You Little Tort
Farber, Daniel
You Little Tort We clog the courts with crazy liability cases while the real crooks get off by Daniel Farber Richard Neely sits on the supreme court of West Virginia. This is how he describes...
...The cigarette companies' virtual immunity from liability sends the message that selling a dangerous, addictive drug is socially approved behavior...
...Michelin will somehow survive (and if they don't, only the French will care), but my disabled constituent won't make it the rest of her life without Michelin's money...
...He tells a long, amusing story about French and American horse owners...
...While it displays Neely's engaging style, the Michelin story also exemplifies his thesis...
...According to the same ALI study, "most of the balance goes to lawyers" At least one prominent law professor has suggested that the system actually is designed to maximize the payout to lawyers...
...According to one study, about 13,500 products liability suits were filed in federal court in 1986, as opposed to 1,500 in 1974...
...A consumer/ business alliance against the lawyers has some obvious PR appeal...
...This rule would help plaintiffs, since it would speed up compensation, as well as helping defendants, for whom it would eliminate much of the uncertainty associated with punitive damages...
...Yet, only one plaintiff has ever succeeded in recovering damages from a cigarette company, and the damages were so limited that the cigarette industry considered the case a victory...
...In 35 years, polio cases dropped from 57,000 a year to four...
...These reviewers liked Neely's disenchanted view of the status quo...
...More importantly, his book may help to get products liability on the national political agenda...
...Without federal legislation, large-scale vaccination programs might not be possible in this country...
...Free Press, $24.95 like the Robin Hood of the state courts...
...Some scholars believe that in these cases current law provides consumers with excessive insurance: they are covered for product-related injuries but have to pay a higher price for the product to cover the "premium," and are actually getting more insurance than they would really want to buy if they had a choice...
...On the one hand, he does believe that products liability has increased consumer safety by deterring unsafe conduct...
...This is how he describes his job: "As a state court judge, much of my time is devoted to designing elaborate new ways to make business pay for everyone else's bad luck...
...Plain tiffs Products liability dates-from the 1960s, when the courts turned "let the buyer beware" on its head...
...The answer, according to Neely, is that no individual state can afford to take the lead in tort reform...
...Their concerns may be exaggerated, but they do have some foundation...
...The vaccine example shows how products liability law can endanger socially beneficial activities...
...The reality is that most smokers begin before they are 16 and are addicted by the time they reach adulthood...
...There has been a steady expansion in the scope of liability, and defenses have become harder to establish...
...How can you help but Daniel Farber is the Henry Fletcher Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota...
...Vaccination has been one of the great success stories of the twentieth century...
...So the natural human tendency is to help out the poor injured plaintiff, while ignoring the effect of ,the decision on those who are benefiting from vaccination...
...The injured plaintiff is in court for everyone to see...
...But the stakes are high...
...Admittedly, the Naderites and the Chamber of Commerce might find each other uncomfortable allies...
...Senior partners in large firms make money buying young lawyers at wholesale and selling them at retail ." "Horse riding is the ideal sport for politicians because at its heart is the skill of convincing the horse to do all the work ." As one of the blurbs on the dust jacket says, "It is difficult not to like Judge Richard Neely...
...Most conservatives, after spending years arguing in favor of states' rights and judicial restraint, have a little trouble with the idea that the best way to cure a tough problem is to hand it over to the Supreme Court...
...You better shop around Judge Neely himself makes an interesting reform proposal to the effect that no punitive damages should be awarded when the defendant has made a prompt, fair settlement offer...
...If federal intervention is needed, you may wonder, why does Neely choose the federal courts rather than Congress...
...Product liability cases run the gamut from vaccine cases, where there probably should be no liability, to the cigarette cases, where the tort system has failed to come to grips with an enormous public health hazard...
...Not only is my sleep enhanced when I give somebody else's money away, but so is my job security, because the in-state plaintiffs, their families, and their friends will reelect me:' But Neely himself is obviously more principled than that, and he really isn't that cynical about the motivations of most judges...
...Some clever politician ought to be able to exploit that potential to put together a winning coalition...
