wms
billSquared
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Posts
- 2,052
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Outrageous? What exactly surprises you about this?
The widow is suing the people that killed her husband. Is this hard to understand?
Right or wrong is irrelevant. Court actions address economic issues, and this is now an economic issue, to be settled with economic judgements.
If a mishap occurs, nearly certainly a law suit will arise out of that event. Count on it. Predicate all your actions on how they may be interpreted after the fact by laymen on a jury, from what you say into a cockpit voice recorder to the way you drive in traffic. We're all subject to judicial review and legal scrutiny, and if someone is injured or a loss occurs, then you may be assured of it.
na her pockets are not deep enought. Justice can not be served unless there are deep pockets, I mena after all where would the money come from for those attorney fees.I agree with most of what you say, but "The widow is suing the people that killed her husband?" Well, he may of been the one to kill all those people in the helicopter and those folks should turn around and sue the estate of the widow.
Well, he may of been the one to kill all those people in the helicopter and those folks should turn around and sue the estate of the widow.
Counter suits are nearly inevitable. One should always plan on it.
Additionally, it's inevitable that many other parties are brought into these suits, from manufacturers to the company that sold the tickets, to the place that pumped the fuel. If this surprises anyone, surely they were born just yesterday.
The "venemous culture of litigation" is not new, nor is anything else under the sun.
The wright brothers were locked in bitter dispute with Curtis Wright from the earliest days of powered flight, and even their own credit as the first in powered flight bought legitimacy through the Smithsonian only by means of threat of litigation, and extortion by the Wrights.
Litigation as we know it today, the civil transference of paper and funds upon supplication of a magistrate, is a far cry improvement over the ancient methods of settling minor disputes through maiming and bloodshed. Indeed I have lived in parts of the world where a simple traffic incident is likely to end in murder on site. To whine over tort (or the reform thereof) in our own polite society, or to label it as something new, is indeed naive, and nothing short of inaccurate.
The "venemous culture of litigation" is not new, nor is anything else under the sun.
The wright brothers were locked in bitter dispute with Curtis Wright from the earliest days of powered flight, and even their own credit as the first in powered flight bought legitimacy through the Smithsonian only by means of threat of litigation, and extortion by the Wrights.
Litigation as we know it today, the civil transference of paper and funds upon supplication of a magistrate, is a far cry improvement over the ancient methods of settling minor disputes through maiming and bloodshed. Indeed I have lived in parts of the world where a simple traffic incident is likely to end in murder on site. To whine over tort (or the reform thereof) in our own polite society, or to label it as something new, is indeed naive, and nothing short of inaccurate.
...in our own polite society
Counter suits are nearly inevitable. One should always plan on it.