Ohio Landmark Supreme Court Cases Ruling Eliminates Jury Discretion
Whether you’re a CEO of a company or a guy who sweeps floors for a living, the Ohio Landmark Supreme Court Cases has put its stamp of approval on a law that could have devastating consequences for you if you’re seriously injured in an accident.
The court, in a case called Arbino vs. Johnson & Johnson, said for the first time in Ohio history that it’s constitutional to disregard the findings of a jury if the jury decides to award more than $250,000 to someone injured in an accident to compensate for the person’s pain – even if that pain may last a lifetime.
The court reached this landmark supreme court cases decision despite clear precedent that such a law is unconstitutional. Essentially what the court says this time around is that the Ohio General Assembly really, really, really, really wants to limit damages for insurance companies, so who are we to stand in their way?
Look at what the Ohio Constitution says, then you decide whether what the court has done makes any sense. The relevant part of Article I, Section 5 states, “The right of trial by jury shall be inviolate …”
In Ohio, the constitutional right to trial by jury has always been interpreted to mean that judges and the government won’t be able to invade the jury’s fact-finding function.
That’s why jurors are there, right? To hear the facts of each individual case and decide what they think is fair. Now, though, jurors can spend days or weeks hearing the facts of a case, reach a difficult decision that the injured person should be awarded a sum to compensate for the pain an accident has caused, only to have that decision gutted by a judge if the sum exceeds $250,000.
How does the right to a trial by jury remain inviolate if a law requires judges to violate the decisions a jury reaches? We should probably now read the constitution to say: The right to a jury shall be inviolate, provided it doesn’t cost an insurance company too much money.
The right to have a jury determine the facts of a case has been the backbone of our legal system for hundreds of years. It serves as a check against a judge who might be corrupt or for some reason influenced by one side or the other. It’s a concept as old as our country and traces its roots to the Magna Carta. As the court’s majority notes, Thomas Jefferson viewed jury trials as “the only anchor, ever yet imagined by man, by which a government can be held to the principles of its constitution.”
If the court really believes those words, shouldn’t there be a much more compelling reason to upend the jury system than the desire to save insurance companies money? In the interest of full disclosure, I am a personal injury attorney and I work hard to help people who have been injured in accidents get a fair shake from insurance companies. And, yes, this decision has the potential to hurt my wallet in certain cases. The real impact on my practice likely will be minimal because most people aren’t hurt so seriously that the cap will apply. Regardless of my personal stake, this is simply a matter of right and wrong, and I don’t think people realize the impact of what’s actually taken place.
Everyone has heard about the infamous McDonald’s scalding hot coffee case. It’s a complete oddity, but insurance company lobbyists always trot it out as if it’s the norm. The caps enacted in Ohio are far more likely to affect the average man or woman unfortunate enough to get into an auto accident.
Here’s the nightmare situation that could happen to you or a family member. You’re driving to work when a guy driving a delivery truck takes his mind off the road while talking on a cell phone and plows into your car. Your head hits the window, your ankle is crushed when your car’s frame crumples, and your body is snapped back and forth like a rag doll, and your life has been altered forever.
The head trauma leaves you plagued by headaches. Your ankle injury means that every step causes pain to shoot through your leg. Your back hurts so much that getting a real night’s sleep is impossible. You can’t play ball with your kids anymore or even mow the yard. And the pain doesn’t go away after a week, or a month, or even a year. In fact, by the time you get to trial years have gone by and the docs are telling you you’ll never run again and your pain will always be with you.
A jury hears your case and awards you the cost of your medical bills that may have to be repaid, and lost wages, and decides – after hearing your testimony, your doctor’s testimony, your spouse’s testimony, the defense doctor’s testimony, and the defense attorney’s arguments – that your lifelong pain is worth $500,000. Or $1 million. Or $2 million. Whatever it is, it’s not enough to compensate you for what this accident has done to your life and no one – no one – in that courtroom would change positions with you for any amount of money.
That’s the point where the judge steps in and reduces the jury’s pain and suffering award to $250,000 because that’s what the law requires. The jurors heard the facts and struggled to come to a fair decision, only to have their legs cut out from them by a General Assembly that knew nothing about the facts of your case or the impact the accident has had on your life.
And our Supreme Court just blessed this system.
It blessed a system where a jury can hear the specifics of an individual case only to have the decision wiped out by an arbitrary cap the state Legislature’s Republican majority came up with to satisfy their chamber of commerce and insurance company campaign contributors.
