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Verdicts & Settlements
  • $15.0 million involving man who was left a ventilator dependant quadriplegic as result of broken neck during intubation

  • $12.5 million involving a suicide

  • $10.75 million settlement with physicians and hospital in case involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries at birth

  • $8.1 million wrongful death verdict in case involving an outpatient suicide, highest verdict in the United States in a suicide case

  • $7.1 million verdict represented the first medical malpractice verdict ever in Guilford County, highest medical malpractice verdict in North Carolina at the time, the second highest punitive damages verdict in the state

  • $7 million awarded by jury in medmal verdict

  • $4.5 million involving a child who suffered significant brain injury as result of medical treatment received for heart condition

  • $3.5 million verdict involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries

  • $3.25 million for the wrongful death of husband and father of 4 children who died due to a failure to see and appreciate a brain aneurysm by a radiologist performing an MRA (Magnetic Resonance Angiogram)

  • Confidential settlement in 2002: $2.3 million for the wrongful death of a 38 year-old, wife and mother of 2 children who died following a routine thyroidectomy

  • Cumberland County: $1.5 million settlement in a car accident involving a 31 year-old wife and mother of 2 children which resulted in a closed-head injury and permanent brain damage

  • Macon County: $800,000 wrongful death verdict in case involving throat cancer

  • PATIENTS' LAWSUITS TREAT ATTORNEY WELL; LAWYER SAYS BILL OF RIGHTS WOULD MAKE HMOS RESPONSIBLE FOR DECISIONS

    Charlotte Observer (NC)

    (c) Copyright 2001, The Charlotte Observer. All Rights Reserved.

    Sunday, July 8, 2001

    MAIN

    PATIENTS' LAWSUITS TREAT ATTORNEY WELL; LAWYER SAYS BILL OF RIGHTS WOULD MAKE HMOS RESPONSIBLE FOR DECISIONS

    ERIC FRAZIER, Staff Writer

    THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER

    FAYETTEVILLE -- Wade Byrd fires up a Tareyton, takes a long drag and
    pronounces himself pleased with the work he's done this year.

    He should be.

    With just six months of 2001 in the books, the Mecklenburg-born,
    Fayetteville-bred lawyer has racked up about $23 million in jury
    verdicts and out-of-court settlements. If he takes the one-third trial
    lawyers generally keep from their awards and settlements, that's more
    than $7 million.

    "I can't complain. It's been a pretty good year," Byrd says, a twinkle
    in his blue eyes. "But the year ain't over yet."

    Success for the 53-year-old lawyer, a onetime shoe salesman, says a
    lot about his determination to excel. And with the much-debated
    patients' bill of rights moving through Congress, critics might say it
    also shows how much money trial lawyers can make suing health-care
    providers and insurance companies.

    Byrd, however, says the bill, pushed through the U.S. Senate by his
    friend and fellow lawyer John Edwards, isn't about wealthy lawyers
    getting richer.

    That, he says, is what lobbyists for health maintenance organizations
    and insurance companies want people to believe. Byrd, one of the state's
    top medical malpractice and personal injury lawyers, says all the new
    bill will do is make HMO "bean counters" pay for their mistakes, just
    like any other business that harms someone.

    "Lawyers are people who are easy to dislike until you need one," says
    Byrd. "But what (business lobbyists) just don't seem to understand is,
    we're a capitalist country.

    "If you don't want to pay for your mistakes, let the government run
    everything. But part of being in private business is accepting the
    responsibility when you do make a mistake."

    *

    Against the odds

    Byrd's results are hardly typical for a Carolinas medical malpractice
    lawyer.

    Most labor in relative obscurity, pursuing complex, hard-to-prove
    allegations on behalf of injured or deceased patients and their
    families. Experts say most medical malpractice cases never make it to
    trial, and N.C. doctors win four out of every five that do.

    But Byrd, a lawyer for 28 years, says he has won most of his trials
    and has logged more successful settlements than he can remember. With
    his ever-fattening bank account, he pampers himself with Armani suits
    and gives liberally to the colleges he attended, Methodist College in
    Fayetteville and Wake Forest University, where he finished law school.

    With his law partner, Greensboro lawyer Sally Lawing, he has reached
    the top of the high-pressure world of medical malpractice litigation. He
    pursues cases not just in Fayetteville, but across the Carolinas,
    Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia.

