An Oklahoma appeals court has ruled a mother is not entitled to recover any damages after her 7-year-old daughter spilled hot gravy on her leg after buying a meal from a fast food restaurant’s drive-through window.
The Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals ruled Monday in favor of the defendant, Whataburger, and upheld a lower court’s ruling.
The child’s mother sued the restaurant after she ordered a meal that included a Styrofoam bowl of heated gravy that spilled on her daughter’s leg, resulting in second-degree burns.
The court determined the gravy was not unreasonably hot and that the family had eaten the same meal many times and should have “known or expected the gravy to burn if spilled.”
Attorneys for the mother and Whataburger did not immediately return telephone messages.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
US Will Test Infant Formula to See If Botulism Is Wider Risk
These Five Technologies Increase The Risk of Cyber Claims
FM Using AI to Elevate Claims to Deliver More Than Just Cost Savings
UBS Top Executives to Appear at Senate Hearing on Credit Suisse Nazi Accounts