Landlord tries to argue reduced damages because lead poisoned child was Hispanic

30 July 2015 - 12:25 By ASHLEY SOUTHALL

A federal judge in Brooklyn explained in a court memo released on Wednesday why he rejected a landlord’s attempt to use a child’s Hispanic ethnicity to argue for reduced damages in a lead poisoning case. Judge Jack B. Weinstein ruled that the attempt violated federal law governing the use of statistical generalisations based on race or ethnicity, and forbid experts on both sides to discuss them.A lawyer for Mark Kimpson, the landlord, was seeking to reduce the $2 million in damages awarded to the child and his mother after she sued over lead poisoning. A jury awarded the damages on July 10 after finding that the apartment the family rented from Kimpson contained lead-based paint that had not been properly removed or contained.“Posed is the question,” Weinstein wrote, “can statistics based on the ethnicity (in this case, 'Hispanic’) of a child be relied upon to find a reduced likelihood of his obtaining higher education, resulting in reduced damages in a tort case? The answer is no.”To contest the damages, Kimpson’s lawyer, Roger V. Archibold, needed to persuade the court that the boy’s prospects for obtaining postsecondary education if he had not had lead poisoning were already low. Archibold argued that because Hispanics are less likely to obtain higher education, the boy’s chances for doing so were improbable.In a 52-page memo, Weinstein wrote that he rejected the argument based on a case in which the use of race- and ethnicity-based statistics was found to be in violation of the Constitution’s equal protection and due process clauses.The memo on Wednesday does not affect the jury verdict, which Archibold has appealed to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.Archibold said Weinstein had “mischaracterised” the defense’s argument about the child’s ethnicity. Archibold said he was confronting an expert hired by the plaintiffs whose statements at the trial did not seem to line up with the study he was citing.“The expert was confronted with the evidence of the study that he quoted,” he said. “He opined that the study gave him these statistics and it did not.”Weinstein added that Archibold was required to use specific characteristics of the child and his family, rather than the characterisation of the child as a member of a particular ethnic group, in projecting damages. The boy’s father has a bachelor’s degree and his mother has a Master of Fine Arts. Both held responsible income-generating jobs, the family was stable and the parents were caring, Weinstein said.“Based upon his specific family background, had the child not been injured, there was a high probability of superior educational attainment and corresponding high earnings,” Weinstein wrote. “Treated by experts as a 'Hispanic,' his potential, based on the education and income of 'average ”Hispanics“ in the United States,' was relatively low.”The boy’s mother, Niki Hernandez-Adams, rented a basement apartment from Kimpson in an old building in Bedford-Stuyvesant, where she lived while pregnant and after the boy turned 1. During a visit to the pediatrician after his first birthday, the boy was found to have elevated levels of lead in his blood. Hernandez-Adams claimed in her lawsuit that the lead poisoning had damaged the boy’s central nervous system.Archibold argued that Kimpson had sufficiently contained the hazardous lead-based paint in the apartment. Before the family moved in, the landlord had covered the old paint with new paint and drywall, according to the judge’s memo.Archibold blamed the family’s dog for severely scratching the walls and the moldings in the apartment, releasing lead dust. He also claimed that the infant’s cognitive and behavioral difficulties resulted from other medical conditions of his mother during her pregnancy.--2015 New York Times News Service..

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