- by cnn
- 15 Aug 2024
A Dunkin' franchisee is paying a woman $3 million to settle a lawsuit involving hot coffee falling on her lap that she alleges caused severe burns and life-altering injuries, according to her lawyers.
The unnamed woman claimed the incident, which happened in February 2021 at an Atlanta-area location, occurred because the cup's lid was not secured.
According to the woman's attorney, the lid came off the cup after she was given the drink and the hot coffee spilled on her lap causing second- and third-degree burns to her thighs, groin and abdomen. She also required "extensive" skin grafts, a statement said. The injury resulted in her spending weeks at a burn unit in a Georgia hospital, costing her $200,000 in medical bills.
"America may run on Dunkin', but our client had to re-learn how to walk due to the severity of her burns," said Morgan & Morgan attorney Benjamin Welch in a statement. "We alleged that the spill never would have happened had the drive-thru employee properly secured the lid on our client's coffee cup."
Welch said that the woman, who was 70 years old at the time of the incident, said that she had to "alter the way she lives her life" because of the injuries. Walking is painful for her and that she still must apply creams to he her burns "several times a day."
Golden Donuts LLC, the franchisee, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Corporate parent Dunkin' isn't named in the lawsuit and also didn't respond for comment.
This case echoes the famous McDonald's hot coffee lawsuit several decades ago, in which another woman spilled coffee on her lap and suffered third-degree burns. Third-degree burns are the most severe and penetrate through the entire skin.
The Global Wellness Institute (GWI), a non-profit authority on the global wellness market, today unveiled fresh insights into Saudi Arabia’s burgeoning $19.8 billion wellness economy. The new data highlights the Kingdom as one of the fastest-expanding wellness hubs in the Middle East and North Africa, boasting an impressive 66% average annual growth in wellness tourism from 2020 to 2022.
read more