Tort Reform Article

Subject: Fwd: NYTimes.com Article: Shot in the Arm for Tort Overhaul


Shot in the Arm for Tort Overhaul

November 17, 2002
By ADAM LIPTAK



THE politics of overhauling American tort law are anything
but straightforward. They involve odd alliances,
ideological paradoxes and a great deal of money.

Yet it is all but certain that the Republican Party's
election victories will move the call for reform, sought by
the business world for years, higher on the legislative
agenda.

"It's going to be a hot priority," said Joan Claybrook, the
president of Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group.
"It's going to be brutal."

When it's all over, the rules governing tort actions - the
civil lawsuits, usually for money, claiming wrongful
conduct by defendants, usually companies - may well change
drastically.

"Reform" - a capacious and loaded term usually used by
defendants - is most likely in the areas of class actions
and punitive damages, especially involving asbestos
liability and medical malpractice, among other issues.
Proponents will no doubt use enormous punitive awards, like
the $28 billion awarded last month by a Los Angeles jury to
a single plaintiff in a tobacco lawsuit, as a rallying cry.
The frivolous suits filed each year also provide
ammunition. The American Tort Reform Association's Web site
even lists "loony lawsuits," like one saying the haunted
house at Universal Studios in Orlando, Fla., is too scary.

Despite the anger those cases incite, even among the
general public, earlier Republican Congresses have been
cautious in addressing the issue. But George W. Bush, as
governor of Texas, pushed through sweeping limits on tort
suits. Days after taking office in 1995, he declared a
legislative emergency to address the "junk lawsuits that
clog our courts." He asked for - and got - limits on
punitive damages, curbs on awards in cases with multiple
defendants and restrictions on where suits can be filed.

"It was far more successful than anyone thought the
Legislature would go for," said Frank B. Cross, a law and
business professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

The victory was particular striking given the strength of
the opposition. "At least until fairly recently, parts of
Texas had a reputation for being very plaintiff-friendly,"
said Joseph Sanders, a law professor at the University of
Houston. "They talked about it the way they now talk about
Mississippi."

DEMOCRATS and Republicans have always had competing
philosophies about civil justice, said Philip K. Howard,
author of "The Death of Common Sense" (Random House, 1995),
which argues that society has become too reliant on
regulations and lawsuits. He is also the founder of Common
Good, an advocacy group that supports broad changes.

Lawsuits, he said, enjoy "a superficial appeal which is
consistent with traditional liberal rhetoric, that the
little guy has the right to litigate." This litigation
culture, Mr. Howard added, is supported by "the private-jet
crowd" of trial lawyers, who have generally been big
contributors to Democratic politicians.

Yet the legislative discussion is largely based on
apocryphal or at least anomalous lawsuits, said Stephen
Daniels, a senior research fellow at the American Bar
Foundation, which is a nonpartisan research group. "Some of
it is philosophical debate, but most of it is the clash of
interest groups," he said.

Pushing the issue called tort reform has never been as
important to Republicans as opposing it is to Democrats.
"It looms so large in Democratic Party power politics,"
said Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the conservative
Manhattan Institute. By contrast, said George L. Priest, a
law professor at Yale, "the Republicans are not
single-minded."

The Republicans must also try to reconcile support for
legislation that would have its greatest impact in the
state courts with their traditional philosophical
commitment to federalism, which would leave most local
matters to the states.

Still, with a president who has made tort reform a
signature issue and with the Democrats on the run, "if the
Republicans are smart, they can get more than they have
ever gotten," said John Coale, a plaintiffs' lawyer in
Washington and a major contributor to Democrats.

Four issues top the legislative agenda.

"Class-action
reform is probably the most ripe in terms of the work
that's been done," said James M. Wootton, president of the
United States Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal
Reform. A bill called the Class Action Fairness Act of
2001, which was passed by the House in March, would allow
defendants to move major interstate class actions filed in
state courts to federal courts. That would address the
complaint by defendants that a few out-of-the way courts,
in places like Madison County, Ill., are too friendly to
plaintiffs and thus handle a disproportionate number of
class actions.

A bill to address medical malpractice claims was passed by
the House in September and will probably resurface. It
would shorten the statute of limitations, limit certain
kinds of damages, disallow claims where regulators have
approved the product in question and give courts the power
to review lawyers' contingency fees, which entitle them to
a percentage of what plaintiffs win.

Legislation that is likely to be introduced in the next
Congress would address the internecine disputes among
lawyers who represent plaintiffs who were exposed to
asbestos and have actual or potential ailments.

And legislation may also be introduced to cap big punitive
awards, which loom large in the public debate on all tort
reform issues.

Advocates of tort reform like to justify their agenda by
pointing to big punitive awards, meant to punish and deter
rather than to compensate. Opponents say those awards are
unusual and generally justified, but they are often
reversed on appeal.

Last month, the Supreme Court of California, in a 4-to-3
decision, declined to hear a challenge to the largest
punitive award ever affirmed in American history in a
personal injury case. The decision let stand a $290 million
award by a jury in Ceres, Calif., to the family of three
people killed in the rollover of a Ford Bronco in 1993.

Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., a lawyer for Ford, said his
client would ask the United States Supreme Court to hear
the case. He added that the outsized award, sustained at
all three levels of the state court system, demonstrated
why federal legislative action was needed.

LAWYERS for Juan Romo, one of the surviving family members,
said the award was justified by Ford's conduct in making
what the family called "the weakest roof in Ford's
history." Made of fiberglass, the roof was sold by Ford as
"tough" and "rugged"; the roof's design included a hollow
hump that suggested the presence of a rollover bar even
though it did not have one.

Other big punitive awards imposed recently in a variety of
cases have also made headlines. The biggest is that $28
billion in punitive damages given by a California jury last
month, an award in a suit brought by a smoker with lung
cancer who accused the Philip Morris Companies of luring
her into a lifelong tobacco habit with fraudulent
advertising and marketing.

The United States Supreme Court is considering whether
State Farm Insurance must pay a policyholder $145 million
in punitive damages, in addition to $2.6 million in
compensatory damages, in a car-accident insurance dispute.
The Alabama Supreme Court is reviewing a $3.4 billion
punitive award, on top of a $90 million compensatory award,
in a case about the interpretation of an offshore gas
lease.

Plaintiffs' lawyers say punitive awards are quite unusual.

"Seeing a check in the mail from a punitive award is very,
very rare," Mr. Coale said.

To address the issue of excessive awards, Mr. Boutrous
contended, Congress should consider limiting each state's
court system to imposing damages based on a defendant's
conduct only in that state.

Another approach was suggested by Lori S. Nugent, a Chicago
lawyer who represents corporate defendants. "One of the
most effective reforms would be to mandate trials in three
phases," she said. Under that system, a jury would first
decide whether and how much the defendant must pay in
compensation, then whether punitive damages were warranted.
Only after that would the jury set the amount of any
damages.

Such micromanagement of state judicial systems is not
universally endorsed, even by people who generally favor
changes in this area.

"A federal legislature would be loath to impose a
procedural limit on state proceedings," Mr. Boutrous said,
"and I am not even sure that they could."

Ms. Nugent argued, though, that the federal government
could and should act. "It's a wish-list item," she said.
"But when you see the kind of drain that punitive damages
is placing on the economy, it joins the ranks of reality."

Regardless of whether the issue of punitive damage awards
is addressed, the asbestos crisis may well move toward a
resolution. "The Supreme Court seems to have given Congress
a strong hint that it needs to do something about the
asbestos crisis," said Catherine M. Sharkey, a fellow at
Columbia Law School.

In 1999, in the process of setting aside a $1.5 billion
class-action settlement in an asbestos case, the Supreme
Court referred to what it called "the elephantine mass of
asbestos cases" that "defies customary judicial
administration and calls for national legislation."

"Asbestos will be on the agenda in the next Congress," Mr.
Howard said, "and that bill will be supported by
plaintiffs' lawyers who represent people who are actually
sick."

Mr. Howard was referring to internecine disputes between
lawyers who represent people who have actually developed
cancer and other symptoms of asbestos exposure and those
who are suing on behalf of people who fear getting sick in
years to come. The finite sums of money available are
likely to mean that not everyone can be compensated.

Michael E. Baroody, executive vice president of the
National Association of Manufacturers, said legislation to
address this issue was likely.

"The courts are not distinguishing between people who are
sick now, and genuinely so, and people who have been
exposed," Mr. Baroody said. He said he expected that
legislation to establish medical criteria, at the least,
would be introduced in the next Congress.

In addition, he said, Congress could suspend statutes of
limitations to ensure that those who did not sue
immediately would lose no rights.

There is proposed legislation on broader medical issues,
too, much of it driven by what doctors call an insurance
crisis. Even Mississippi, widely regarded as one of the
forums most receptive to plaintiffs' suits, recently
enacted legislation curbing medical malpractice suits.

It apparently had to - the market had intervened.

"When
there is no doctor around, you really notice," Professor
Priest said. "You notice it less if there are fewer
products to buy."

Mr. Coale said caps would be unwise and unwarranted. "I
have had clients with catastrophic medical injuries, and
they really need this money," he said.

By most accounts, however, the Republican majority in the
new Congress is facing treacherous political terrain on the
tort reform issue.

"It's very scary for those of us concerned about protecting
the jury system," said Joanne Doroshow, the executive
director of the Center for Justice and Democracy, a
consumer group that focuses on the civil courts, "but it's
hardly a done deal that Congress will start passing huge
amounts of tort reform."

Mr. Nugent, a defense lawyer, said action like that was
likely.

"We are now in a political environment where reform has a
real shot," he said, "and that will save jobs and help the
economy."

Ralph Nader, the former presidential candidate, said he
agreed that legislation was likely. But he thinks it will
backfire. "The Republicans will attack the civil justice
system," he said. "That will sharpen and focus the issues,
and it will boomerang against them."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/17/business/yourmoney/17TORT.html?ex=1038541200&ei=1&en=6608e93582b3d95f

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company