Archive for January, 2012

Model Severely Injured After Walking Into Plane Propeller

A professional model from Texas recently lost a hand in an accident at an airport when she walked into a moving propeller after deplaning a small airplane at night.

She was up and walking around after only a few days in the hospital with the help of a physical therapist.

The model and fashion blogger, 23-year-old Lauren Scruggs, suffered head, shoulder and brain injuries in addition to losing her left hand. She had gone up in the small, two-seat plane to view holiday light displays around Dallas from the air. Her family speculated that she was trying to return to the plane to thank the pilot when she unknowingly walked into the spinning propeller. Scruggs is the founder of LOLO Magazine and LOLOmag.com.

Small-engine airplane pilots are saying it is rare to let a passenger out of the plane with an open propeller until the engine is cut off and the prop has come to a stop. The plane, an Aviat Husky, has an engine that is far louder than the propeller and it might have been difficult to know in the dark that the loud noise was the engine and not the prop, according to ABC News.

The pilot of the plane is a friend of the Scruggs family and Lauren’s parents have said they have no plans to take legal action against him. But passenger safety is generally regarded to be the responsibility of the pilot – even on the tarmac.

The Federal Aviation Administration is looking into the incident. There is no word whether the engine was running when Scruggs was hit or whether the propeller was powering down. Some pilots have speculated that since it did not kill her, it might have been powering down. It is rare to survive such a catastrophic event.

In many catastrophic injury cases blame can be difficult to place on anyone but the person who was injured. It has been speculated that in this case the pilot may be at fault since the propeller was still running when Scruggs left the plane.

The plane’s propeller struck Scruggs on her left side, fracturing her skull and her collarbone. She was able to open and use her right eye within days of the accident, but her left eye was still bandaged. Doctors said the left eye would be their next focus after they amputated her left hand. Scruggs damaged the globe of her left eye, but doctors were able to repair it in surgery.

Seth Wilburn writes for the Gomez Law Group, a Dallas employment lawyer and Dallas business lawyer. To learn more, visit http://www.gomezlawyers.com.

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Monday, January 30th, 2012 Articles No Comments

Texas Court Keeps Franchise Tax on Partnerships

The Texas Supreme Court recently ruled that a business tax does not violate the state constitution and cleared the way for lawmakers as they attempt to change the tax in 2013.

The tax enacted in 2006 was the first in the state to require partnerships to pay a franchise tax, according to Bloomberg. The tax is not meeting expectations, and raising only about $4 billion a year for schools, prisons and other functions. Texas gets most of its revenue from property taxes, but since property values have been down, the state has had a revenue shortfall.


An insurance adjuster claimed that the tax acted like an income tax on some partnerships. In Texas, voters must approve of any new income taxes. The court found that a business tax does not apply to the partners in a partnership and the tax can stand.


This is good news for tax reform groups who think the Texas Supreme Court’s decision broadens the legislature’s ability to change the tax. Lawmakers had been waiting for a decision on the tax’s constitutionality before taking up tax reform in the legislature, according to the Austin American-Statesman.


Texas law has required a popular vote to enact a state income tax since 1993. The franchise tax came about after a 2005 Texas Supreme Court ruling declared the state’s education finance system was unconstitutional.


After the state’s Supreme Court ruling, the legislature slashed property tax rates and closed a loophole that allowed some businesses to avoid the franchise tax by changing how they were formed. The original idea was that the expanded franchise tax would make up for the changed property tax, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.


The new wider-ranging franchise tax hit smaller businesses. An insurance claims adjusting company called Allcat Claims Service sued the state’s comptroller’s office saying the tax amounted to an income tax on individual partners. Some small firms argued the franchise tax is complicated and puts a costly compliance burden on businesses.


The Star-Telegram also reported that school systems are suing the state again because the financing system is creating unconstitutional inequities.


The court disagreed by a vote of 7-2. One of the dissenting opinions stemmed from the state legislature’s insistence that any challenge to the tax go directly to the high court and that the court be required to address it within 120 days. Justice Don Willett ruled that the court would overstep by acquiescing to the mandate.


Seth Wilburn writes for the Gomez Law Group, a Dallas employment lawyer and Dallas business lawyer. To learn more, visit http://www.gomezlawyers.com.

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Tuesday, January 17th, 2012 Articles No Comments

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