Summary
A California jury awarded Michael Garcia $50 million after he suffered severe burns from a spilled Starbucks hot tea, requiring skin grafts and causing permanent disfigurement.
Garcia’s lawsuit alleged a Starbucks employee failed to secure the drink in a tray, leading to the spill. Starbucks offered a $30 million settlement with confidentiality, which Garcia rejected.
The company plans to appeal, calling the damages excessive.
The case echoes past lawsuits over hot beverage burns, including the famous McDonald’s coffee case from the 1990s.
The incident:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1rmUichSTMfckx3NkZ4rcv-XxibJo2-o4/view
2nd Cup is at 2:30 and third immediately after.
Looks to me like she at least attempted to seat the cup firmly in the tray. So IDK?
As sad as this is for the driver, it seemed stable enough when she handed it over, but the driver unbalanced them.
EDIT:
On my 3rd review of the situation, it seems the 3rd cup looks taller in the tray. If they are supposed to be similar size cups, it is clearly not seated like the others.
Still I’d say the driver does carry some of the blame, he fumbled it after he had 100% control of the tray.
And although the driver can never be restored by any amount, $50m seems insane by the standards of “normal” countries.
Much like the insane judgements on copyright infringement, and death penalty to people who turn out to be innocent in USA.
Maybe ask yourself this: If the driver was drunk, and fumbled the tray, would that still be the fault of the server?
Now he probably wasn’t drunk, but it was still him that fumbled the tray, maybe because he wasn’t focused?
The issue with this is not likely to be the fault of whoever dropped the cup, but rather like the prior McDonald’s case that the restaurant was maintaining the drink at far too high a temperature to be safe. Therefore guaranteeing injury if it is spilled on someone – regardless of how it is spilled.
Expecting that drinks will never get spilled on anyone is completely unrealistic. Maintaining drink temperature at a reasonably non-injurious level for when (not if) one will be spilled is therefore mandatory.
This dude required skin grafts. That’s not a case of, “Oops, it spilled and now your shirt’s wet.”
I think that’s absolutely an issue, and I was wondering a bit about that, but that would also ruin the flavor of the coffee. I’ve never been to a Starbucks, but AFAIK Coffee is their main product.
Good point.
AFAIK a normal coffee machine heats the water to about 93° C, as a supposedly optimal temperature for the beans. I’d guess about 90° would be a pretty normal temperature for coffee.
But I also think that 60° would probably be hot enough to serve the coffee at.
Since our body temperature is about 37, the delta at 90 is 53, but the delta at 60 is only 23 which is way less than half, meaning that keeping it a bit colder would have an enormous impact on burn damage.
If you went that low, coffee snobs would probably riot. I don’t know the correct number, though. I’ll leave you with an anecdote, which is this:
I once spilled a cup of coffee water directly on my crotch at camp, via the expedient of not realizing my collapsible silicone camp cup was not fully deployed. I had just taken the pot off of my camp stove where it was at a rolling boil, poured it straight into the cup, which collapsed, and then onto myself. Total time from taking the boiling pot off the fire to dousing myself was about four seconds. That’s basically as hot as water can get unenclosed, under normal terrestrial conditions.
That hurt like a bastard for about 30 seconds, and my thighs were red for the rest of the day. I obviously didn’t require any skin grafts. (I was also able to stand up right away and fan off, and wasn’t trapped in a car.)
If the plaintiff was burned to the point that skin grafts were necessary then there was definitely something wrong with that cup of coffee.
Edit: Actually, for science. I just poured a cup straight out of my home coffee maker and bunged a thermometer in it. 170° F, or 76.66° C. I drank it and didn’t feel even a little bit like rioting, so that temperature is probably decent for serving. (Not necessarily brewing, which is 90-something C.) In fact, I would be immensely surprised if Starbucks did not have some kind of corporate guideline or policy about this, especially in the post-McDonald’s case world.
But as you state yourself, it cannot be hotter than boiling.
In open air, and cooked via thermal transfer, i.e. a heating element or a flame. It can be hotter if it’s been microwaved.
I have no idea how the drink in question was prepared.
It’s both in terms of fault. California is a comparative fault state. So if the guy’s injuries are worth 50 mil and he and Starbucks are each found equally at fault, them for giving overheated water and him for negligently handling a cup of potentially dangerously hot liquid then they’re each responsible for half the 50 mil. Or 70:30. Or 100:0. Whatever the jury decides.
You know, there was a trial where they reviewed the footage in detail, probably more than 3 times, and both sides got to point these things out. Are you sure he “fumbled” before the 3rd drink got spilled? Or was it the drinks instability that caused him to fumble?