant Association
Michael Lowry (Partner-Las Vegas) and Kevin Brown (Of Counsel-Las Vegas) won a motion to dismiss in Second Judicial District Court in Reno, having been retained by a local trucking company whose vehicle was involved in a tip-over accident with another commercial truck. Upon filing the suit, Plaintiff completed all required preliminary procedures with one critical exception: the timely opening of discovery. This failure to act, despite reminders from Brown seeking the opening of discovery, resulted in the district court granting a motion to dismiss on behalf of the defendant after finding no extraordinary circumstances to justify the delay.
Michael Lowry and Kevin A. Brown
Michael Lowry (Partner-Las Vegas, NV) obtained a dismissal in the Eighth Judicial District Court on behalf of a national sports bar restaurant with a flagship store on the Las Vegas Strip. Two customers alleged they were served drinks spiked with illicit drugs, causing both of them to become impaired, with one asserting he had been hospitalized as a result. The customers filed suit, but did not complete in a timely manner the process to open the discovery period. Michael moved to dismiss, noting the long delay, and the district court dismissed the case over the customers' objection.
Michael Lowry
Las Vegas partner Michael Lowry and associate Jonathan Pattillo were granted summary judgment for the firm’s department store retail chain client in United States District Court, District of Nevada. The plaintiff alleged that the store had cooperated with police and other stores in an investigation of an organized retail theft group, which violated his civil rights under color of state law per 42 USC 1983, defamed him by identifying him as being involved in the crime and resulted in his false imprisonment. The charges stemming from the investigation were dropped when the plaintiff noted he was incarcerated for unrelated convictions when the retail thefts occurred. Michael and Jonathan argued that someone who is already incarcerated cannot be falsely imprisoned by someone else and that there were no strong indicators of a conspiracy present. In granting summary judgment to the firm’s client, the judge also concluded there is a limited privilege to defame for people reporting crimes and cooperating with police. The limits of that privilege were not breached here.
Michael Lowry and Jonathan C. Pattillo
Michael Lowry (Partner-Las Vegas) was hired by an American restaurant and entertainment business concerning an incident where a customer was served, continued drinking at an unrelated bar and later drove his car. Within two miles, he struck a car stopped at a red light, killing two people in the car.
The decedents’ families filed a wrongful death claim against the restaurant, the bar and the driver. They argued NRS 41.1395, the Nevada statute that specifically places responsibility on the person who drank not the person who served them, is unconstitutional. Michael moved to dismiss the entire complaint, and the Eighth Judicial District Court agreed, stating that NRS 41.1395 is constitutional. The court created a narrow exception, concluding NRS 41.1395 would not protect someone who assisted the driver to his car. Michael then subpoenaed the police investigation, which proved the person who assisted the driver to his car was an employee of the bar, not the restaurant. Michael then moved for summary judgment and the court granted it.
Michael Lowry