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Topic: Why do you sue?Posted By: visitor2035
Subject: Why do you sue?
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 21:08
It is with great regret i write this post, as it seems suing is a regular pastime. Ameica must take full blame for this ridiculous situation that we find oursleves in.
There is a famous case where a woman in the US poured water over her male partner in a resturant, she then stood up slipped on the water (remember this twit had already poured the same water over her companion) broke her ankle, sued the resturant and won 138000 dollars.
America take a good look at yourselves....
UK and europe.....we're heading down this money for injury route regardless who is to blame.
I hate the whole thing....accidents happen....grow up and get a life.
Replies: Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 21:21
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
Posted By: rileydog22
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 21:22
Why do people sue? Because people don't have the right to harm others and not suffer the consequences. Sure, it gets abused. Every system has its abuses. But for every absurd lawsuit that somebody wins, there's a hundred cases of someone rightfully receiving reimbursement for damages from somebody's malicious or negligent behavior. It's just not as newsworthy.
-------------
Posted By: visitor2035
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 21:26
People sue because of greed...no more no less.
Posted By: rpe9p
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 21:32
My favorite crazy one is the thief who broke into someone's house to rob them, fell on a knife, sued the owners of the house and won. I agree though that there are a lot of legitimate lawsuits, but some have just gotten out of hand, probably because there are so many lawyers that they will try to take any case. Products need to have all kinds of ridiculous warnings to prevent lawsuits and for people like doctors worrying about getting sued can get in the way of doing their jobs.
The other thing I dont understand is why our legal system will give millions of dollars to a person and their lawyer just to punish a company. If you are going to hit them with some big punitive damages, that money should go to the government or something.
I welcome someone who knows something about the law to tell us why we are wrong, because I would bet there are strong arguments for things being the way they are.
Posted By: Jozef
Date Posted: April 02 2009 at 22:46
People sue because they feel they've been wronged. Sometimes they'll take advantage of the system and try to fraud their way into making money and sometimes they will have an actual legitimate reason to start a lawsuit, perhaps to get financial compensation for damage done to property or to themselves.
Such is life.
-------------
Posted By: weetabix
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 03:14
What the w**ked up press never reports are the counter suites (sic) McDonalds sued the coffee bird and got the money back.
Posted By: Vompatti
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 05:52
I read "Who do you sue?" I could have thought of dozens of people.
Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 08:12
Atavachron wrote:
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: Negoba
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 08:24
Why do people sure?
Because there is money to be made.
And it's the U.S.
Part of the problem goes back to basic civics, that you have to have an educated populace for democracy to work. Since we don't, juries can get some very strange combinations of folks. The other is just the vast differential between the poor and the wealthy. Many of the award settlements are just juries feeling like Robin Hood, taking money from the rich and giving it to the poor. What's a couple million to McDonald's?
------------- You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
Posted By: Man With Hat
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:09
I think Negoba is getting to the point (or at least my problem with this system).
Not to put words in his mouth (so if this is totally opposite of your point please point that out), but the problem as I see it is with the people in the system as opposed to the system itself. Some people just want to screw corporations, some people seems to have sympathy towards others' stupidity, and some people are just igronant and/or stupid.
IMO, the right to sue is a good one, and being able to sue over any little thing is alright, its just we need the proper people in place is ensure stupid claims (such as the one above about the lady spilling the water on the ground) don't make it past filing the claim.
------------- Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:28
Atavachron wrote:
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
Coffee can't be heated any more than the temperature of boiling water. And when you make coffee the water is boiling too, so the coffee can
not have been unusually hot. It is physically impossible.
-------------
BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
Posted By: Equality 7-2521
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:45
BaldFriede wrote:
Atavachron wrote:
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
Coffee can't be heated any more than the temperature of boiling water. And when you make coffee the water is boiling too, so the coffee can
not have been unusually hot. It is physically impossible.
Even if physically possible the amount of energy required for McDonalds to heat water to a temperature within an order of magnitude of the sun would have run them broke.
------------- "One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
Posted By: Padraic
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:49
I think David was just being hyperbolic, but that's just me...reports are the coffee in question was about 180-190 deg. F.
Posted By: Negoba
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:52
Under the extreme pressures provided by the lead-lined McDonald's to-go coffee cup, in fact water can assume temperatures about 212 F. Of course, when it comes out it then vaporizes (or plasma-izes) perhaps explaining the burns.
I should have been a lawyer. Most juries sadly get fooled by pseudo-scientific mumbo jumbo. All they see is two nerds arguing about things they don't understand, and the only standard they can use to learn about subjects over their heads are "expert witnesses.' You can pay an expert witness to say the sky is purple (well it is some days, pretty).....part of the problem with medical suits...the juries have no knowledge of what's actually being argued.
