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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction

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To: Oral Roberts who wrote (11033)7/9/2004 11:08:50 AM
From: mph  Read Replies (1) of 90947
 
Even though you sometimes have a jury panel that does
not consist of the sharpest knives in the drawer, you
have to remember that there is a certain collective
wisdom in a panel of 12. Sure, certain superficially
appealing themes can be hammered home, even if they
won't withstand real scrutiny, but you can't insult
their intelligence. People sense that.

I just tried a case where the plaintiff really caused
his own accident and overreached on a lost earnings
claim for which he had no documentation. (He claimed
to be an independent contractor painter...uh huh)

His lawyer argued that plaintiff had absolutely no
role in causing the accident and that, in fact, it
was all the defendants. (This was premises liability
where he slipped and fractured his hip)

He asked the jury for over $600K in his initial
closing arguments. After mine, where I challenged
all the liability issues and said that a lawsuit
is not a lottery ($600K for an accident he caused
himself?
), this guy actually rebutted by
saying that although I asked you for $600K, you're
not limited to that amount. You can award more.


(He must have thought he was Paul Newman in The
Verdict.
)

The guy talked down to the jury the entire trial.
It was almost embarrassing.

As for the outcome, let's just say the plaintiff won't
be retiring any time soon.............he was awarded less
than $40K and will see even less after he pays his
lawyer and other expenses.

(That $40K includes the award against all defendants.
He could have settled for that amount before trial
and saved the trial expense---but he thought he was
going to be the next millionaire.)
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