By RANDY KENNER
Scripps Howard News Service
November 22, 2000
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - A lawyer for a local McDonald's has filed court papers stating that its
pickles are harmless and did not burn a local woman's chin.
MAR Inc., owner of McDonald's restaurants in the Knoxville area, made the statement in its
answer to a $125,000 lawsuit filed against it earlier this year by a woman who claimed she
was burned by a hot pickle.
MAR filed its answer earlier this month in Knox County Circuit Court in response to a
personal injury lawsuit filed in October by Veronica M. Martin and her husband Darrin which
claims she was injured by a pickle on a small McDonald's hamburger.
Specifically, Martin contends that her husband and she purchased several small hamburgers
Oct. 6, 1999, at one of MAR's McDonald's.
When she began to eat one of the burgers, according to the lawsuit, a hot pickle fell from
the hamburger onto her chin, causing a second-degree burn that has left a permanent scar.
The couple claim the hamburger was "in a defective condition or unreasonably dangerous to
the general consumer," in addition to breaching an implied warranty that it was safe.
In its answer, MAR Inc. said that its products are safe and flatly denied that Mrs. Martin
was injured by anything she bought from McDonald's.
The two-page answer also denies that the pickle caused a second-degree burn to Martin
and denies she has incurred medical bills, lost wages or suffered mental and physical pain
as a result of eating the hamburger.
It also denies that Martin has been deprived of the "services and consortium" of his wife because of the alleged injury.
[This message has been edited by Ripsnort (edited 11-22-2000).]
[This message has been edited by Ripsnort (edited 11-22-2000).]