------------- You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
Posted By: Finnforest
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 11:57
rileydog22 wrote:
Why do people sue? Because people don't have the right to harm others and not suffer the consequences. Sure, it gets abused. Every system has its abuses. But for every absurd lawsuit that somebody wins, there's a hundred cases of someone rightfully receiving reimbursement for damages from somebody's malicious or negligent behavior. It's just not as newsworthy.
He hit the nail on the head. End of discussion. All of the legit lawsuits that were actually worthy are not sexy, and can't be used by Fox News to rile up their base.
The alternative is to take away all rights from the consumer and allow big business to wrong people and environment with zero consequence. Yeah, that'd be great.
What we need is just a bit more discretion for the judge to toss suits that he knows are frivelous.
Posted By: rpe9p
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 12:12
Ive got no real problem with the system, I just wish there were not so many lawyers so that there wouldnt be so many frivolous lawsuits. People do something stupid, and there are a thousand lawyers waiting there to help the person blame anyone but themself.
Posted By: stonebeard
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 12:42
Finnforest wrote:
rileydog22 wrote:
Why do people sue? Because people don't have the right to harm others and not suffer the consequences. Sure, it gets abused. Every system has its abuses. But for every absurd lawsuit that somebody wins, there's a hundred cases of someone rightfully receiving reimbursement for damages from somebody's malicious or negligent behavior. It's just not as newsworthy.
He hit the nail on the head. End of discussion. All of the legit lawsuits that were actually worthy are not sexy, and can't be used by Fox News to rile up their base.
The alternative is to take away all rights from the consumer and allow big business to wrong people and environment with zero consequence. Yeah, that'd be great.
What we need is just a bit more discretion for the judge to toss suits that he knows are frivelous.
Simply enough, without the right to reasonably sue something or someone, acts of vigilante vengeance would skyrocket.
------------- http://soundcloud.com/drewagler" rel="nofollow - My soundcloud. Please give feedback if you want!
Posted By: Negoba
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 12:49
I agree to some extent. That there would be a place to bring complaints before the community for judgment is indeed a grand ideal.
Our courts look nothing like this. Lawyers are given too much freedom by judges because they are their peers. Because of that latitude, the major of lawsuits are not legit anymore. People know a cash cow when they see one, so they pile on.
Reasonable legislated regulation of industry by informed representatives is just as viable option for keeping the big guy from abusing the poor. Of course we know that our legislatures are just as political (or corrupt) as the courtrooms.
It's variable from place to place, but I'm from Illinois so my faith in the system is pretty poor.
------------- You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 13:44
I`,ve mentioned this before on the site.
Some dumbass went through a stop sign and hit one of my dogs about 4 years ago. It cost me a king`s ransom in vet bills or else I would have lost the dog. I threatened to take the jerk to court and sue him for ten times the vet bill. Now before you go on about " you should have had the dogs on a leash" They are Australian Cattle Dogs, very loyal and obedient ( ACDs are in the top 5 percentile of canine intelligence ) and they walk close beside me and will not even chase a squirrel and automatically sit at an intersection before I give the all clear to cross. This occured in a residential area close to where I live and take them for their run in a park specifically designated for dogs. This dumbass was doing three times the speed limit and a bystander had to chase the guy down and of course I called the cops.
Through a lawyer we settled out of court although I would have prefered to choke the guy to death.
Sometimes suing someone is the only way to teach them a lesson.
-------------
Posted By: Raff
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 13:50
In my personal case, the question should probably be, "why do you NOT sue?". In the past few years I found myself in at least two instances in which I would have had every right to sue the manure out of the people involved. Unfortunately, in the first instance (which was work-related), I would have ended up doing myself a lot of damage before I was ever awarded compensation (the ministry for whom I worked would have retaliated against me, and the suit would have gone on for years anyway). The second instance was immediately before my departure for the US, and had instead to do with my ill-fated PhD. In this case, I decided not to pursue the matter for obvious reasons - it is not easy to take care of a lawsuit when you are halfway across the world.
Posted By: TheCaptain
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 14:24
BaldFriede wrote:
Atavachron wrote:
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
Coffee can't be heated any more than the temperature of boiling water. And when you make coffee the water is boiling too, so the coffee can
not have been unusually hot. It is physically impossible.
Actually it can be heated to a temperature hotter than that of boiling water (even without added pressure as Negoba stated). Any time a solute is added to a solvent, the boiling point increases and the freezing point decreases. The more things the solute dissociates into, the more drastic the change in temperature is. Anyway, I'm sure that the coffee wasn't drastically hotter than normal coffee which isn't drastically hotter than boiling water. I just wanted to lay down some mad science on this forum.
------------- Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal.
Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 16:10
Why do you sue? It's something to do. I've never sued. I am eagerly awaiting what Ivan has to say on the subject if he's around.