The court justifies its decision on the thinnest of rationales. See if you can follow its logic: When judges reduce jury awards for pain and suffering, they aren’t interfering with a jury’s fact-finding function, they’re simply applying the law.
What?
Spin that around your head for a while. It never gets any clearer. So, the jurors can do their cute little dance, and we’ll pretend to care about what they have to say. But the second they award any money to someone that could actually make an insurance company pay fair compensation, well something simply must be done. Apparently, the right to trial by jury is inviolate, but only up to a point.
And there is nothing in the Supreme Court’s opinion that would stop the legislature from capping pain and suffering damages at $1 or $5. The amount of the cap isn’t the point. Caps are wrong at $1 million and wrong at $1. Jurors are in the best position to determine what someone deserves for the pain caused by an accident.
The caps can be lifted in extreme cases such as when someone loses a limb or can no longer independently care for himself and perform life-sustaining activities. But the caps apply to more common cases like I described above, even if the person will experience a lifetime of pain.
To their credit, Justices Terrence O’Donnell and Paul Pfeifer dissented from this badly reasoned and disheartening opinion.
I understand that the General Assembly desperately wanted to do the bidding of the business interests that have pumped millions of dollars into GOP campaign coffers. (Incidentally, those same interests also have contributed millions to Republican candidates on the all-Republican Supreme Court.)
Legislators, whether Republicans or Democrats, can get into all sorts of mischief when big money is thrown their way.
That’s why we have a right to expect that the Ohio Supreme Court will do more than justify its decisions by paying fawning deference to the legislature.
We have a right to expect someone in Columbus to stand up for the people of this state. And most importantly, we have a right to expect the court to apply Ohio’s Constitution and legal precedent, especially when we’re talking about something as cherished and revered as the jury system.
Tagged with: Constitutional Right • Disrespect • Landmark Decision • Landmark Supreme Court Cases • Trial By Jury
Filed under: Deluxe Attorney Articles
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Honestly, stop existing. No one is universally respected. Hate to say it but government intervention in economics is what causes people trouble. If the government had not given them loans in spite of their unyielding disposition, then they would've have been given loans from loan sharks either and would not be in debt.
He signed my pocket Constitution today! Mad proud. END THE FED!
RT Boies: When an init. is a constitutional amendment, ONLY courts can prevent that, right? M: Unless repealed, yes. #prop8
“. . . . . . We think they [people of African ancestry] are . . . not included, and were not intended to be included, under the word “citizens” in the Constitution, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and secures to citizens of the United States. . . .”
“The operator of a popular BitTorrent search site said Monday he will likely challenge last week’s landmark decision by a U.S. judge declaring such sites unlawful and no different from conventional peer-to-peer piracy services. “We do think from our preliminary review there are a number of issues for appeal,” said Ira Rothken, attorney for popular torrent search engine ISO Hunt, the defendant in the case.”
http://www.landmarkcases.org/
Marshall was CJ from 1801 to 1835. Taney from 1836-1864. Marshall was responsible for ensuring that the Supreme Court had the right to invalidate laws deemed unconstitutional such as Marbury v Madison. He also ensured that the federal government had power over the state governments with the rulling of McCulloch v Maryland.
Taney was responsible for the Dred Scott verdict which declared that African Americans are not citizens and also stated that slavery cannot be outlawed in US territories.
Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission; "Hilary: The Movie"
A capias is a warrant or order for arrest of a person, typically issued by the judge or magistrate in a case. A capias may be issued in different forms. A capias is commonly issued for a failure to appear in court.
Even though "the warrants are in other cities" it is possible that they will "show up", and you will be remanded into custody on those warrants (AS YOU SO WELL DESERVE).
The opinion I have heard people espousing is that businesses,public schools and government agencies should not be required to be multilingual-which they are in some places. Some immigrants are raising h*ll because no one at the welfare office speaks their language! You can't tell me that's right. Speak your native tongue in your home with friends and family by all means-but don't ask me to support you with my taxes if you can't be bothered to learn my country's language. As far as grocers-if the goods were produced in another country and people want to buy them,they should know what they're buying or ask for help. I visit a store with many imported goods and that's what I do. No one is asking for english to be the universal language, but some immigrants seem to feel that their language should be. I'm sure some americans do this in other countries and it's just as wrong. If you want to live or visit some place,you can't expect everyone to understand you if you can't speak the language of that country.
damn i loved this show:/
Today in class students are creating presentations using Audacity and Slideshare to learn about Landmark Supreme Court cases:-)
Hmmm… Searching my memory of my constitutional law class.. I believe that this is the case where the Supreme Court allows the Fed congress to establish a bank in order to meet some related obligation. The congress did so under the part of the constitution that says that congress can do what is "necessary and proper" to carrying out the rest of their privileges and obligations.
