After $241M verdict vs Prairie Farms, Travelers sued for $2B for ‘bad faith’

After $241M verdict vs Prairie Farms, Travelers sued for $2B for ‘bad faith’

Spread the love

Acknowledging the $241 million wrongful death verdict they obtained against Prairie Farms Dairy could endanger the ability of large and popular dairy cooperative to survive, a prominent Chicago personal injury law firm has now asked the courts to order Travelers Insurance to pay $2 billion for allegedly wrongly leaving Prairie Farms to face the lawsuit alone.

On March 31, attorneys from the firm of Salvi Schostok & Pritchard filed suit in Southern Illinois federal court against Travelers in pursuit of the potentially massive payout.

In the action, the Salvi lawyers are representing plaintiff Paula Johnson. She is a widow who secured a $241 million jury verdict in the lawsuit she and the Salvi firm filed against Prairie Farms over the death of her husband, a Missouri delivery driver who allegedly died from carbon dioxide exposure while transporting strawberries packed with dry ice.

According to the new insurance lawsuit, Johnson and her attorneys claim Travelers allegedly acted in bad faith against Prairie Farms for years, refusing to settle the case and essentially abandoning their insured at trial.

In a statement announcing the new lawsuit against Travelers, Patrick A. Salvi II, lead trial attorney for the Johnson family, said: “This is a case that never would have gone to trial but for the reckless behavior of an insurance company that abandoned its duty of good faith to Prairie Farms and delayed recovery for Paula Johnson and her family by refusing to settle for a reasonable amount before trial.

“The gamble that Travelers took with the finances of a company that employs thousands of people in multiple states resulted in a verdict of nearly a quarter billion dollars.”

The Johnson family has been in court against Prairie Farms since they first filed suit in 2017. That lawsuit came about a year after Paula Johnson’s husband, Eric Johnson, died after being found unresponsive in a parking lot in Missouri.

According to court documents, Prairie Farms contracted with Johnson, then 64 years old, of Missouri, through courier company CJS Express on Aug. 5, 2016, to “pick up several crates of strawberries and deliver them to a location in Arkansas.”

According to the company, Prairie Farms affiliate PFD Supply directed Johnson to pick up the strawberries packed in dry ice at its facility in St. Charles, Missouri, in suburban St. Louis.

Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide.

According to court documents, Johnson loaded the crates into his car, a 2016 Honda Fit, and departed on his journey.

However, about 90 minutes after departing from the PFD facility, Johnson was reportedly found unresponsive in his vehicle, with the engine still running, in a parking lot, still in St. Charles, Missouri.

According to court documents, responding emergency medical services transported him to a nearby hospital, where he died three days later.

According to court documents, responding emergency services officers indicated the interior of the car gave off a “strong, sharp smell,” similar large amounts of carbon dioxide.

According to court documents, when he left the PFD facility, a rear window of Johnson’s vehicle was down, as is required for transporting goods including dry ice. However, when he was later found in the parking lot, all of the windows to his car were up.

According to court documents, no one involved in the case denied at any point in proceedings surrounding the case that one window left open would have provided enough ventilation to potentially avoid harm from carbon dioxide exposure from dry ice sublimation.

However, the case was allowed to proceed to trial, where a Madison County jury at the end of February ordered Prairie Farms to pay $241 million to the Johnson family.

In the lawsuit, Johnson and the Salvi attorneys assert Prairie Farms wished to settle the case for 10 years, but allegedly were prevented from doing so by Travelers.

The Salvi firm said they are suing Travelers under assignment of claim from Prairie Farms to Paula Johnson, to pursue the insurance company for the money to fund the verdict, and potentially hundreds of millions of dollars more.

They said they are seeking compensatory and punitive damages estimated at more than $2 billion.

In the lawsuit, the Salvi attorneys noted the verdict represented an “existential” threat to Prairie Farms, a farmer-owned cooperative.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs assert they seek “full redress and punitive damages” for Travelers’ alleged “willful refusal … to prevent the cascading set of harms that first befell Johnson and then Prairie Farms Dairy … when Travelers chose to place its own financial interests ahead of any consideration of the existential risks to its insured.”

In the complaint, the plaintiffs noted the “devastation” Prairie Farms is facing following the verdict, saying they face “the prospect of being unable to pay employees or procure supplies that their continuing existence as businesses depended upon.”

The complaint includes excerpts allegedly from a March 7 email from Prairie Farms’ general counsel reportedly to Travelers, who noted that since the verdict, “Prairie Farms’ bank accounts have been frozen, and Prairie Farms has been judicially restrained from conducting ordinary financial operations,” while “… Prairie Farms’ customers have been ordered by citation not to remit payment of any amounts owed.”

