As the Manhattan Institute marks its 25-year anniversary of
"Turning Intellect into Influence," it claims the war against
the plaintiffs' bar is close to victory - a claim bolstered by its
own evidence as well as that of others.
Backing up its claim, the free-market-oriented think tank cites
response to its book released last year, Trial Lawyers Inc., portraying
the plaintiffs' bar as a behemoth industry (Liability &
Insurance Week, Sept. 29, 2003).
"Judging from the heavy traffic on our website and the
requests for copies from general counsels and CEOs, trade associations
and reporters, we sense the tipping point is approaching," its
year-end update concludes.
The Manhattan Institute said its goal for the book was "to
introduce into the public imagination the idea of the tort bar as Big
Business, and in doing so, completely reverse the current popular
misperception."
A month after its release, it said, an editorial in The Wall Street
Journal, on a Food and Drug Administration advisory panel's
decision to lift the 1992 ban on silicone breast implants ended with two
lines that show the Institute was achieving its goal.
"So while we're happy that the FDA finally seems to be
tossing over the junk science on breast implants, let's remember
the staggering price we've paid: legally, scientifically and in
public health.
"The real lesson here is that the robber barons who make up
Trial Lawyers, Inc. are often far more toxic than the industries they
purport to protect us from."
The initiative to accomplish its goal was led by former U.S.
attorney general Richard Thornburgh and Sen. Jeffrey Sessions (R-AL), it
said, with the Institute lining up "a key set of interviews for Mr.
Thornburgh with Catherine Crier on Court TV, Judge Andrew Napolitano on
Fox's The Big Story and CNBC's Kudlow and Kramer."
After the first wave of publicity for the book, it said it hosted
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R). "Personal injury trial lawyers have
turned a legal system designed to resolve disputes into their own
personal investment vehicle to strike it rich," Perry was quoted as
saying.
"They turned that system from one intended to dispense justice
to a new kind of lottery that dispenses jackpot justice. Nothing
illustrates this phenomenon more than the outstanding report recently
published and prepared by the Manhattan Institute, Trial Lawyers
Inc."
The Institute's prediction of a tipping point comes just
before the Senate is to take up the class action bill, which would allow
class actions to be removed to federal court when at least $5 million is
at stake and when fewer than two-thirds of class members live in the
same state as the defendant.
Removing class actions from state to federal courts has been one of
the Institute's top priorities in its war against the
plaintiffs' bar.
James Copland, director of the Institute's Center for Legal
Policy, says current law allows plaintiffs' attorneys to forum shop
for a state judge known for hospitable treatment to plaintiffs in class
actions.
If a federal judge certified a national class of plaintiffs, he
says, the decision "could be immediately appealed - to the Supreme
Court if necessary - to prevent rogue judges from abusing their
positions."
Besides the Manhattan Institute's self-assessment, the year
ended with other evidence that groups working to limit liability are
gaining the advantage over their adversaries in the plaintiffs'
bar.
So far, for example, the plaintiffs' bar has succeeded in
stopping the class action bill, S. 274, from passing the Senate.
But when the Senate voted Oct. 22 to close off debate, the
plaintiffs' bar held the opposition at bay by only one vote.
Since then, three Democratic senators have decided to switch from
opposing to supporting the measure, giving two votes more than would be
necessary to close off debate and 12 more than necessary to pass the
measure.
The three Democratic senators are Christopher Dodd (CT), Mary
Landrieu (LA) and Charles Schumer (NY).
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) has said he will call the
bill up when the Senate returns Jan. 20.
If the vote goes against the plaintiffs' bar, the
Institute's prediction the "tipping point is approaching"
could prove true.
Other straws in the wind:
Newsweek and MSNBC Cable cooperated to present a harsh criticism of
the plaintiffs' bar, with the magazine devoting its Dec. 15 cover
story to "Lawsuit Hell: How Fear of Litigation Is Paralyzing Our
Professions" and the network presenting a special series called
"Civil Wars" (Liability & Insurance Week, Dec. 15).
Meanwhile, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's National Chamber
Litigation Center reported it has filed a record number of legal for the
third year in a row, entering 73 new cases, and chalked up 30 victories
- also a record.
Notable among the later, the Chamber said, was its Supreme Court
brief in State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Campbell,
overturning a Utah court's award of punitive damages 145 times the
compensatory damages.
"As a result, state appellate courts have already slashed
excessive punitive damages awards that exceeded the guidelines
established by the State Farm decision in three other cases in which
NCLC has participated: Bocci v. Key Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Waddill v.
Anchor Hocking, Inc., and Ford Motor Company v. Romo, et al.," NCLC
said.
"NCLC's efforts in these four cases alone helped
contribute to a reduction of punitive damage payouts totaling almost
$430 million."
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