So, to summarize, this case stands for the idea that where the constitution tells congress that it has certain obligations and powers, it also tells the congress (under the "necessary and proper" clause) that it can carry out those obligations and powers using whatever means are "necessary and proper."
There are several ways to approach this problem….. The UCMJ would be the last resort…..
FIRST Save and copy the offending email…..
SECOND Seek the support and assistance of the TPU's next superior command level…..if they do not resolve the problem THEN go to your next higher active duty supervisor…. ….. Re-establish the chain of command… You are the active duty component…..that should trump the TPU's status
FINALLY Do not go in angry or vengeful …. stay professional….. stay cool and shoot for cooperation and an attitude adjustment…..
The oath we swore to obey….. was to obey the orders and directives of those APPOINTED ABOVE US…… not the ones that outrank us…… you were APPOINTED above them and deserve respect and cooperation
I think the guy who wrote the email forgot his chain of command
EDIT A little real world advice….. if you go to the UCMJ….. you put it in the hands of the convening authority…. who may or may not want to pursue the disciplinary action…. he can decide it is not worth doing anything about….. there is a lot of politics in the Reserves…..
I evaluated a USAR unit in Camp McCoy….. they were TERRIBLE !!!…. but my boss gave them a passing grade….. with a promise to me of punishing them in private…..his reason? The unit commander was a political big shot with connections in Washington DC….. the flack from failing them could hurt a lot of people….. I did not like it…..but then I was only a captain
Miranda vs. Arizona is where we get the arrest warnings from ("You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be held against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you do not know, or can not afford an attorney, one will be appointed to you by the court.") A man with the last name Miranda had been arrested and charged with kidnap and rape. The arresting officers failed to inform him of his right to remain silent, and denied his access to a lawyer (both rights in the constitution). He confessed. His confession was used against him in court, and he was convicted. Because he was not informed of his right to remain silent, and denied his right to legal counsel, the US Supreme Court overturned his conviction, and issued an order to police departments that they give a suspect the warning I quoted above before questioning them.
In another case, a few years earlier, called "Escombedo v. Illinois", the supreme court ruled that police must inform a suspect of their right to counsel. In this case, it was ruled that if this was violated, the statements from a suspect could not be used as evidence. The police also failed to inform the suspect in Escombedo vs. Ill of his right to remain silent.
These two cases have several links between them – you might consider researching both of them together.
Here is a link to an index of landmark cases, arranged by topic. Take a look and see if you can find something that you can use–
Also–think about the Dred Scott decision of 1857 and how Lincoln's leadership led to the 13th and 14th amendments to the Constitution.
RT In this secular land of ours, Muslim rage boys can run riot, drag out women, loot, burn… Their Constitutional right!
Children primary casualties of ACLU bullies … NO Constitutional right to homosexuality exists #rush #tcot
She is a terrible person.
wonder if he did sue? and what came of it
Cornell Univ. has a great website for free case law.
is a link to Historic Cases authored by Justice Taney. One page back has all justices list. Choose Marshall or a host of others from the period to check out cool opinions.
I love this show! I have it on DVD.
Escobedo actually asked for an attorney and was refused. His confession was thrown out.
Miranda ruling was that all suspects must be given their rights in a form that they can understand.
Two years later Congress tried to weaken Miranda in Federal cases.
They protect the innocent and the guilty. No one should talk to the police without a lawyer present because their words will be twisted by the police.
Last year’s mockery via jewishworldreview.com Some 19 years ago, the first president Bush earned the enmity of American Jews with his rant about being “one lone guy” standing up against the horde of AIPAC activists exercising their constitutional right to petition Congress. Bush’s statement symbolized the intolerance and enmity that his administration felt toward Israel and its American friends. But say one thing for that Bush and his secretary of state, James the Jews” Baker: at least they never pretended to be anything but what they were, country-club establishment Republicans who were not comfortable with Israel or Jewish symbols. Not so Barack Hussein Obama. After a week spent beating up on Israel, blowing a minor gaffe into an international incident, subjecting Israel’s prime minister to unprecedented insults that Obama would never think of trying on even the most humble Third World leader, and establishing the principle that the Jewish presence in eastern Jerusalem — even…