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#71
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![]() Thank you. So, how can we expect to ever enact any kind of meaningful tort reform if we can't even come up with a definition of what needs to be reformed? And if forcing people to be more specific is not the answer, then what is? Being vague? It's not only a matter of frivolous, it's also a matter of a complete lack of logic an common sense. Just look at the recent suit where the vacuum pump manufacturer got burned at the stake even though the vacuum pump performed as advertised. How that can happen is beyond what my feeble mind can process. Rich Russell |
#72
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
Jack wrote: C J Campbell wrote: Part of the problem is there is no more "out in the country." There's lots of it you may not be able to see from your condo. Laugh Do you realize you've written this statement to a pilot? Or do you expect he does his flying in a condo? Do you imagine that a "pilot" could seriously claim that there is no more "out in the country" (in the USA)? He may well do his flying in a "condo" for all the sense his claim makes. And how do you suppose I come by my views? Certainly not from sitting in my living room for the past 4 decades. Jack |
#73
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Hi Dudley and SR,
It's a sad state of affairs really, and I have no idea what the solution is or even if there ever will be a solution. The quest for the fast buck is just too tempting for both the lawyers AND the public. The two together are a formula for disaster. The fact that people (the public AND the lawyers) will jump at any money the think they might be able to grasp might be sad but it is a fact of society. Few people turn their back at a gold nugget lying before their feet. The real problem is the legal system itself, which WILL on occasion grant hundreds of thousands of Dollars to someone stupid enough to place a cup of hot coffee between their legs. If cases like that were regularly and relyably dismissed (and, yes, maybe a cost to be paid for filing it), lawyers would stop filing them, or at least defendands would not need to worry about them. Obviously a company, as was recently cited, considers it a real possibility, that a jury might judge it to pay a huge amount of money for building a vacuum pump that did NOT fail, just because the plane carrying it crashed! So real a possibility, that the company preferred to accept a settlement (and leave aviation business alone in the future). How insane is that? THAT needs to be changed. As SR pointed out, one trick to change that would be to elimiate jurys and leave it to professionals. Jurys tend to favor with the "little man" against the big, bad corporation, no matter how ridiculous the claim. regards, Friedrich -- for personal email please remove "entfernen" from my adress |
#74
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One problem I have with "tort reform" is that if it's reformed to the extent
people seem to wish it, there would be even less defense against large corporations cutting corners they oughtn't cut. Remebmer, it's in their best interests to take risks with our lives to increase their cash flow. As long as there is disparity of access (to law services), the large corporations have the advantage. "Tort reform" will likely end up cementing that advantage in place. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#75
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![]() Jack wrote: Bob Noel wrote: "more appropriate use"? How revealing of your feeling. Congratulations on your ability to extract meaning from a clear statement. Which clearly suggested that an airport should be a less appropriate use than something else. How many more strip malls, shopping centers, and landfills do we need? Something like 50 airports disappear forever every year, is that not enough? Tampa is about to lose a jewel of an airport this fall. Abandoned airports like Pittsburgh Metro and Fall River (MA) became blight after they closed, although at least Pittsburgh Metro was privately owned. I still don't think the feds ever really made Fall River pay back their grant money as the law required. And the promised casinos never came either, just a few rusting structures were built on the property. |
#76
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In article , Jack wrote:
Airports where NOT build out in the country in years gone by.... The 'city' grew out to meet them. Oh, I see -- that's different then. Actually it is. There's a difference between saying "We need to build an airport lets do it away from the city." And "our town has been expanding, in fact we've grown so large we're right to the each of the river and the edge of the airport." The end result might be the same, but the methodolgy is different. |
#77
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![]() Michael wrote: James Robinson wrote Not really. The aircraft manufacturers seem to get sued almost automatically, no matter what the cause of the accident was Not really. In fact, the lawsuits are not all that common. They don't need to be that common when they are for millions and millions of dollars. Who can forget the lawsuit that Piper lost because somebody took off in their Cub with the seat removed on a runway with a truck intentionally it? Piper was found at fault because the pilot couldn't see directly in front of him before the tail wheel came up. (never mind that it was a tailwheel airplane or that it had been certified by the govt that way or that the seat had been removed.) http://www.aopa.org/members/files/pi...92/pc9212.html (Piper would later lose the appeal too). Or who can forget the poor fellow who flew his Cessna 182 VFR into a massive thunderstorm in Virginia and was killed? Cessna was found responsible and had to pay millions and millions because of a "defective tail design." Nevermind that test pilots flew numerous 182s to Vne and couldn't find anything wrong with the tail, that it had been certified by the feds, or that pilot had illegally been scud running into IMC without an instrument rating. The last one I remember was the governor who crashed. When Kennedy crashed, nobody sued. The knives were sharpened amongst the individual parties but there was a big settlement. Yes, I"m pretty amazed that Piper and every parts manufacturer wasn't sued, but they probably figured they already have enough money and it wasn't worth the time in court. Good for them. |
#78
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"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message nk.net...
