The settlement process is, once again, nothing more than a free-market way of deciding what a claim is worth. Originally Posted by Mazomaniac
If a lawsuit passes muster from a judge on summary judgment . . . . Do frivolous lawsuits exist? Sure. In very small number and they are almost always disposed of on summary judgment of by voluntary dismissal. Originally Posted by TexTushHogA bit over-simplified, because: (1) the judicial system imposes substantial costs; and (2) it's not only frivolous lawsuits, there is the problem of inflated claims with enough merit to survive a motion for summary judgment.
If the claim (weighted for probability of success) is worth $X, the defendant may be forced to settle for more, to avoid the costs of going to trial. You can affect that to some degree if the losing party has to pay the costs of the other side. You can also limit completely frivolous lawsuits by allowing a streamlined procedure for summary judgment at an early stage. Of course, even that imposes some costs on the defendant, and it doesn't address lawsuits that are not completely frivolous; if the claim is "worth" $25,000 but the other party refuses to settle for less than $200,000, and it will cost you $400,000 to defend, what will you do?
Not to mention that what a claim is "worth" is completely hypothetical. An outside, objective party might evaluate it at $750,000, while another outside, objective party might evaluate it at $3,000,000, and another might evaluate it at $120,000. What will the jury decide? How much can you remove subjectivity and bias in jury selection?
The costs and the "jury crap shoot," of course, affect both plaintiffs and defendants adversely. And most partisans on either side of this debate only acknowledge the costs that hurt their side (or their own personal interests if they're attorneys).
Those who sympathize with plaintiffs see the possibility that a plaintiff will not be able to afford to bring a meritorious lawsuit or forced to take a low-ball settlement offer. And if they're plaintiff's attorneys, those are the very type of bad results that they're most likely to see. Defense attorneys are less likely to encounter those situations.
Those who sympathize with defendants see the possibility that a defendant will be unjustly sued (and still incur costs even if able to win on a motion for summary judgment) or forced by litigation costs to settle a meritorious but low-value lawsuit for more than it's worth. And if they're defense attorneys, those are the very type of bad results that they're most likely to see. Plaintiff's attorneys are less likely to encounter those situations.
Personally, I believe that it was appropriate a few years back to restrict class-action stockholder lawsuits, because there were firms set up specifically to file suit automatically anytime that stock prices for a company dropped, and defendants routinely and quickly settled because of the huge potential exposure. (And often class-action lawsuits wind up with very trivial recovery for the stockholders when compared to the fees received by the attorneys.) And I think some other class-action lawsuits have gone way too far, destroying defendants through very questionable science that is later debunked -- e.g., breast implants -- or by chasing the line of causation too far (and even blatant coaching of the plaintiffs) in search of deep pockets -- e.g., some asbestos claims. Clearly abusive situations. At the same time, yes, without the possibility of class-action lawsuits, some wrong-doing could never be reached because it is too expensive to do so on a case-by-case basis.
Those are the types of situation that inflames most of the passion concerning this argument. Everyone argues the extreme cases. As far the the run-of-the-mill, single plaintiff cases like medical malpractice or auto collisions discussed above -- I have no idea. I don't see those often from either side.
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Any change in the rules is not per se "unfair." It depends largely on how you view the pre-change balance of power. Do defendants have an advantage, due to greater financial resources or bias by judges? Do plaintiffs have an advantage, from the ability to bring the lawsuit in the first place (imposing costs on the defendant) or bias by juries?
I think any fair evaluation of the justice system would conclude that -- even if there's nothing better to replace it with -- it doesn't work very well for either side. Too many meritorious claims that are never given their day in court or receive judgment lower than warranted by the actual merit of the claim. Too many low-merit claims that receive a higher settlement or judgment than warranted by the actual merit of the claim. And for everything in between, too much cost imposed by the system.
The justice system mis-serves, to one degree or another, everyone, plaintiffs and defendants. That is, everyone other than the lawyers. Our only real justification for our involvement is that the lousy system would work even worse without us.
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Technically, I'm a plaintiff's attorney although that's just an artifact of a built-in administrative advantage by the other side; effectively, I'm equivalent to a defense attorney. I've seen several instances where my clients were forced to settle even though we had good arguments. When the amount at issue is $600,000, even with a 65% chance of success, we may have to accept 25% instead of 65% simply because it would cost $500,000 to go to trial. Unfortunately I don't encounter the opposite, where we get an advantageous settlement because the other side wants to avoid litigation costs. Alas, my opponents don't consider it from an economic standpoint - or else are considering the benefit by going to court of intimidating hundreds of other similarly situated claimants.
So, I may be biased in a discussion like this. But then, so are most of the others who participate.