...I'm not convinced that a legislative solution is impossible...
...First, it should have simple, clear rules governing liability and damages...
...The Products Liability Mess: How Business Can Be Rescued from State Court Politics...
...The tobacco cases, however, demonstrate how the law turns a blind eye to major public health hazards...
...The vaccine story points out one of the weaknesses of the products liability system...
...According to the Public Health Service, smoking kills 350,000 Americans every year—seven times the number who die in car crashes and many times the number of AIDS cases reported to date...
...This is too cynical...
...Despite this phenomenal success, state courts upheld large verdicts against drug companies when juries concluded either that warnings to patients of dangerous side effects of certain vaccines were not sufficiently detailed or that some other vaccine would have been preferable...
...In short, conservatives will agree with Neely's diagnosis but reject his cure, while liberals will reject the diagnosis itself...
...the French take no precautions against injury because they don't care who gets hurt...
...Most of Neely's attention is devoted to this reform proposal...
...Only the Supreme Court, he suggests, can prevent the state courts from exploiting out-of-state companies...
...Given these political realities, I doubt that Neely's proposal will be adopted...
...Judge Neely doubts that Congress will understand these interrelations...
...They're a long way from life in the litigation trenches...
...This brings us back to the main topic of the book...
...Neely argues that products liability law has gotten out of hand because of the incentives for state court judges to help out hometown plaintiffs at the expense of outofstate manufacturers...
...Judge Neely also suggests that Congress will try to lay down too many detailed rules, which will then be difficult to change if they don't work out...
...Neely doubts that his colleagues have any incentive to reform tort law, so he wants the federal courts to intervene...
...Good judges, he says, "listen open-mindedly to other points of view" while trying to "achieve their vision of the just social contract...
...Smokers are considered responsible for their own illnesses because they knew—or should have known—that cigarettes are hazardous...
...Rather, products liability is probably a good example of the expense of trying to do perfect justice in every individual case...
...The huge administrative costs of the present system create a political opportunity for reform that would benefit consumers, insurance companies, and manufacturers, at the expense of trial lawyers and other beneficiaries of the litigation system...
...There is a real problem in the system that processes injury claims...
...I may not always congratulate myself at the end of the day on the brilliance of my legal reasoning, but when I do such things as allow a paraplegic to collect a few hundred thousand dollars from the Michelin Tire Company—thanks to a one-car crash of unexplainable cause—I at least sleep well at night...
...his blend of learning, irreverence, candor, and common sense would be hard to resist" One of the reasons Neely is so disarming is that his candor stops short of cynicism...
...In 1986, Congress responded with legislation intended to protect the industry from excessive liability...
...Even if these estimates turn out to be too high, it is obvious that we are spending vast sums that benefit neither industry nor accident victims...
...Yet I also find that France is a needlessly dangerous society...
...To solve this problem, he calls upon the United States Supreme Court to start reviewing state court decisions in products liability cases...
...This doesn't mean that products liability law works faultlessly...
...Supreme Court are any more knowledgeable in such matters...
...He would make an exception, however, if the plaintiff can provide clear proof that the defendant deliberately endangered the public...
...There are billions of dollars in cost-savings that could be divided among accident victims and businesses...
...Even before it was published it was the subject of laudatory reviews in Forbes and Fortune...
...As a result of the threat of liability, the availability of vaccines in the United States was threatened...
...courts are powerful but not interesting...
...Neely's answer is rather guarded...
...Liberals, on the other hand, won't object so much to Neely's treatment as to his diagnosis: they're unlikely to think that products liability is such a mess anyway...
...A RAND Corporation study estimated that in 1985 Americans spent more than $16 billion on tort litigation...
...Is the system working better to hold corporations properly accountable...
...On the whole, he still thinks that business should be responsible for dangerous products...
...The vaccine situation is a classic example, which Neely discusses in passing...
...Handtailoring is a lot more expensive than mass production...
...One solution might be for Congress to attack the problem indirectly by creating incentives for states to reform their own liability rules or by using tax rules to change the dynamics of the litigation process...