"C J Campbell" wrote in message If one tries to establish a reason for the high cost of general aviation in the United States, at any level you view, one has to factor in the presence of the American trial lawyer into the cost equation. Without lawyers influencing the cost factors, the price of the airplanes, all peripherals, and even the cost of the training would be much more reasonable... Blah, blah, blah. As mr Sondrecker requested- let's have some facts. Opinionated diatribe by Henrique and others without facts is prety much the order of the day for them and their ilk. PLEASE-give me some specifics!!! There aren't any. The American judicial system based upon the centuries-old concept of a jury of one's peers is second to none. FACT: The American Insurance Association published a report " Premium Deceit: The Failure of 'Tort Reform' to Cut Insurance Prices" (March,2002), which found, following a 14 year study, that there was no relation between tort restrictions and insurance rates. This study was consistent with the National Association of Attorneys General: "The facts do not bear out the allegations of an explosion in litigation or in claim size, nor do they bear out the allegations of a financial disaster suffered by property/casualty insurers today. They finally do not support any correlation between the current crisis in availability and affordability of insurance and such litigation explosion. The available data indicate that the causes of, and therefore solutions to, the current crisis lie with the insurance industry itself." Ernst & Young and the Risk and Insurance Management Society's report of business liability costs recently found such costs to be miniscule and the lowest in over a decade. The study found liability costs to be in steep decline to only $4.83 for every $1000 in revenue in 2000. 2001 RIMS Benchmark Survey, (2002). The United States is the most competitive nation in the world and companies with high liability exposure are having great success innovating and competing in world markets. Institute form Management Delopment, 1998 Report. In a study of US manufacturing competitiveness, teh Congressional Office of Technology Assessment found that the greatest influences on US competitiveness were capital costs, quality of human resources, technology transfer and technology difficulties. Liability laws were not even mentioned as a factor. The business-backed Conference Board stated affirmatively in its 1987 report that product liability laws do not have significant adverse effects on competitiveness. In more than 2/3s of the surveyed companies, liability costs were less than 1 per cent of total costs. Most notably, the Board found "Where product liability has had a notable impact--where it has most significantly affected management decision making-- has been in the quality of the products themselves. Managers say thet products have become safer, manufacturing procedures have been improved, and labels and use instructions have become more explicit." Weber, Nathan "Product Liability: The Corporate Response, Research Report #893. I could go on and on and on, with facts, not hysterical hyperbole and repetition of tired, unsubstantiated propaganda by gullible sheep. GET SOME FACTS AND THINK FOR YOURSELF, FOR A CHANGE!!! Want to criticize John Edwards for being an "ambulance chaser,' taking frivolous cases? Give me the name of the case and/or the facts of the case, and let's see! Frivolous lawsuits- there is a procedure to deal with them. See Rule 11, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and the stste rules patterned after it in most states. Loser pays?? Yes; I'll bet the coffee lady would have loved that rule! Oh, by the way...I'm a trial lawyer, and proud of it. |
#79
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"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message nk.net...
"C J Campbell" wrote in message If one tries to establish a reason for the high cost of general aviation in the United States, at any level you view, one has to factor in the presence of the American trial lawyer into the cost equation. Without lawyers influencing the cost factors, the price of the airplanes, all peripherals, and even the cost of the training would be much more reasonable... Blah, blah, blah. As mr Sondrecker requested- let's have some facts. Opinionated diatribe by Henrique and others without facts is prety much the order of the day for them and their ilk. PLEASE-give me some specifics!!! There aren't any. The American judicial system based upon the centuries-old concept of a jury of one's peers is second to none. FACT: The American Insurance Association published a report " Premium Deceit: The Failure of 'Tort Reform' to Cut Insurance Prices" (March,2002), which found, following a 14 year study, that there was no relation between tort restrictions and insurance rates. This study was consistent with the National Association of Attorneys General: "The facts do not bear out the allegations of an explosion in litigation or in claim size, nor do they bear out the allegations of a financial disaster suffered by property/casualty insurers today. They finally do not support any correlation between the current crisis in availability and affordability of insurance and such litigation explosion. The available data indicate that the causes of, and therefore solutions to, the current crisis lie with the insurance industry itself." Ernst & Young and the Risk and Insurance Management Society's report of business liability costs recently found such costs to be miniscule and the lowest in over a decade. The study found liability costs to be in steep decline to only $4.83 for every $1000 in revenue in 2000. 2001 RIMS Benchmark Survey, (2002). The United States is the most competitive nation in the world and companies with high liability exposure are having great success innovating and competing in world markets. Institute form Management Delopment, 1998 Report. In a study of US manufacturing competitiveness, teh Congressional Office of Technology Assessment found that the greatest influences on US competitiveness were capital costs, quality of human resources, technology transfer and technology difficulties. Liability laws were not even mentioned as a factor. The business-backed Conference Board stated affirmatively in its 1987 report that product liability laws do not have significant adverse effects on competitiveness. In more than 2/3s of the surveyed companies, liability costs were less than 1 per cent of total costs. Most notably, the Board found "Where product liability has had a notable impact--where it has most significantly affected management decision making-- has been in the quality of the products themselves. Managers say thet products have become safer, manufacturing procedures have been improved, and labels and use instructions have become more explicit." Weber, Nathan "Product Liability: The Corporate Response, Research Report #893. I could go on and on and on, with facts, not hysterical hyperbole and repetition of tired, unsubstantiated propaganda by gullible sheep. GET SOME FACTS AND THINK FOR YOURSELF, FOR A CHANGE!!! Want to criticize John Edwards for being an "ambulance chaser,' taking frivolous cases? Give me the name of the case and/or the facts of the case, and let's see! Frivolous lawsuits- there is a procedure to deal with them. See Rule 11, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and the stste rules patterned after it in most states. Loser pays?? Yes; I'll bet the coffee lady would have loved that rule! Oh, by the way...I'm a trial lawyer, and proud of it. |
#80
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In article , Greg wrote:
Michael wrote: James Robinson wrote Not really. The aircraft manufacturers seem to get sued almost automatically, no matter what the cause of the accident was Not really. In fact, the lawsuits are not all that common. There's no database (that I know of) that lists such things, but it seems based on my own personal non-random observation and misc internet searchs that every time a Boeing plane goes down, they get sued (including 911). Your resuls might vary... |
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