Rorinthas wrote:
Tort reform is viable tort reform. People agreeing via contract not to take their issues to court is people agreeing via contract not to take their issues to court. The fact that I agreed not to sue my employer but instead go to a nationally recognized board of mediation has nothing to do with the need to deal with getting millions of dollars for chipping a tooth.
Erm, you do realize that very rarely does a claimant gets millions of dollars in a class-action lawsuit, right? The settlement may be in the millions, but each claimant only gets a share...and for settlements to get into the millions, there has to be a LOT of claimants, or a LOT of damage. I think BP's recovery fund is the closest you'll get to significant dollars per claimant, and not too many of them got that much.
The most I've ever gotten offered in a class action settlement that I qualified for was for like $25, from Microsoft, or a free oil change from Jiffy Lube.
If a class action lawsuit is filed over a chipped tooth, it means that *everyone* in the class would have to have received that very specific injury. And injuries usually mean more than most states' small claims courts. But for something like the guy in the article who alleges he was getting defrauded by a company that he never signed an agreement with ? There's no incentive for a company to stop, that guy has only small claims court to go to. There's not enough financial damage for a 'real' lawsuit. And for the few people who actually go that far, the company pays their settlements as a cost of doing business. So that leaves only trusting in Congress to pass a law to change the practice.
Sorry, Rori, I can't agree with you. Any tort reform just for the sake of tort reform isn't necessarily in our best interest. Viable is something that satisfies justice while at the same time preventing abuse
on both sides. I don't think this is viable. All this does is tip the scales way far over the other way.