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Sunday, May 04, 2008
Lawsuit Reform and the RIght to Trial
By Ken Connor
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


This article is a response to Lindsay Boyd's Town Hall article, "Lawsuit Climate 2008: The REAL Climate Crisis."

Last week Lindsay Boyd, Townhall.com’s Associate Editor, posted a glowing review of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Institute for Legal Reform’s  recently released “Lawsuit Climate 2008: Ranking the States.” 

Before readers vest too much credibility in this “survey” of the civil justice system in all 50 states, some warnings are in order. 

First, a poll of in-house counsels and senior litigators who represent corporations with annual earnings in excess of $100 million guarantees a remarkably narrow view of state court systems.  After all, these individuals are all responsible for defending corporations against lawsuits.  Not exactly a broad spectrum of opinion!

Further, buried in the “methodology” section of the report is the tacit admission that the attorneys surveyed were not expected to have direct, in-depth knowledge of a state’s court system.

Interestingly, the $100 million corporate earnings floor happens to bring into the survey some of the business interests – notably pharmaceutical manufacturers and insurance companies – that are among the largest financial backers of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and also the most frequent subjects of serious legal claims of negligence and/or misconduct.  Their participation in this bogus “survey” represents nothing more than a very self-interested attempt to undermine confidence in the civil justice system and fuel efforts to raise ever-higher the bar of citizens’ access to the courts.

The U.S. Chamber routinely rails against “greedy trial lawyers,” counting on reflexive support from conservatives in its efforts to undermine the civil justice system.

But conservatives should be wary of buying what the U.S. Chamber is selling.

As a trial lawyer for thirty-five years, I am among the first to admit that the civil justice is imperfect.  But access to the court system is a constitutionally protected right, and at a time of rampant corporate misconduct it is a right that needs to be zealously defended.  Conservatives who believe in the Constitution and the need for checks and balances in our public life should agree.

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About The Author
Ken Connor is Chairman of the Center for a Just Society in Washington, DC and a nationally recognized trial lawyer who represented Governor Jeb Bush in the Terri Schiavo case.
 
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I do agree
"Conservatives who believe in the Constitution and the need for checks and balances in our public life should agree."

I do agree: so where are the checks and balances on your colleagues, Mr. Conner?

Self-interested nonsense
What America needs is what most countries in the world have: loser pays. In America, vexatious litigants aided by trial lawyers can enter a case at little cost to themselves but at great cost to their opponents. And if they lose, thye just move onto another court. Under the American system, it is worth try, try again until you succeed, because the final payoff is well worth it compared to the comparatively trivial costs of going to court.

No wonder many innocent companies settle out of court, since they lose regardless. There needs to be some incentive against frivolous lawsuits aided by bullying trial lawyers, and against court-hopping.
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