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LAWSUIT CENTRAL
Trial Lawyers, Inc. takes it to
"the Bank" in Los Angeles.
For each of the past three years, the American Tort Reform Association has
published a report, Judicial Hellholes, which focuses on the worst venues in
the nation for lawsuit abuse. In each of those years, the Los Angeles County
Court's Central Civil West Division—cynically nicknamed "the Bank" by area plaintiffs'
attorneys—has made the list.[124] And this year, corporate
executives surveyed by the Harris Interactive polling group ranked Los Angeles
the least fair litigation environment in the nation.[125]
It's not hard to see why. Though California has a number of overly litigious jurisdictions—including San Francisco and Alameda Counties
—Los Angeles stands out with an eye-popping list of verdicts.
For example, in 1998, a judge in the Central Civil West Division, Richard Hubbell,
urged the jury to "send a notice out to the world," to which they responded
with a $760 million punitive-damage award.[126] The case
was brought by infamous "toxic tort" lawyer Thomas Girardi against five companies
that had supplied allegedly harmful chemicals for Lockheed's F-117 Stealth fighter
factory, where the 28 plaintiffs had worked from the 1950s through the 1980s.[127]
An appellate court reversed Judge Hubbell and overturned the punitive award
in its entirety, determining that the facts of the case did not support a finding
of "despicable conduct" but rather, at most, "a tragedy arising in an industry
developing weapons whose purpose was to defend this country during the Cold
War."[128]
Perhaps no case in the district is more notorious than the 1999 products liability
case in which Brian Panish scored a then-record $4.2 billion verdict for six
automobile passengers injured in an explosion.[129] Panish
argued that the Chevy Malibu the plaintiffs were driving was defective and overly
susceptible to explode in rear-end collisions. Incredibly, however, presiding
judge Ernest Williams did not permit General Motors to introduce testimony on
the Malibu's low fire-accident rates—nor to enter evidence that the driver who
had rear-ended the plaintiffs had been driving at 70 miles per hour, while drunk.[130]
And when GM wanted to call high-ranking public officials to rebut the plaintiffs'
claim that the automaker had lobbied to limit regulations on fuel-tank safety,
the judge denied that, too.[131]
L.A. attorney Michael Piuze broke Panish's record in 2002, with an over-the-top
$28 billion verdict awarded to a 64-year-old lifelong smoker. [132]
Piuze had earlier won a $3 billion award in 2001 on behalf of a 56-year-old
lifelong smoker.[133] Both awards were ultimately reduced
to the tens of millions, in accordance with federal constitutional requirements.[134]
Just last year, a Los Angeles jury held a local store liable for $4.1 million
for selling a dietary supplement that had allegedly caused a plaintiff's stroke.[135]
In taking the extreme step of holding a retailer liable for its supplier's product,
jurors stated that they wanted to let retailers know that "if you are going
to sell something that is dangerous, you better warn the consumer or take it
off your shelf."[136]
Though California has a number
of overly litigious jurisdictions,
Los Angeles stands out with
an eye-popping list of verdicts. |
Fixing Los Angeles's broken legal system is easier said than done, but one
necessary change is making sure that jury service in the Central Civil West
Division is more representative. The division's clerk is noted for getting potential
jurors off long trials for virtually any reason, so that those summoned who
have jobs or other social responsibilities do not serve, and those left in the
jury pool are hardly an adequate cross-section of the population.[137]
Ultimately, however, it is the district's trial-lawyer-backed judges who have
made a mockery of justice with their wacky rulings; until they are replaced
with jurists who take their oaths seriously, the Bank will be open for business.
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124. AMERICAN TORT REFORM FOUNDATION, JUDICIAL HELLHOLES 31 (2004); AMERICAN TORT REFORM
ASSOCIATION, BRINGING JUSTICE TO JUDICIAL HELLHOLES 11 (2003); BRINGING JUSTICE TO
JUDICIAL HELLHOLES 5 (2002)].
125. See U.S. Chamber of Commerce, supra note 6, at 17 tab. 5.
126. See Kenneth Reich, $700 Million Award May Be Reduced: Judge's Remarks
in Lockheed Workers Case Against Oil Firms May Be Focus of Review, Experts Say,
L.A. TIMES, Aug. 10, 1998, at B1.
127. See Arnold v. Ashland Chemical Co., No. B121434, 2000 WL 1094103,
at 4 (Cal. App. 2 Dist. Feb. 18, 2000).
128. See id. at 17.
129. See Gary Gentile, GM Appeals Billion-Dollar Verdict in Crash Case.
Courts: Original Award Was $4.9 Billion in the Fiery Malibu Accident, ORANGE
COUNTY REGISTER, Dec. 7, 2000, available at 2000 WL 29972745.
130. See id.; Fred J. Heistand, Courts Out of Step with Common Sense,
BUSINESS PRESS (Ontario, Cal.), Mar. 6, 2000, at 27; Opportunity to Right a
Wrong Missed by Judge Ruling on GM Damage Award, L.A. DAILY NEWS, Sept. 2,
1999, at N1.
131. See id.
132. See Bullock v. Philip Morris Inc., No. BC 249 171 (L.A. Super. Ct.,
Oct. 4, 2002).
133. See Boeken v. Philip Morris Inc., No. BC 226593 (L.A. Super. Ct.,
June 6, 2001).
134. See Mike McKee, Court Chops More off $3 Billion Award in Philip
Morris Case, RECORDER, Sept. 22, 2004, available at http://www.law.com/
(last visited Mar. 7, 2005); Dan Ackman, In L.A., Smoker Gets $28 Billion,
Er, Million, FORBES.COM, Dec. 19, 2002, at http://www.forbes.com/2002/12/19/cx_da_1219topnews.html
(last visited Mar. 7, 2005).
135. See Penni Crabtree, $4.1 Million Awarded in Retail Ephedra Case,
SAN DIEGO UNIONTRIB., Aug. 26, 2004, at C1.
136. Id.
137. See DANIEL KLERMAN, AMERICAN TORT REFORM ASSOCIATION, A LOOK AT CALIFORNIA
JURIES: PARTICIPATION, SHORTCOMINGS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS (2002); Robert D. Crockett
& Jonathan M. Jenkins, Taking It to the Bank, L.A. LAW., Sept. 2001, at
47, 49.
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