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 18:26
TheCaptain wrote:
BaldFriede wrote:
Atavachron wrote:
well ridiculous lawsuits are not necessarily representative of the vast majority of them, and even some of the legitimate ones will be dismissed. I remember is the famous McDonalds one where the woman sued over a hot cup of coffee that burned her when she spilled it. "Insane" most said including me, until I saw the photos of her injury and fond out the coffee had been mistakenly heated to a temperature close to that of the sun.
Coffee can't be heated any more than the temperature of boiling water. And when you make coffee the water is boiling too, so the coffee can not have been unusually hot. It is physically impossible.
Actually it can be heated to a temperature hotter than that of boiling water (even without added pressure as Negoba stated). Any time a solute is added to a solvent, the boiling point increases and the freezing point decreases. The more things the solute dissociates into, the more drastic the change in temperature is. Anyway, I'm sure that the coffee wasn't drastically hotter than normal coffee which isn't drastically hotter than boiling water. I just wanted to lay down some mad science on this forum.
You don't even have to add anything to the water to enable its temperature to be raised to over 100°C, nor do you need to pressurise it - you can do it in a standard cup in a standard microwave oven - it is called superheating and it is very dangerous because the superheated liquid is extremely volatile - simply adding sugar or any rough-surface into the liquid will cause it to violently boil spraying superheated water and water vapour out of the cup.
The boiling point of any liquid is the temperature at which the liquid turns to a gas - in boiling water the gas released is steam and the water temperature will be at 100°C when the gas separates from the liquid. The release of energy in the steam bubbles is equal to the heat energy going into the water, therefore once bubbles form in the water its temperature cannot be raised above the boiling point. The bubbles form at what is called nucleation points - imperfections in the surface of the container that trap small pockets of air which "seeds" the formation of steam bubbles.
However, in superheated water there are no bubbles so the heat energy going into the water has no release and the water temperature rises to over 100°C. This is because the water in a microwave is heated from the centre of the volume of water so the temperature of the container can be below the boiling point, preventing the formation of bubbles.
Superheating can occur in easier in liquid that has been temperature cycled without disturbing the container, since this degases the liquid, reducing the liquid's ability to form bubbles as it approaches the boiling point.
------------- What?
Posted By: The Doctor
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 18:34
The simple answer is "because we can".
If people outside of the US could do it as easily as we do, they'd be doing it too. After three years in law school, my general impression is if the law protects stupid people, then stupid people will use it to protect themselves from their own stupidity. Sorry to say, but eventually this will spread to Europe at the very least. My favorite is the three or four fat teenagers who sued McDonald's for making them fat. Although the woman who tripped over her own child in a furniture store and then successfully sued the furniture store is a close second.
------------- I can understand your anger at me, but what did the horse I rode in on ever do to you?
Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 18:55
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:00
^ the facts speak so much clearer than hearsay and speculation
------------- What?
Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:06
yep... and the article made clear that facts sort of got lost in the tabloid nature of the whole affair... like David I laughed about it at first.. and wondered how much I could get for spilling my coffee in my crotch ...
see that youtube video of yours... hell forget that.... what about poor David... did I hear him say earlier he SAW pictures of the aftereffects of that
oh I am bad...
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:14
Here in Argentina the question would be: Why don't you sue?
And the simple answer would be: because justice/trials/whatever takes years here, it's not worth it, believe me
Posted By: Raff
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:18
cacho wrote:
Here in Argentina the question would be: Why don't you sue?
And the simple answer would be: because justice/trials/whatever takes years here, it's not worth it, believe me
Same as in Italy, though people do sue. For years I dreamed about suing the Ministry for the moral (and material) damage they did to me, but then life rewarded me in a different way, and now I'd rather enjoy what I have than spend money on a lawsuit.
Posted By: rpe9p
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:18
cacho wrote:
Here in Argentina the question would be: Why don't you sue?
And the simple answer would be: because justice/trials/whatever takes years here, it's not worth it, believe me
Its just as annoying for the other side, thats why most trials settle out of court
Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:24
Raff wrote:
cacho wrote:
Here in Argentina the question would be: Why don't you sue?
And the simple answer would be: because justice/trials/whatever takes years here, it's not worth it, believe me
Same as in Italy, though people do sue. For years I dreamed about suing the Ministry for the moral (and material) damage they did to me, but then life rewarded me in a different way, and now I'd rather enjoy what I have than spend money on a lawsuit.
that's the cool heavy prog team you're leading, right?...hope you told that to Micky, he wouldn't be up to such a surprise, would he?
Just kidding....always, me, getting off-topic, and making silly jokes....
Seriously, back on topic, my brother crashed last year, and still NOTHING has happened, however, my father got sick of waiting, and took the car to a mechanic to fix it, and pay it himself.... hopefully some justice will arise...
