Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Contingency Fees: Another Name for Champerty

Torts Contingency Fees: Another Name for Champerty
The Wall Street Journal Monday, November 10, 1997
I have a rather extensive file of articles I posted on Free Republic during the Clinton Terror, and from time to time find one that still has legs. This is one. 

Note: Barn Army JAG Officer Chuck Martel is of course excepted, absolved, and applauded in all his endeavors.


[www.FreeRepublic.com]

How did a crime under common law become a common practice of modern American law? It began in 1848 with the repeal of New York state's statutes regulating lawyer's fees. Known as the Field Code, this allowed victims of then-common industrial accidents to retain a lawyer. It was, as we still hear the contingency fee described today, "the poor man's key to the courthouse door."

Champerty
A century and a half later, on almost any given day in America, the newspapers bear witness to the evils that jurists have been warning about for centuries and are still fighting off in the courtrooms of Europe. In Florida, a settlement was just struck in the second-hand-smoke suit against the tobacco industry. This $5 billion class-action case was begun on a contingency-fee basis in 1991 by lawyers Stanley and Susan Rosenblatt, who will get $49 million. Their 60,000 clients, so far as one can tell, will get little or no money.

"Fee litigation," in which lawyers specialize in defending the fees of other lawyers, is now a thriving field. There is even a publication called Mealey's Attorneys Fees to keep tort lawyers up to speed on what other lawyers are getting, lest anyone settle beneath the going rate. At the American Bar Association meeting in August, a packed seminar called "Proving and Defending Attorney Fee Petitions in Employment Litigation" was devoted entirely to instruction in the latest techniques in bill padding for employment lawyers. [Full Article]




9 comments:

Chuck Martel said...

Everybody hates personal injury lawyers until some drunk runs a stop sign and puts them in the hospital.

toadold said...

The tort lawyers are loved so much that Texas has capped what can be rewarded for punishment fees despite the screams, lobbying, and bribes offered, from the tort lawyers. That and a some other changes in the law is one of the reasons why businesses, manufacturers and doctors esp., are moving to Texas lately.

Tom Mann said...

Did you abdicate as King of Sweden?

ps-Should you ever have the need, I have the four volume collection of WSJ editorials on Whitewater.

Rodger the Real King of France said...

No I an cuurently also the Reak King of Swede3d, but can't afford new stationary ''

Tom, I have that same set, thanks.

Anonymous said...

IIRC, the Rosenblatts' flight attendant settlement was ~$346 million. They received their $46 million contingency directly, no flight attendant received a dime, and the balance of the swag went to a foundation to proseletyze on second hand smoke.
Of course, the Rosenblatts are chair and vice chair of the foundation and receive a handsome salary for running the foundation.
IMHO, in class action suits, the only winners are the attorneys, because very few of the class are actually participants in the trial and they jury sees the issue as punishing the offender rather than making each class member whole according to his individual damages. My father was asked to join a class in a drug lawsuit worth ~$60 million. He asked what his share would be if the suit were won, and refused to join it for $1.87. Seems to me an individual's grievance should stand on its own, or the class action attorneys get their normal hourly rates, not an enormously inflated fee for representing many clients with only one trial.
Lt. Col. Gen. Tailgunner dick

Chuck Martel said...

Everybody hates personal injury lawyers until a doctor fails to diagnose a stroke and their spouse ends up with brain damage.

Anonymous said...

Lawyers are like whores. Use 'em if a have to, just dont bring 'em home for dinner.
Tim

Anonymous said...

Chuck - if a dump truck runs a stop sign and t-bones me, I want a lawyer for sure, but I think the issue is class action suits where a deep pocket organization is attacked in a populist way and the sueing attorney's reward is grossly out of proportion to the amount of work he and his staff put in, and the members of the class receive a pittance.
Lt. Col. Gen. Tailgunner dick

Anonymous said...

Everybody hates personal injury lawyers until..Well we just hate em...

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