Everyone knows delicious deli meats can cause health problems, but one New Hampshire woman's story is a bit more complicated.
Alice Cohen and her husband Ronald Cohen have sued Eataly Boston after she slipped on a piece of prosciutto while walking Boston's famous Prudential Center food hall last October.
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Cohen said she was walking in an area that had Eataly food samples when she slipped, fell and fractured her ankle.
“Alice Cohen sustained bodily injuries, a loss of enjoyment of life, pain and suffering, and incurred necessary medical expenses for medical care and attention,” the lawsuit claims.
The couple says the cost of her trip to the hospital and subsequent physical therapy exceeded $7,500 and the couple claims that "loss of consortium" also plays a part in their quest for a $50,000 judgement.
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"Eataly Boston LLC owed a duty of care to Plaintiff and the general public to maintain its premises in a condition that would not create an unreasonable risk of harm to those lawfully on the premises and to ensure that the premises was safe for use by its customers,” court documents state, according to the New Hampshire Union Leader.
Loss of consortium in Massachusetts is allowed if a "family member suffers a serious injury and this affects your life in a personal way," the Daily Mail reported.
Eataly has eight locations across the country, including two in New York City and one in Boston.
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