Proposition 12 is only slightly about medical malpractice. Check out this weekend?’s Statesman article listing the various businesses that are pumping millions in support of Prop 12. Do HEB or WalMart practice medicine? Do they care about medical issues? Of course not. They are attempting to throw away centuries of tradition in the jury system in Texas, something our Founding Fathers found important enough to place in the 7th amendment to the US Constitution. Prop 12 is really about big businesses wanting to avoid have to fully compensate you when their conduct has caused you harm.
If ?– and I truly question this premise ?– medical malpractice litigation is in a crisis situation, then why didn?’t state senator Joe Nixon tie mandatory reductions in medical malpractice insurance premiums for doctors?? For that matter, why did this legislative sponsor of tort reform have HIS $300,000 mold claim paid by the big insurance company, and then get an additional $30,000 which internal insurance documents revealed would help them get tort reform passed? This is greasy politics at its worst. Further, in states where similar caps exist, insurance rates did not decline signficantly. This is a red herring, pure and simple.
Forget Prop 12 for a minute. House Bill 4, also passed this session, creates such broad, unprecedented tort reform in the rules and practices governing ALL civil cases that it will be extremely difficult even for rock solid, meritorious cases to ever go to trial. You don?’t hear anything about this law that?’s already in place. For example, if you have a strong case, reject a settlement offer, and WIN at trial but win less than 120% of what was offered, you have to pay the other side?’s costs and attorneys?’ fees. That?’s absolutely ridiculous. These rules are in play now, without Prop 12.
Prop 12 seeks to cap damages in all med mal suits, regardless of the circumstances of the individual case. If you happened to have an emergency, go to a hospital, and a doctor with a drug or alcohol problem butchers your spouse, child or yourself, then your noneconomic damages ?– e.g., pain and suffering, disfigurement, embarrassment, lost of enjoyment of life in the future ?– AT MOST are limited to $250,000 per defendant, up to a total of $750,000. Think about that. How much is your breast, kidney, eye, face, body or life worth, if you?’re the victim of a clearly avoidable act of negligence? One size does not fit all when you?’re valuing human lives.
And you know what else? Prop 12 is not limited to med mal cases. You?’d think so from all the propaganda, but that?’s not the truth. The language at issue allows caps for damages in ALL civil actions. So, the damages caps above could apply to the drunk driver who maims or kills your family. To the car manufacturers who knowingly sell you a car whose gas tank is known to explode on impact. To drug companies that quickly get a pill to market, knowing it has potentially fatal consequences. And so on. Is that justice? Not in my book.
Court rules, trial judges and the court of appeals traditionally have reduced the huge, so-called runaway jury verdicts that you often see in the news. Stripping juries of their constitutional place in America, however, is an affront to our tradition and to our justice system. That?’s why I?’m voting against Prop 12. I hope you will too.
If ?– and I truly question this premise ?– medical malpractice litigation is in a crisis situation, then why didn?’t state senator Joe Nixon tie mandatory reductions in medical malpractice insurance premiums for doctors?? For that matter, why did this legislative sponsor of tort reform have HIS $300,000 mold claim paid by the big insurance company, and then get an additional $30,000 which internal insurance documents revealed would help them get tort reform passed? This is greasy politics at its worst. Further, in states where similar caps exist, insurance rates did not decline signficantly. This is a red herring, pure and simple.
Forget Prop 12 for a minute. House Bill 4, also passed this session, creates such broad, unprecedented tort reform in the rules and practices governing ALL civil cases that it will be extremely difficult even for rock solid, meritorious cases to ever go to trial. You don?’t hear anything about this law that?’s already in place. For example, if you have a strong case, reject a settlement offer, and WIN at trial but win less than 120% of what was offered, you have to pay the other side?’s costs and attorneys?’ fees. That?’s absolutely ridiculous. These rules are in play now, without Prop 12.
Prop 12 seeks to cap damages in all med mal suits, regardless of the circumstances of the individual case. If you happened to have an emergency, go to a hospital, and a doctor with a drug or alcohol problem butchers your spouse, child or yourself, then your noneconomic damages ?– e.g., pain and suffering, disfigurement, embarrassment, lost of enjoyment of life in the future ?– AT MOST are limited to $250,000 per defendant, up to a total of $750,000. Think about that. How much is your breast, kidney, eye, face, body or life worth, if you?’re the victim of a clearly avoidable act of negligence? One size does not fit all when you?’re valuing human lives.
And you know what else? Prop 12 is not limited to med mal cases. You?’d think so from all the propaganda, but that?’s not the truth. The language at issue allows caps for damages in ALL civil actions. So, the damages caps above could apply to the drunk driver who maims or kills your family. To the car manufacturers who knowingly sell you a car whose gas tank is known to explode on impact. To drug companies that quickly get a pill to market, knowing it has potentially fatal consequences. And so on. Is that justice? Not in my book.
Court rules, trial judges and the court of appeals traditionally have reduced the huge, so-called runaway jury verdicts that you often see in the news. Stripping juries of their constitutional place in America, however, is an affront to our tradition and to our justice system. That?’s why I?’m voting against Prop 12. I hope you will too.