Michigan Legal Watchdog Group Re-forms To Fight Excessive Litigation
NORTHVILLE, Mich., Jan. 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The State of Michigan's legal liability system has taken a disturbing turn for the worse. This has prompted a legal watchdog group that disbanded in 2013 to return to action.
"After years of being ranked in the top half of all the states in the nation for having a fair and reasonable legal system, Michigan has sunk to the bottom half of the rankings along with states like Mississippi and California," said Bob Dorigo Jones, president of Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch.
Michigan's new ranking can be found in the 2019 Lawsuit Climate Survey performed by the Harris Poll and the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform. The survey is the nation's most comprehensive poll of how lawyers and senior attorneys at the largest companies in America view Michigan's lawsuit climate.
"Michigan's lawsuit climate is becoming more volatile and unpredictable, and as that happens, it becomes less attractive to job providers who are deciding where to locate their business. Of those who participated in the survey, 89% said that a state's litigation climate is likely to impact important business decisions at their companies," said Dorigo Jones.
"With all of the variables that affect a state's business climate, it's easy to overlook the importance of its legal liability system. Taxes, government regulations, quality of education, availability and cost of skilled labor and many other issues certainly weigh heavily when business decisions are made, but this survey shows that it's time to put the spotlight on Michigan's litigation climate again."
For 17 years, Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch served as a non-partisan citizen watchdog over the courts. It worked to increase public awareness of all the ways excessive litigation negatively affects job providers, families and communities.
"Many people view lawsuits as a problem only for businesses or insurance companies. However, nothing could be further from the truth. When we began publishing our research in 1997, we discovered that non-profit organizations were some of those hardest hit by lawsuit abuse," added Dorigo Jones.
"At that time, the Girl Scouts of Metro Detroit reported that it had to sell 36,000 boxes of cookies every year just to raise enough money to pay for their liability insurance to protect themselves from lawsuits. They weren't alone in dealing with this problem. Little League baseball, horse riding programs for the developmentally disabled and many more community groups were being rocked by the high cost of liability insurance."
Gradually, things began to improve. Common sense legal reforms enacted by the legislature began to provide more stability for the legal climate. The Michigan Supreme Court developed a reputation across the country for tossing frivolous lawsuits out of court and for limiting the spread of legal liability. By 2015, Michigan's ranking in the Lawsuit Climate Survey had risen to 24th in the nation. Job providers were beginning to have a favorable view of Michigan's legal climate again. Unfortunately, it didn't last.
In the 2019 edition of the Lawsuit Climate Survey, Michigan has dropped down to 33rd in the nation. Fears over lawsuit abuse are rising again in the business community, and in 2020, the Michigan Supreme Court, where rule-of-law justices have held a majority for 22 years, could reverse direction.
"At the end of this year," said Dorigo Jones, "Justice Stephen Markman must retire because he's reached the maximum age for Justices. That means the personal injury bar could regain a majority on the high court if the candidate they support wins the election."
"Lawsuit abuse is a term we use because it encompasses more than frivolous lawsuits. For instance, defensive medicine has become an expensive problem in America these days because many doctors and health professionals feel the need to constantly order more tests than are needed. They do this in an effort to ward off speculative lawsuits by personal injury lawyers who second-guess their decisions. Lawsuits can also be used as a weapon to intimidate or to deflect responsibility by those who are guilty of misconduct or negligence. And it can happen in the private as well as the public sectors."
"The Flint water crisis is a prime example," said Dorigo Jones." The people of Michigan know all too well that this tragedy was perpetrated by local and state officials. And yet, as has been well documented, four years after state prosecutors said they were going to pursue criminal investigations against the state and local officials who perpetrated the Flint water crisis, every charge has been dismissed without a single guilty plea. Instead, the state continues to flounder as it pursues meritless lawsuits against private contractors (a judge recently dismissed the lion's share of the state's claims) while failing to make any progress against the state and local officials who were directly responsible.
Citizens should wonder if the state is trying to use the courts is to deflect public attention away from their mistakes in the Flint water situation, especially because the state department involved in that crisis is now being accused by Macomb County Public Works Administrator Candice Miller of bungling another investigation of pollution that caused green slime to ooze onto a Detroit highway. Critically, the state's approach has emboldened out-of-state trial lawyers who are now trying to score their own quick payday in the Flint water situation with no promise of true accountability for the people of Flint."
Litigation has a far-reaching impact on our lives in so many ways. How will it affect the availability of safe drinking water? How will it affect the ability of the auto industry to provide consumers with autonomous vehicles? How will it affect the availability of medical care and potentially life-saving prescription drugs?
These questions are crucial to the future of our state, and that's why Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch is returning to action," concluded Dorigo Jones. "This time, we will be known as MiLAW for short, pronounced MyLaw, to emphasize the personal stake each Michigan resident has in eliminating lawsuit abuse."
Based in Northville, Michigan, Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch is a non-partisan citizen watchdog over the courts. It is also home of the popular Wacky Warning Label Contest. Visit www.LawsuitFairness.org. Contact: Bob Dorigo Jones, president, MiLAW, 734-891-6022, [email protected], www.LawsuitFairness.org
SOURCE Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch
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https://www.lawsuitfairness.org
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