“Prairie Farms cannot survive more than a limited number of additional business days under these conditions,” the email said.

The email reportedly said the $241 million verdict “will exceed $380 million” under Illinois’ prejudgment interest rules, and “an appeal bond” of $570 million is needed and “may be unattainable.”

“This is not rhetoric. It is the practical reality created by the judgment and exacerbated by your (Travelers) coverage positions,” the email said.

According to the complaint, Travelers has allegedly refused to post the needed bond.

According to court documents, Travelers includes more than 500 farmer members and employs about 9,000 workers.

According to the complaint, Prairie Farms “entered into a post-verdict settlement” with the Johnson family, which included an assignment of rights to Johnson to sue Travelers in pursuit of payment.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Disability group, coroners press governor ahead of assisted suicide decision

Disability group, coroners press governor ahead of assisted suicide decision

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A Chicago-based disability-rights organization is seeking a meeting with Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office as Illinois prepares...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Village of Beecher for November 24, 2025

Village of Beecher Meeting | November 24, 2025 The Beecher Village Board met on Monday, November 24, 2025, to address routine financial business and discuss seasonal community issues. While much...
WATCH: U.S. Rep. Miller live; Heated rhetoric in Congress; SNAP, ‘basic income’ debate

WATCH: U.S. Rep. Miller live; Heated rhetoric in Congress; SNAP, ‘basic income’ debate

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop talks live with...
beecher ilinois school board graphic.5

Solution Found to Revive Broken Junior High Digital Sign

Beecher School Board Facilities Committee Meeting | November 24, 2025 Article Summary: The Facilities Committee received a report detailing a cost-effective solution to retrofit the non-functional digital sign at Beecher...
Beecher Graphic.1

Beecher Sets Schedule for Parade of Lights and Holiday Contests

Village of Beecher Meeting | November 24, 2025 Article Summary: The Beecher Village Board finalized the schedule for the upcoming Parade of Lights and the Holiday Lights Decorating Contest. Holiday...
beecher ilinois school board graphic.3

“Cheaper to Go Up”: Beecher Schools Discuss Vertical Expansion Concepts

Beecher School Board Facilities Committee Meeting | November 24, 2025 Article Summary: Facing potential future enrollment growth and high land costs, the Beecher School Board Facilities Committee discussed conceptual plans...
Beecher Graphic.2

Weather Delays Force Extension of Leaf Collection in Beecher

Village of Beecher Meeting | November 24, 2025 Article Summary: The Village of Beecher is extending its annual leaf collection program through mid-December due to recent snow and rain delays....
Weather-Winter

Beecher Digs Out from 12.4 Inches of Snow; Sub-Zero Cold Forecast for Friday

Article Summary: Beecher residents are clearing more than a foot of snow following a major weekend storm, while forecasters warn of a dangerous drop in temperatures and additional snowfall arriving...
Illinois rejects federal ‘no tax on tips’ rule, keeps state tax on tipped income

Illinois rejects federal ‘no tax on tips’ rule, keeps state tax on tipped income

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois is not adopting the new federal “no tax on tips” provision, meaning tipped workers in...
Beecher Elementary school Graphic

Contractors Clash on Cause of Elementary School Leaks; Committee Weighs Window Replacement

Beecher School Board Facilities Committee Meeting | November 24, 2025 Article Summary: The Beecher School District 200-U Facilities Committee reviewed proposals for replacing windows at the Elementary School but paused...
Will County Board Graphic.01

Frankfort Turns to County for Wildlife & Dangerous Animal Control

Will County Board Meeting | November 2025 Article Summary: The Village of Frankfort has entered into a two-year agreement with Will County Animal Protection Services to handle calls regarding bats...
joliet junior college foundation

JJC Foundation Director Kristin Mulvey to Retire After 25 Years of Transformative Leadership

Joliet Junior College Meeting | November 12, 2025 Article Summary:Kristin Mulvey, the longtime Executive Director of Institutional Advancement and the JJC Foundation, was honored by the Board of Trustees as...
Attack foiled in Ft. Worth day before National Guard troops shot in WDC

Attack foiled in Ft. Worth day before National Guard troops shot in WDC

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Another Afghan-related terrorist attack was foiled one day before two National Guardsmen were shot in Washington, D.C., federal authorites said Saturday. The alleged perpetrators were...
Hundreds of flights canceled in Chicago as winter storm wreaks havoc

Hundreds of flights canceled in Chicago as winter storm wreaks havoc

By Dan McCaleb | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – More than 1,000 flights were canceled or delayed at Chicago's airports Saturday as a winter storm threatened...

WATCH: IL legislator wants more transparency for taxpayer funded credit cards

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A Democratic state legislator is looking to require more transparency for how local governments in Illinois use...