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by cherokee316 from Independence,Mo.

Last Post 20 days, 4 hours Ago


Man wins $340,000 in bottled fly lawsuit
winsdor star ^ | 4 26 05 | Chris Thompson

Posted on Wednesday, April 27, 2005 12:51:32 PM by freepatriot32

A Windsor hairstylist who suffered "recognizable psychological injury" after discovering a dead fly in a bottle of Culligan water has been awarded more than $340,000 in damages.

Waddah (Martin) Mustapha, who operates two outlets of Martin's Coiffure and Spa at the Radisson Hotel and Casino Windsor, claimed "nervous shock, emotional distress and resulting anxiety, depression and physical and psychological conditions" arising from a breach of contract with Culligan.

"It's long overdue," Mustapha said of the settlement.

On Nov. 21, 2001 Mustapha and his wife Lynn, who was seven months pregnant, were preparing a new bottle of Culligan water to put in their dispenser when she saw something dark in the bottle. Both looked closely and saw legs and wings and realized it was a dead fly.

Lynn Mustapha vomited immediately and Martin vomited later in the evening.

Justice John Brockenshire heard that after discovering the fly Mustapha "could not get the fly in the bottle out of his mind."

Mustapha told court he would have nightmares about falling into a ditch face down in water and he could not sleep more than four hours a night.

LOST SENSE OF HUMOUR

He also testified that he lost his sense of humour and became argumentative and edgy.

Mustapha did not see a doctor until January 2002 and told the doctor that his salon clients were "asking what was wrong with him and whether he was OK."

The doctor prescribed anti-depressants to help him relax and sleep.

He was also prescribed stool softeners for constipation which Mustapha attributed to the fact that he used to drink eight glasses of water a day and now drank none.

Since the incident, Mustapha said he was unable to get the image of the fly out of his mind, and often pictured flies walking on animal feces or rotten food and then being in his bottled water.

Prior to the fly incident Mustapha would shower daily, singing while doing so.

Afterward Mustapha would stand in the bathroom contemplating whether to shower or not and would often just get dressed and leave or wipe a cloth under his arms before applying deodorant.

Following therapy Mustapha was able to stick his head under the water so it would not touch his face and later had therapy where he would stand in the dry shower in a bathing suit.

After the incident Mustapha began drinking coffee made with only warm milk and instant coffee but after therapy was able to drink coffee made in the traditional manner.

Mustapha was unable to resume drinking water by itself.

Mustapha's lawyer Pat Ducharme said the case is unique in Canada.

"I found precedence that had to do with people who consumed elements but never a case where someone had seen something in a bottle and developed a severe depression," said Ducharme.

He said the case was successful because of the number of doctors who examined Mustapha.

SEVERE DEPRESSION

"All of them came to the same conclusion that he was suffering from a severe depression because of seeing the fly in the bottle," said Ducharme.

Another contributing factor was that a psychiatrist hired by Culligan examined Mustapha for 10 minutes and deemed his claims bogus, Ducharme said, an assertion that Brockenshire rejected.

Culligan's water distributed in Windsor comes from a plant in Woodstock.

The company testified that it has extensive filtering and purification systems but that flies could enter the so-called "clean room" and enter a bottle before or during its filling.

"I am prepared to accept that the odds against this happening are very high," Brockenshire wrote in his decision.

"However, it should not have happened at all."

Culligan operates water purification companies in more than 90 countries.

The company has 30 days to appeal the decision.

After the incident Mustapha's business at the Radisson, where he spent the majority of his time, suffered greatly.

Mustapha was awarded $80,000 in general damages, past and future special damages of $24,174.58 and past and future economic damages of $237,600.

10 Comments |  Add a Comment

Member Comments Total Comments: 10
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BasehorLady read my blog view my photos
May 24, 2008 | 4:26 PM

Some people are so stupid they will sue for anything...

RabidAnglophile read my blog
May 25, 2008 | 8:23 AM

"First, kill all the lawyers"......Wm. Shakespeare.

This is the reason I find most lawyers distasteful.

spellcheckman read my blog
May 25, 2008 | 12:20 PM

They haven't won anything that they can spend until all the appeals have been exhausted.

On appeals a separate judge could find the award excessive. Per that, the award could be lessened or thrown out completely.

Unless it showed him with a check ready to spend, like the lottery winners, he's got a lot more waiting and a lot more lawyer spending to do on appeals.

The news rarely follows the whole story through. With the exception of Christine Craft at Channel 9.

Her big award was reduced to almost nothing.

BasehorLady read my blog view my photos
May 25, 2008 | 1:47 PM

Don't forget the lady that "claimed" to find the finger in her chili. That backfired on her big time!

mpvan read my blog
May 25, 2008 | 2:05 PM

That was a $500,000 award that Ms. Craft was unable to collect on.

The U.S. Supreme Ct. would not hear her case.



She later became an attorney.

cherokee316 read my blog view my photos
May 26, 2008 | 10:45 AM

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the case of a man who said he lost interest in sex after he found two dead flies in an unopened bottle of drinking water.

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Waddah Mustapha sued the bottling company, saying he had suffered psychological damage, including depression, phobia, anxiety and damage to his sex life after the unpleasant 2001 discovery.

He won C$340,000 ($343,000) in damages in a lower court, but the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that he had not proved his case.

"Mr Mustapha must show that it was foreseeable that a person of ordinary fortitude would suffer serious injuries from seeing the flies in the bottle of water he was about to install. This he failed to do," the court said.

Mustapha said he vomited after finding the fly and now found it hard to shower. He also said he was afflicted by visions of flies walking over feces.

Mustapha -- who will lose the award and must pay the costs of the case -- was not immediately available for comment.

($1=$0.99 Canadian)

BasehorLady read my blog view my photos
May 26, 2008 | 12:15 PM

What a loon!!!

mabell read my blog
May 26, 2008 | 12:28 PM

I wonder how he would have reacted if he knew what is in the water that he can't see. He probably would commit suicide.

DogJ read my blog
May 27, 2008 | 10:50 AM

Bashorlady,
If that was intended as a pun... I got it...lol

twistersister read my blog view my photos
May 27, 2008 | 10:56 AM

LOL, try looking at milk under a microscope and see all the active bacteria cultures at age 9...I didn't drink the stuff for darn near six months=)
Petty lawsuits, they should be glad in the USA we don't have to drink the water cattle take a BLEEP in or urinate in like folks in Africa or other remote countries....

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cherokee316

Over the hill and going up the next one,and after reading many of the politically motivated blogs here I just want to say,an airplane can't fly with just one wing whether it be right wing or a left wing it will just fly in circles like a dog chasing its tail.

Member Since: 2/4/2007