New "Judicial Hellholes"
Identified
in New Jersey, Nevada
American Tort Reform Foundation
Releases "Judicial Hellholes 2007"
Listen to Interview with ATRF President Tiger Joyce
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
December 18, 2007
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Contact:
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Darren
McKinney
(202) 682-0084 |
Today
at a press conference in Washington, DC, the
American Tort Reform Foundation
has named
for the first time Clark County, Nevada and Atlantic
County, New Jersey as "Judicial Hellholes". The list
also includes perennial Hellholes:
South Florida; Rio Grande Valley and Gulf Coast,
Texas; Cook County, Illinois; and, the entire state
of West Virginia as
the nation’s most unfair civil court jurisdictions.
“Besides naming two new Judicial
Hellholes this year, the biggest headline may be the
fact that Madison County, Illinois is no longer a
Hellhole,” noted ATRF president
Sherman “Tiger”
Joyce (below). “In each of the last five years Madison
County was cited as a leading Hellhole. But led by
Chief Judge Ann Callis and Judge Daniel Stack, the
courts there have undertaken several positive
reforms which justify moving the county this year to
the ‘Watch List.’
“As the public becomes more aware of
problems within the courts, policymakers are more
likely to correct those problems,” Joyce observed.
“We’ve now seen that happen in Madison County, just
as we saw it happen in Mississippi several years
ago.”
American Tort Reform Association
general counsel
Victor Schwartz
(below, right) promptly cautioned
that, “While the tactical victory for fairness in
Madison County courts is certainly worth
celebrating, the nationwide strategic battle for
truly equitable civil justice goes on.
“For proof, look no further than this
year’s two new Hellholes: Clark County, Nevada and
Atlantic County, New Jersey,” Schwartz continued.
“Judges in those gambling hotspots are dealing from
the bottom of the deck and advancing personal injury
litigation to the detriment of their states’
economies."
Pointing to a section of the
Hellholes report titled “Growth Strategies,”
Schwartz added, “The 2007 Hellholes report also
details the personal injury bar’s aggressive efforts
to expand liability and craft new opportunities for
litigation. Plaintiffs’ attorneys are pushing their
now well-positioned allies in Congress and state
legislatures for what I call ‘trial lawyer earmarks’
― hard-to-find provisions tucked into legislation
that may seek, for example, to provide new private
rights of action, limit federal preemption laws, or
prohibit mutually agreed upon arbitration
agreements.”
“Speaking of political alliances,”
Joyce interjected, “our Hellholes report also
spotlights increasingly common contractual
relationships between some state attorneys general
and their leading political patrons: personal injury
lawyers. Too often these arrangements are governed
by non-competitive contracts that are negotiated
behind closed doors, and the contingency fees upon
which these contracts are typically based give
private lawyers, backed by state authority, a
pernicious incentive to maximize the damage awards a
defendant may be obligated to pay, even if civil
justice is minimized in the process.”
Schwartz then turned to the selection
of this year’s top three Judicial Hellholes:
South Florida
“The collective reputation for
excessive awards and plaintiff-friendly rulings make
Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Broward counties a
proverbial launching pad for class actions, dubious
claims and novel legal theories,” explained
Schwartz. “While some judges in West Virginia and
other perennial Hellholes have shown determination
to make progress, too many judges in South Florida
continually allow the plaintiffs’ bar to push the
envelope of civil justice. And with the state’s high
court as unpredictable as it is, there’s no
confidence that improper trial court rulings will be
corrected on appeal."
Rio Grande Valley and Gulf Coast,
Texas
“Texas enacted important tort reforms
in 2003 and 2004, and vastly improved its civil
justice climate. But personal injury lawyers are
still living high off the hog in Jefferson,
Brazoria, Cameron, Hidalgo, Nueces, Starr and Zapata
counties,” Schwartz said. “Last year’s Hellholes
report noted a new wave of intellectual property
litigation in these jurisdictions; this year,
personal injury lawsuits in connection to the
dredging of Texas ports comprise a rising tide."
Cook County, Illinois
“Though long regarded as an
environment that is hospitable to class actions and
hostile to corporate defendants, Cook County has
added to that reputation with awards for noneconomic
damages in wrongful death actions,” continued
Schwartz. “Additionally, a Cook County court this
fall invalidated a state law limiting potentially
infinite pain and suffering awards in medical
liability cases.”
Audio Interview with ATRF President Tiger Joyce
You can download copies of the
Hellholes Reports here:
Download 2007 Hellholes Report
Download 2006 Hellholes Report