By William Tucker on 12.12.03 @ 12:06AM
What’s going on? Are liberals and conservatives changing partners?
"Lawsuit Hell" is this week's cover story in Newsweek.
The reliably liberal weekly has chronicled the sorry tales of
doctors, teachers, ministers and other professionals living in fear
of litigation.
"These are the sorts of stories that fill schoolteachers and
doctors and Little League coaches with dread that the slightest
mistake -- or offense to an angry or addled parent or patient --
will drag them into litigation hell, months or years of mounting
legal fees and acrimony and uncertainty, with the remote but scary
risk of losing everything," recount staff writers Evan Thomas and
John Stuart Taylor, Jr. In offering solutions, they celebrate the
work of the author of The Death of Common Sense and
founder of Common Good, Philip Howard, an attorney for Manhattan's
Covington & Burling, who has become the point man of tort
reform
The grand irony here is that Newsweek's story appears
the exact same week that the reliably conservative Weekly
Standard has run its own cover story entitled "In Defense
(Sort of) of Trial Lawyers." For the first time in memory, a
right-wing magazine has said something positive of the plaintiff
bar.
What's going on? Are liberals and conservatives changing
partners? Will the Republicans soon be fundraising at the
Association of Trial Lawyers of America while the Democrats court
the American Medical Association? Or are right and left simply
doomed to take opposite sides, no matter what the issue?
As the author of the Weekly Standard article, I feel
the obligation to make some sort of explanation.
Newsweek's concerns -- which come quite far along in
the game -- arise because lawsuits have gone beyond the realm of
corporate America. "American don't just sue big corporations or bad
people," says the article (are they really that apposite?). "They
sue doctors over misfortunes that no doctor could prevent. They sue
their school officials for disciplining their children for
cheating. They sue their local governments when they slip and fall
on the sidewalk." In other words, trial lawyers are no longer just
targeting "deep pockets." They're going after you and me.
My article is predicated on the long-standing conservative
complaint that trial lawyers have carved a huge gaping hole in the
American economy. From Peter Huber's Liability (1988) to
Walter Olson's The Litigation Explosion (1991) to the many
articles in Forbes and Fortune¸ the broad
consensus has been that malpractice, product liability, and other
legal strategies have become a "tort tax" amounting to $200 billion
annually. "Trial Lawyers Inc. might well be the most profitable
business in the world," intoned a recent broadside published by the
Manhattan Institute.
Hold on a minute, I suggested. Before we engage in uninhibited
lawyer bashing, let's admit that that something good does come out
of the tort system. In fact, torts have become a form of private
regulation, carried out without the burden of government
bureaucracy. Lawsuits can zero in on important niches of health and
safety without regulatory ineffectiveness or overkill.
In his recent book, Four Trials, for example,
presidential candidate John Edwards recounts the case of a
five-year-old girl who had 80 percent of her intestines sucked out
of her body and was condemned to a lifetime of feeding tubes when
she became caught on an uncovered wading pool drain. As her lawyer,
Edwards discovered there had been nearly a dozen almost identical
instances of death or severe injury involving the same drain. Aware
of the problem, the company had simply dodged the issue. "Doesn't
he know this kind of thing should never be put in writing?" was the
response to one internal memo warning of the danger. In this
situation, the $25 million damage award hardly seemed
inappropriate.
Republicans would be foolish to get on the wrong side of these
issues (just as Edwards is foolish to think that winning such cases
qualifies him to become president). Yet despite the productive work
done by trial lawyers, there are obvious flaws in the system. Both
Newsweek and the Weekly Standard are attempting
to pinpoint exactly what has gone wrong.
My view is that the system ultimately goes awry when malpractice
or product liability lawsuits runs up against the limits of nature
or human tragedy. Many early malpractice suits, for example,
targeted anesthesiologists, who often underdosed or overdosed
patients, leading to side effects and operating-room catastrophes.
The discipline underwent a number of reforms in the late 1970s and
now lawsuits against anesthesiologists are rare. Lawsuits against
obstetricians, on the other hand, have become a counterproductive
ritual.
The principle cause of action is cerebral palsy, a condition
that appears at childbirth and results in severe lifetime
disability. In the early years, malpractice attorneys argued that
CP occurred because doctors were not performing enough caesarian
deliveries. (Edwards' first big damage award was against an
old-fashioned North Carolina doctor who thought women didn't need
C-sections.) Yet caesarians have now risen from 4 percent of
deliveries in 1970 to 25 percent today -- and the incidence of
cerebral palsy has not fallen one bit. Obviously the theory is
incorrect. Cerebral palsy has other causes. Many researchers now
believe it results from genetic damage or early trauma in the womb.
Yet lawyers keep bashing away at obstetricians, using the pathetic
spectacle of severely inflicted children to win the sympathy of the
jury. The result is obstetricians are going out of business and
women must travel hundreds of miles to seek care.
Many veteran trial attorneys who pioneered liability law now
agree the system is riddled with excesses. John O'Quinn, the Texas
billionaire attorney who bankrupted Dow Corning over breast
implants, supports a "loser-pays" system that would force attorneys
to reimburse the defense's court costs when it loses. Jere Beasley,
who just won $11 billion for Alabama over ExxonMobil gas leases,
believes that punitive damages should go to the state rather than
the individual plaintiff. Wayne Reaud, the Gulf Coast attorney who
became a billionaire suing Texas oil companies over asbestos, rails
against the "recruiting law firms" that have turned asbestos
litigation into an assembly line. (Reaud's 47-year-old partner was
murdered by a disaffected client who had been told, falsely, by a
gristmill law firm that he had asbestos-related disease.)
Damage caps, special medical courts, outlawing contingency fees
-- no one knows exactly which strategy offer the best promise of
curbing the tort system's excesses while maintaining its basic
advantages. But at least the discussion has begun.
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