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Old 07-27-2007, 06:49 PM   #1
j.m@talk
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Prankster dentist wins in court

OLYMPIA, Wash. - An oral surgeon who temporarily implanted fake boar tusks in his assistant's mouth as a practical joke and got sued for it has ended up with the last laugh.

Dr. Robert Woo of Auburn had put the phony tusks in while the woman was under anesthesia for a different procedure. He took them out before she awoke, but first he shot photos that eventually made it around the office.

The employee, Tina Alberts, felt so humiliated when she saw the pictures that she quit and sued her boss.

Woo's insurance company, Fireman's Fund, refused to cover the claim, saying the practical joke was intentional and not a normal business activity his insurance policy covered, so Woo settled out of court. He agreed to pay Alberts $250,000, then sued his insurers.

A King County Superior Court jury sided with Woo, ordering Fireman's Fund to pay him $750,000, plus the out-of-court settlement. The insurance company won the next round, with the state Court of Appeals saying the prank had nothing to do with Woo's practice of dentistry. On Thursday, the state Supreme Court restored Woo's award.

In a sprightly 5-4 decision, Supreme Court Justice Mary Fairhurst wrote that Woo's practical joke was an integral, if odd, part of the assistant's dental surgery and "conceivably" should trigger the professional liability coverage of his policy.

Dissenting Justice James Johnson said the prank wasn't a dental procedure at all and only "rewards Dr. Woo's obnoxious behavior and allows him to profit handsomely."

The backstory, the court wrote, is that Alberts' family raises potbellied pigs and that she frequently talked about them at the office where she worked for five years.

Woo said his jests about the pigs were part of "a friendly working environment" that he tried to foster.

The oral surgery on Alberts was intended to replace two of her teeth with implants, which Woo did. First, though, he installed temporary bridges that he had shaped to look like boar tusks, and while Alberts was still under anesthesia, he took photos, some with her eyes propped open. Before she woke up, he removed the "tusks" and put in the proper replacement teeth.

Woo says he didn't personally show her the pictures but staffers gave her copies at a birthday party.

Woo's lawyer, Richard Kilpatrick, described the surgeon as a kindhearted, fun-loving man who was chagrined that an office prank turned out so badly. He was delighted with the high court's decision, Kilpatrick said.

Attorneys for the insurance company did not immediately return calls for comment about the ruling.



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Old 07-27-2007, 06:53 PM   #2
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They should take his license to practice away and then feed him his own gonads.
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Old 07-27-2007, 07:10 PM   #3
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That court must have been high to arrive at that finding. Wonder what other kinds of fun stuff are part of his practice? Glad I left Washington.

I bet the tusks were an improvement anyhow.
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Old 07-27-2007, 07:18 PM   #4
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Total lack of a sense of humor.
When I was in the U.S. Navy my runnin mate was a dentist assistant on a large ship we occupied. I went to get him one afternoon to go ashore and he told me he would be a few minutes but to watch him. He had a very young "boot" sailor in the chair looking stupified and scared. He told the boot that one molar was really bad and it would have to come out and it was too bad to pull and he would have to "blast" it out. He reached over an got a vial of novocain and inserted a length of dental floss into the end. He took this vial and placed it in the kids mouth with a large packing of cotton and took out his cigarette lighter and lit the floss. The kids eyes got huge and he jumped out of the chair and ran out of the dental office.
My buddy Carol looked over at me and said, O.K. let's go ashore!
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