海角大神

Boom goes the churro: Chilean court upholds damages for exploding sweets

Chile's Supreme Court upheld a verdict this week ordering a newspaper to pay $125,000 to those injured by following the paper's recipe for churros. Is this just another frivolous lawsuit?

Everyone knows the case of the American woman who spilled her McDonald鈥檚 coffee and sued for burns. After all, it is held up as the example of America鈥檚 litigious society gone wrong.

Now we have a similar case from Chile, with a newspaper sued for running a recipe that caused churros 鈥 fried dough that is a common snack in this part of the world 鈥 to explode.

Chile鈥檚 Supreme Court upheld a verdict this week that orders La Tercera newspaper to pay to plaintiffs who were hurt when they attempted the churros recipe that the newspaper ran back in 2004.

Hospitals around the country began getting calls after the recipe was published, The boiling oil 鈥 heated to 482 degrees fahrenheit as the recipe required 鈥 burst out of the pans when the dough for the churros was added to the pan. The 13 victims in this case were burned on their arms, faces, and chests.

鈥淔aithfully following the recipe published in the daily, it would be impossible to have avoided this damage,鈥 the judge .

Since everyone seems to have an opinion about the coffee case, I suspected they might about this one too. From my tiny, unofficial survey, the overwhelming sentiment: Would readers jump off a bridge if the newspaper instructed them to do so?

But, as is true with the coffee case, once you read the facts, a different story emerges. If I were inspired to make churros 鈥 a treat I have never attempted, being not the least bit adept at frying 鈥 I probably would follow the recipe to a T.

That easily could have resulted in 鈥渆xplosions so violent that the splatters reached the ceiling and bathed the person preparing it,鈥 as investigating magistrate Ximena Diaz in 2008 after an investigation.

In the McDonald鈥檚 coffee case, a new documentary called released this July details the events surrounding the spill on Stella Liebeck, who suffered burns and sued the fast food chain. While she was dismissed as another American attempting to take advantage of the legal system, it was not a simple scald burn. Injuries were extensive and McDonald鈥檚 had previously that their coffee was too hot, hot enough to injure.

Of course, the world is awash with frivolous lawsuits. There is the Israeli woman who sued a TV station for bad weather forecasting 鈥 she apparently did not dress appropriately for a rainy day and fell ill 鈥 and the American couple who sued an airline for injuries related to cramped legroom. 聽Websites tally lists of what they consider the most outrageous of them all.

But I don鈥檛 think this churros case, nor the coffee one, deserve a place among them.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Boom goes the churro: Chilean court upholds damages for exploding sweets
Read this article in
/World/Americas/Latin-America-Monitor/2011/1228/Boom-goes-the-churro-Chilean-court-upholds-damages-for-exploding-sweets
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe