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Nevada's
crisis in medical malpractice liability is an extremely serious
matter. The public health itself is at stake, because of the
doctors we're losing and its impact on access to health
care.
Still,
even within this grim context, it is fascinating to watch the trial
lawyers maneuver. You can almost see their dorsal fins,
cutting through the bloody water.
Just
kidding... sort of. The fact is, the plaintiffs bar here in
Nevada is responding to the state's liability-law crisis by
confirming the very worst stereotypes of the profession:
calculating, manipulative and disingenuous.
Time and
time again, when newspapers telephone the local tort lawyers'
spokesmen, what the report hears is the same ol' song... clearly
read from some talking-points advisory. "Don't mess with the
way we've rigged the legal system" is a free translation of the
first verse, followed by a quick chorus of, "It ain't us, it's them
greedy insurance companies."
Thus, in
April a Nevada Trial Lawyers Association spokesman publicly called
on state lawmakers to refrain from "overhauling a civil justice
system that is the cornerstone of American
democracy."
He should
have said WAS a cornerstone of American democracy. As all
attorneys know, civil justice law, in the past 40 years, has been
turned inside out. Majestic and wise precedents of the common
law that in the past advanced civil society and freedom of contract
have, in America, been completely subverted.
As scores
of researchers have documented, we are all now subject to a tort law
system that has been optimized - either consciously or
unconsciously - to increase the wealth of lawyers. The
substantive rules are extraordinarily pro-plaintiff, and the perils
of massive damages are astonishing. This induces plaintiffs to
bring countless lawsuits, and defendants to defend themselves to the
death.
One could
not conceive of a system better designed to generate
employment for trial lawyers. But of course, in effect this
system was designed by trial lawyers... venue-shopping
trial lawyers. Over recent decades they went out and located
judges who would scorn existing contract law and turn almost any
alleged grievance into grist for the tort
lawyers.
The point
is, despite humbug from Nevada's trial lawyers, America's legal
liability system has been broken for a long time. Indeed,
Congress itself implicitly admitted this following Sept 11, when it
set up an alternative to the tort system to deal with the
suffering from the 9-11 catastrophes.
Noted
Roger Parlott, writing in American Lawyer, "Both parties
revealed what they really thought about our tort system in their
heart of hearts." It was that, if not stopped, demogogic tort
lawyers would soon be parading sympathetic victims before juries,
and shifting blame for the catastrophes away from the judgment-proof
federal government and onto minimally blameworthy but solvent
targets.
Both Democrats and Republicans recognized, says
Parloff, that America's tort lawyers could end up bankrupting
everyone in sight - the airlines,the private security firms, the
airports, the cities that operate those airports, even Boeing Corp.
- and in so doing, create new waves of innocent victims, including
the employee-shareholders of those industries, not to
mention the
residents and taxpayers of a bankrupted New York, New Jersey and
Boston. Much better, Congress decided to just discard the tort
system that the plaintiffs bar has foisted upon the
country.
Unfortunately, here in Nevada we are currently still stuck
with that system, and the trial lawyer association is working hard
to head off any real reform. Their spokesmen spread
misinformation, touting a "study" by the Center for Justice and
Democracy, which they call a "nonprofit, nonpartisan public interest
organization."
In
actuality, the center is the policy attack-dog of the trial lawyer
industry; it was formed specifically to fight tort reform. The
"study" in question cooked the books - ignoring years where the data
proved the authors wrong. And note the center's biased
definition of tort reform: "laws that restrict the rights of
injured consumers to sue and obtain compensation from corporate
lawbreakers and other wrongdoers."
The truth
is that America's legal liability system is today so damaged that
even many trial lawyers recognize the necessity for reform.
Otherwise, they know, men and women in the future who truly are
injured will not be able to get compensation from those truly at
fault, because whole sectors of the economy will be
bankrupted.
The people
of Nevada need a way to weed out the frivolous claims that have
driven insurance costs through the roof. The people of Nevada
need tort reform.
Steven
Miller is policy director for the Nevada Policy Research
Institute. |