Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

High court to hear burger case

Deputy’s food contaminated with saliva

Laura Mcvicker Columbian, Vancouver, Wash.

The case of a Clark County sheriff’s deputy who in 2010 sued Burger King because an employee spit in his Whopper is heading to the Washington Supreme Court.

The issue: Whether the state’s Product Liability Act allows a plaintiff to collect damages for emotional distress without suffering any physical injuries.

Deputy Ed Bylsma’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Portland, was dismissed in late 2010. Bylsma appealed to the United States Court of Appeals 9th Circuit.

Last week, the panel of judges asked the Supreme Court to take a look at the case to resolve the “emotional distress” question. The appellate court said the product liability law is unclear in whether plaintiffs can sue even if they aren’t physically injured.

The act is defined by causing harm by the manufacture or preparation of a product, but doesn’t outright define “harm,” the appeals court said.

“We have not been able to find any product liability case allowing emotional distress damages caused by a product in the absence of physical injury,” according to the appeals court’s written request.

The Court of Appeals decision is on hold until the Supreme Court addresses the question.

Bylsma received the contaminated burger at the drive-through of the restaurant at 5513 N.E. Gher Road on March 24, 2009. He was in full uniform and driving his patrol vehicle.

Bylsma said he inspected his Whopper because he could tell something was amiss when the employee avoided eye contact while handing him the food. He peeled away the patty and discovered a thick glob of saliva laced with phlegm, according to the lawsuit.

Fellow sheriff’s deputies responded and collected evidence from the burger. Later testing at a crime lab showed the saliva matched that of former employee Gary Herb.

Herb was arrested and received three months in jail after pleading guilty last year to third-degree assault against an officer.

Herb and another employee were terminated after the incident.

Bylsma said that he now suffers “ongoing emotional trauma from the incident, including vomiting, nausea, food anxiety and sleeplessness and has sought treatment by a mental health professional,” according to the appeals court.

The appellate court said the Supreme Court’s decision could set a precedent.