...These scholars have devoted a great deal of effort to correcting this fault, but to my mind the possibility that consumers are paying for a little "excess" insurance hardly ranks as a major social problem...
...He sometimes seems quite cynical about the judicial role: "As long as I am allowed to redistribute wealth from out-of-state companies to injured in-state plaintiffs, I shall continue to do so...
...in 50 years, whooping cough deaths dropped from 7,500 a year to four...
...By comparison, Pentagon procurement is a model of efficiency...
...The Americans can't afford to have riding stables because the insurance is too costly...
...Inflated damages for pain and suffering may actually compensate plaintiffs for large attorneys' fees...
...Second, it should have streamlined procedures for applying these rules...
...Neely concludes that "we are wrong to have a liability law that is so plaintiff-oriented that it makes it nearly impossible for riding schools to operate...
...Take a guess...
...The lives saved by the vaccine are invisible...
...The current legal immunity of the tobacco industry is wrong...
...What we need, in the interests of the accident victims themselves, is a mass production system that will deliver compensation cheaply, so that more money will go to victims and less to lawyers...
...Like most "beggar thy neighbor" strategies, this one can end up hurting everyone, because the resulting legal rules may ignore the legitimate needs of business...
...Predictably, they were much less taken with his solution...
...This passage tells you a lot about Judge Neely's latest book, The Products Liability Mess.* The style is brash but disarming...
...The threat of draconian punitive damages may be needed to deter defendants from delaying trials indefinitely...
...In between we find the great mass of everyday products cases...
...Neely's book has gotten a warm reception from the business press...
...Why attack the problem at the federal level...
...Businesses are increasingly beleaguered by lawsuits...
...On the other hand, if he succeeds in making the Supreme Court more skeptical of the motives underlying state tort law, some smaller changes in Supreme Court doctrine may result...
...Where does the rest of the money go...
...Judge Neely thinks the federal courts should play a much bigger role in developing liability rules, which the states should be required to follow...
...According to a study by ALI (a prestigious association of judges and lawyers), "victims receive only between 50 percent and as little as 25 percent of the total amounts expended by society to decide tort disputes and compensate victims" These figures are appalling...
...But it's not merely political, because his constituent really is destitute, and no one else is willing to help...
...This is almost as much as the total compensation victims ultimately received...
...It might be more accurate to say that in some ways the law has carried a good thing too far and in other ways not nearly far enough...
...The dramatic private harm obscures the quieter but larger social benefits...
...Here are some other Neely gems: "Jesse Jackson is interesting but not powerful...
...Before worrying about reform, however, it's important to understand the problems with current law, which is at once too harsh on some companies, too lenient with others, and much too expensive and cumbersome...
...Or have the courts run amok...
...So he may be a bit of a rogue, we infer, but he's a rogue with a golden heart...
...So smoking can't be said to reflect a rational individual choice...
...In the Michelin case, he admits to bending the legal rules to help a constituent, with the rueful implication that he's willing to be a bit unprincipled for political reasons...
...A state benefits from having very liberal liability rules, since most of the expense falls directly on out-of-state manufacturers and indirectly on out-of-state consumers...
...The task of designing such a system does not exceed the ingenuity of the human mind...
...There is something to this argument, though it's a bit overstated, since a company may be headquartered elsewhere but still have local clout...
...It's not hard to find examples of socially beneficial activities needlessly hampered by excessive liability...
...For example, the Court might do more to limit the ability of plaintiffs to "forum shop" for a state with the most favorable legal rules, even if that state has no real connection with the accident...
...He may be right, but it seems equally unlikely to me that the justices on the U.S...
...Neely is pessimistic about Congress, which he thinks would be likely to botch the job because of the complexities of tort litigation...
...the problem with product liability law is "the tendency to carry a good thing too far...
...A cheaper compensation system must have two attributes...
...The theory now is that consumers are entitled to assume that products are safely designed and properly manufactured...
...Something is badly amiss in a legal system that is capable of driving essential medicines off the market while ignoring the greatest public health hazard of our time...
...Individual legal rules can't operate in a vacuum...
...Indeed, a number of promising proposals already have been made...
Vol. 20 • January 1989 • No. 12