    A former president of the N.C. Academy of Trial Lawyers, he recently
    won the group's highest honor, the Walter Clark Award.

    "He just does an excellent job in the preparation and presentation of
    his cases," says Charlotte lawyer Allen Bailey. "I'd say there's not a
    lawyer in the state that gets better results consistently in medical
    malpractice cases than Wade Byrd."

    His multimillion-dollar victories, often noted in newspaper stories
    that hang framed on his office walls, attract even more clients and
    cases. That means he can pick only the ones he believes in most
    strongly. And with the help of a registered nurse, a retired insurance
    adjuster and a former hospital administrator, he spots the winners.

    "We take 2 percent of the cases we look at," Byrd says. "The odds are
    stacked against you, so you'd better not only be good at what you do,
    you'd better be careful which cases you take."

    *

    'A brutal sport'

    Earlier this year, he and Lawing won an $8 million verdict against a
    former Charlotte psychiatrist accused of negligence in the suicide of a
    Concord man. They also won a $15 million settlement on behalf of a
    patient whose neck allegedly was broken as hospital workers tried to put
    a tube down his windpipe.

    Byrd says he has a case scheduled for trial in Charlotte this fall
    involving allegations of negligence against The Willows, a psychiatric
    hospital where a 13-year-old boy hanged himself in 1996.

    Byrd, who is suing on behalf of the boy's parents, says such cases are
    all about helping ordinary people fight big insurance companies that
    cover doctors for malpractice.

    Stephen Keene, a lobbyist for the N.C. Medical Society, says doctors
    want new laws that hold HMOs liable for medical decisions such insurers
    make. But the society, which represents about 11,000 N.C. doctors,
    doesn't believe medical malpractice lawyers' sole motivation is to help
    average citizens.

    "Generally, it's a very convenient argument for trial lawyers to say
    they're for the little people," Keene says. "But that's not the complete
    argument. They have a very strong pecuniary interest in large
    judgments."

    Byrd says he sees himself as a small businessman. Medical malpractice
    cases take years to complete, and he invests on average $50,000 to
    $100,000 to try cases involving death or catastrophic injury. If he
    loses, he doesn't get that back.

    "A third of nothing is nothing," he says. "It's a brutal sport."

    And failure doesn't just cost money. For Byrd, it's personal.

    "Losing a case is just agony," he says, grimacing and nearly doubling
    over in his button-tufted leather chair. "It's like a woman has
    rejected me."

    *

    Battling big business

    For someone who made his fortune suing hospitals and insurance
    companies, his life story is littered with ironies.

    He was born in Charlotte, one of seven children of an insurance
    salesman and a registered nurse. His mother battled depression, and a
    brother committed suicide several years ago.

    He grew up in Fayetteville, eager enough to be liked that his junior
    high school classmates voted him "most popular." He got more practice as
    a shoe salesman, a job that helped him pay his way through Methodist
    College.

    He's still selling himself to juries, a task made easier by his bushy,
    cowboy mustache and down-home Southern drawl. Even when he's explaining
    medical procedures and doctor's charts to jurors, he still sounds like a
    good old boy sitting on some front porch explaining the obvious.

    One group he doesn't have to worry about accepting him is Democratic
    politicians. He gives bushels of money annually, helping Democratic
    candidates ranging from Edwards to Gov. Mike Easley to former Charlotte
    Mayor Harvey Gantt.

    In 1996, he gave $75,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign
    Committee, a national group that helps Democratic candidates. He says
    he's helping those who look out for average citizens.

    "Ordinary people don't have lobbyists in Raleigh or Washington," he
    says. "The people who have the lobbyists are big business, big insurance
    companies."

    The way things are going, it looks like he'll have plenty of money to
    give his friends in the Democratic Party in years to come.

    "It was never about money," Byrd says of his career. "I wanted to be
    good. I wanted to be the best. The money just followed."

    *

    Eric Frazier: (704) 358-5145; efrazier@charlotteobserver.com

    TABULAR OR GRAPHIC MATERIAL SET FORTH IN THIS DOCUMENT IS NOT DISPLAYABLE

    PHOTO:2 1. TRACY WILCOX - SPECIAL TO THE OBSERVER. Fayetteville trial lawyer Wade Byrd has won an $8 million verdict in a Charlotte medical malpractice trial and a $15 million settlement in another lawsuit in the first six months of this year. 2. Byrd