Dallas Personal Injury Attorney Blog

Serving Dallas, DeSoto, Duncanville, Midlothian and Waxahachie, Texas

Friday, January 23, 2009

Should there be "caps" on damages that juries can award?

One of the fondest dreams of insurance carriers is that they will get to continue charging high rates for insurance but that our legislature will cap their potential downside risk. Big businesses like car manufacturers and investment companies also love the idea that the amount they have to pay for the damage they cause can be limited - no matter how much damage they did. These are the same people, remember, who think it's a good idea to pay themselves million dollar bonuses right after begging the government for a bailout of the companies they have mismanaged into bankruptcy.

The arguments made for such caps are basically two: First, spokesmen for insurance carriers point to silly lawsuits filed in other states to "prove" that there is a problem here. In editorial after editorial by representatives of a "concerned citizens group" fronting for insurance companies we hear about the McDonald's spilled coffee case (a fifteen year old New Mexico verdict which settled for a fraction of the verdict awarded) and the silly case filed in New York five years ago against fast food companies for serving food with a high fat content. What we don't hear is why either of these cases is relevant to a discussion of what is happening in Texas - and why either case could be relevant to the discussion of whether to artificially cap damages awarded to people when a Texas jury, a Texas trial judge and a Texas court of appeals all believe the injured person deserves the money.

But saying that caps on damages have anything to do with frivolous lawsuits is just silly. A frivolous lawsuit is one where any reasonable person would agree that the plaintiff should get nothing. Damage caps, by contrast, only come into play when twelve reasonable jurors, a trial judge and then a panel of appellate judges agree that the plaintiff's case is not only not frivolous - but that the plaintiff is entitled to recover a large damage award. Put another way, what big business and insurance companies are really asking for is for laws to prevent people who really have suffered catastrophic damages from getting justice from the people who caused the damage. In order to actually get paid in our system today, first 12 jurors have to agree that you deserve the damages, then the trial judge has to sign a judgment agreeing, and then the losing party can appeal that decision and get the damages reduced if they are not supported by the evidence. After going through all of that - 12 jurors, a trial judge and three appellate judges - there is no way to argue that the damages weren't actually suffered, and certainly no argument to be made that the case was "frivolous".

The second argument made for damage caps is that insurance coverage is too expensive. But this argument is never, ever, followed by a promise that insurance rates will be lowered if damage caps are put in place. The insurance lobby says that we must have damage caps on what seriously injured people who deserve the money can recover, so that we can all have lower rates. Well, it seems to me that if we are all going to give up our rights based on that argument, then we ought to get a promise to lower rates in return. But we never do: in fact, we get just the opposite. In California, where there has been a cap on damages in medical malpractice cases for over a decade, rates have gone up 190%. Texas passed damage caps in medical malpractice suits three years ago, and the promised savings to doctors and consumers never materialized - but the insurance industry is making millions more. In exchange for a real loss of rights for the innocent injured, the public gets...nothing.

You should also know this: when a doctor commits malpractice, or a manufacturer knowingly sells a defective tire and kills a family member or maims you, they're not going to compensate you for the damage he causes out of the goodness of their hearts. Their insurance companies have no heart at all and are interested only in profits, not your problems. That "concerned citizens tort reform" group funded by big business and the insurance industry won't help you, and neither will the politicians they put in office. Only the court system can help you, and it won't be able to help if the insurance and corporate lobbyists get their way.

We all need to pay attention to what the issues really are, and not what the propaganda machine says they are. A suit against McDonald's in New York matters to us not at all. Damage caps which deny justice to truly injured Texans and benefit only insurance carriers matter right here, and right now.

posted by Evan Langsted at 12:43 PM 0 comments

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Medical Malpractice

If you suspect that you or a family member have been the victim of medical malpractice, there is only one way to know for sure-you need an expert medical malpractice lawyer to find out for you.

Only a medical malpractice expert knows how to interpret medical records and apply the legal analysis necessary to know if you have a case. Only a medical malpractice expert knows how to find doctors who will break the code of silence and testify against other doctors. In Texas, a special and extremely complicated medical malpractice statute makes success in a medical malpractice lawsuit expensive and difficult. Only a lawyer who is intimately familiar with the statute and how to meet its requirements has any chance of winning your medical malpractice case for you. Like heart transplant surgery, medical malpractice litigation is no place for rookies.

The vast majority of attorneys simply do not know how to handle a medical malpractice suit. To have any chance of winning a case against a doctor, your attorney has to know a very technical area of the law and must be familiar with medicine and medical records. If he doesn't have the knowledge and experience he needs, you attorney won't be able to recognize what a doctor did wrong, no matter how much time he spends looking at your records. And if he does figure out what was done wrong but doesn't know how to prove the case under the Texas medical malpractice statute, he'll lose your medical malpractice case without even getting it to court. There is no substitute for experience.

That's why doctors and their insurance companies always hire big city lawyers who specialize in medical malpractice cases. No doctor ever makes the foolish mistake of hiring an inexperienced lawyer just because he has an office nearby. You shouldn't either.

You and your family need the skills and experience of Polewski & Associates. With 25 years of experience handling medical malpractice cases, outstanding qualifications and a commitment to treating every client like we would treat our own families, Polewski & Associates is the right choice for you. You've been through a lot. You and your family deserve lawyers who know what they're doing.

Contact us now, and let us know how we can help.

posted by Evan Langsted at 1:18 PM 0 comments

Please select from our links for information about our services or click on the map for directions to our offices:

If you or a loved one have been seriously injured in an accident, contact Polewski & Associates today.

Highland Park Place
4514 Cole Avenue
Suite 600
Dallas, TX 75205

1229 E. Pleasant Run Road #120
DeSoto, Texas 75115

117 N 8th St
Midlothian, TX 76065

Call 972-228-1716 or
Toll Free 866-228-1716

Dallas Personal Injury Lawyer Disclaimer: The content of this website is presented by Polewski & Associates. It is not intended to be legal advice, but general information related to our areas of practice including, Auto Accidents, Defective Products, Nursing Home Abuse, and Contract Litigation lawsuits. If you or a loved is suffering from a personal injury, please contact Polewski & Associates for a free case evaluation. We serve clients in Dallas and Ellis County.

Copyright © Polewski & Associates . Site Designed, Developed and Optimized by Page 1 Solutions

Welcome to Polewski and Associates' Dallas personal injury blog, please upgrade your Flash Plugin and enable JavaScript.