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Significant Cases |
1981 State v. Tony Mason
William Healy and Richard Gonzales successfully defended University of Arizona Head Football Coach Tony Mason in a 15 count criminal indictment alleging fraud in the use of funds for the Wildcat football recruiting effort. The charges were prosecuted by the Arizona Attorney Generals Office shortly after the University of Arizona joined the Pac-10 Conference. Following a two week trial, the jury acquitted Coach Mason of all charges.
1984 Acevedo v. Pima County Adult Probation Department Richard Gonzales brought a lawsuit on behalf of several minor children who had been molested by a twice convicted child molester who was under the supervision of the Pima County Adult Probation Department. Initially, nine lawyers declined the case because existing case law did not allow this type of negligence lawsuit against the probation department. Mr. Gonzales took the case to the Arizona Supreme Court and succeeded in having the case law reversed. He then proceeded to recover over a $1,000,000 for the children who had been molested. This case became the subject of an annotation note published by the American Law Reports and can be found at 44 ALR 4th 631.
1989 Gerardo v. Tucson Airport Authority
The Dallas, Texas law firm of Baron & Budd, in association with Richard Gonzales, settled a $35,000,000 lawsuit against the City of Tucson on behalf of 1,618 plaintiffs who had been affected by the dumping of TCE (an industrial solvent) into the ground water table around the Tucson International Airport. Mr. Gonzales was raised in the affected neighborhood and many of his clients were friends and acquaintances with whom he grew up.
1991 Valenzuela v. Hughes Aircraft Company
The companion case to Gerardo v. City of Tucson was settled against Hughes Aircraft Company in 1991on behalf of 2,118 plaintiffs for $95,000,000. At the time, this was the largest settlement for a ground water contamination case in the history of the United States.
1994 Petolicchio v. Santa Cruz County Fair
Plaintiffs high school aged son was killed in a one car accident involving the consumption of alcohol. The alcohol was provided by a friend who was using his mothers keys to steal it from the Santa Cruz County Fair storage room. The Superior Court Judge dismissed the case citing the immunity granted to liquor licensees under existing Arizona statutes. The Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the trial courts dismissal of the case. Richard Gonzales then appealed the case to the Arizona Supreme Court and secured a reversal and finding by the Supreme Court, that as a matter of common law negligence, the defendant liquor licensee owed the general public a duty to prevent minors from stealing its alcohol. Following this decision by the Arizona Supreme Court, Mr. Gonzales was able to settle the case for the parents.
2002 Holguin v. Consolidated Freighters, Inc.
What started out as a relatively minor rear-end collision with soft tissue injury ultimately escalated into a case of permanent disability as a result of the onset of RSD (reflex sympathy dystrophy) and MPS (myofascial pain syndrome). Mr. Gonzales was able to settle the case with the defendant trucking company for $2,000,000.
2006 Associated Aviation Underwriters v. Wood
The TCE ground water contamination case which
started in 1984 with the cases of Valenzuela v. Hughes
Aircraft Company and Gerardo v. Tucson Airport Authority,
was finally resolved after 22 years of litigation with a
multi-million dollar settlement in the Damron enforcement phase
of the case. AAU v. Wood also resulted in a significant
court of appeals opinion addressing substantive issues of
insurance law in the State of Arizona.
2006 Bruce Austin v. Kenneth Howard & Little Bear
Transport, Inc.
On Christmas Eve 2002, tow truck driver Bruce Austin
was called to assist at a fatal accident. He was in a
median strip of Interstate 10 when a tractor-trailer
driven by Kenneth Howard went out of control and veered
into the median, hitting Austin and severing his right
leg. Austin also lost his left thumb, broke several ribs
and fractured his left shoulder. Howard was caught by
police making changes in his logbook while he sat in his
truck at the scene and admitted that he was driving
longer than allowed because he was trying to get home
for Christmas. Little Bear Transport was alleged to be
negligent in its hiring, supervision and business
practices. Both Howard and Little Bear Transport
admitted liability but argued that $1 million was
adequate compensation. The jury awarded $5 million in
compensatory damages and $10 million in punitive
damages. The Arizona State Bar (Arizona Attorney
Magazine, Vol. 43 No. 9, May, 2007) reported that
the Austin case was the second largest civil verdict in
Arizona in 2006.
2007 Taylor/Gurgone, et al. v. University House at
Tucson, et al.
University House at Tucson is an apartment complex
specifically designed for college students attending the
University of Arizona and Pima Community College. Almost
immediately upon opening its doors, the apartment
complex gained a reputation as “party central” for the
local college community. Despite the obvious underage
drinking, unruly conduct and escalating violence, the
apartment management failed to curb these parties
despite having a duty to make the premises safe for
tenants and their guests. Consequently, in April, 2003,
unknown assailants fired 18 gun shots into a party of
several hundred persons, killing two and wounding
numerous others. Richard Gonzales represented the
victims in a lawsuit in Pima County. After four years of
litigation, the parties entered into a significant
settlement with a covenant not to disclose the
settlement amount.
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Reported Cases |
State v. Watkins 122 Ariz 12, 592 P2d 1278 (Ct.App. 1979); McCown v. Patagonia Union High School Dist. 129 Ariz 127, 629 P2d 94 (Ct.App. 1981); Boyd v. Mary E. Dill School Dist. #51 129 Ariz422, 631 P2d 577 (Ct.App. 1981); Acevedo v. Pima County Adult Probation Dept. 142 Ariz 319, 690 P2d 38 (1984) 44 ALR4th 631; Bower v. Arizona State School for the Deaf and Blind 146 Ariz 168, 704 P2d 809 (Ct.App. 1984); Petolicchio v. Santa Cruz County Fair 177 Ariz 256, 866 P2d 1342 (1994);
Associated Aviation Underwriters v. Wood, et al., 209 Ariz 137,
98 P3d 572, (App. 2004).
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