Posted By: zappaholic
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 19:57
rpe9p wrote:
Ive got no real problem with the system, I just wish there were not so many lawyers so that there wouldnt be so many frivolous lawsuits. People do something stupid, and there are a thousand lawyers waiting there to help the person blame anyone but themself.
THIS. There's way too many lawyers out there, and every one of them wants to earn a living. So they create work for themselves. How? Hel-LO frivolous lawsuits!
------------- "Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." -- H.L. Mencken
Posted By: visitor2035
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 21:10
Apart from greed there are no sufficent answers to why you would sue.
Posted By: Equality 7-2521
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 22:23
NaturalScience wrote:
I think David was just being hyperbolic, but that's just me...reports are the coffee in question was about 180-190 deg. F.
I know I just wanted to show off how I know stuff about thermal energy.
------------- "One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
Posted By: Equality 7-2521
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 22:24
visitor2035 wrote:
Apart from greed there are no sufficent answers to why you would sue.
Having your rights violated in a way that costs you some amount of money? Or is that not sufficent enough.
------------- "One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
Posted By: Petrovsk Mizinski
Date Posted: April 03 2009 at 22:25
Why do you sue? But I don't though. You're just assuming I do with that thread title.
:P
-------------
Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 07:47
visitor2035 wrote:
Apart from greed there are no sufficent answers to why you would sue.
For you maybe, (not that you'll appear particularly receptive to other peoples answers), people sue for compensation for loss caused by the negligence of others. That negligence is often driven by greed so it is only fair that those greedy people are made to pay for causing the accident.
If someone runs into the back of your car you expect that person's insurance company to pay for the damage repair, and you certainly don't expect to have to pay for the repair of the other car (you have already decided balme in this case - it was not a knock-for-knock blameless accident - a rear-end shunt is always the fault of the person who shunted you.). If you receive a physical injury in that accident you will get NHS treatment so why claim for compensation for that? Because of loss of earnings, because "out-of-pocket" expenses caused by having restricted movement or no transport, maybe from now on you have to have specially adapted equipment to enable you to go about your daily life - this costs you money that you would not have to spend if the accident never happened - and because perhaps the quality of your life is now restricted through no fault of your own. (How can you put a price on quality of life? There is no magic formula and no figure will ever be right, but I can tell you it isn't "nothing").
So don't give me "accidents happen" because there is no such thing as a blame-free accident - all man-made accidents are caused by the carelessness, negligence or down-right stupidity of someone, and by that, most accidents are preventable (all are preventable in hindsight).- if you can prove that the person responsible did not take proper precautions to ensure your safety then you have a right to compensation for their neglect... the Prosecution services may even do that for you where criminal neglect is involved.
Modern employment law is structured so the company owners, management and directors are responsible for the safety of their workforce - this is not so we can sue the nuts off them when we have an accident, it is to ensure that they comply with safety procedures to protect themselves from being sued. They in turn place that responsibility back onto the employee - all employees are responsible for their own safety and that of their co-workers. This means that you have the right to refuse to do something you deem as unsafe. We have a Manual Handling safety demonstration every year - if I then put my back put lifting a PC monitor that is now my fault and I cannot sue the company (in fact they could fire me for breaking safety codes and rendering myself unfit for work).
------------- What?
Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 07:59
I remember the case of a former coworker at a company I used to work with....
was trying to repair a light .. working on the top step of an 8 foot ladder and dropped a screw and did the natural thing and reached out to catch it and fell. Broke both of his elbows and arms. .and was out of work for almost a year. During the time while he was gone... certain unsavory aspects of his personal life came out.. nothing illegal.. but not exactly upstanding behavior either. What it was though was in his personal life and did not reflect upon his job or preformance of his job.
The company was going to fire him when he came back to work... so what did he do... he got a lawyer and threatened to sue the company... not only did they not fire him... they promoted him to management. Personally I thought the guy was a scumbag... but he turned to the legal apparatus and tools to make sure he as not trampled on as a worker...
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 08:27
^ we had some equipment delivered in the early morning - the only people around were a collegue and his technician - rather than wait for the rest of us to arrive, they decided to move it themselves. Needless to say, it toppled and crushed the tech's leg, putting him in traction for several months - he could have sued the company and my collegue, he did not, but he did claim for compensation and won. My collegue had to live with the guilt of seeing a once athletic young lad limping around with one leg now shorter than the other - it had a profound affect on him that no one could help with - you could say that both parties were damaged in that accident.
------------- What?
Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 08:33
Dean wrote:
^ we had some equipment delivered in the early morning - the only people around were a collegue and his technician - rather than wait for the rest of us to arrive, they decided to move it themselves. Needless to say, it toppled and crushed the tech's leg, putting him in traction for several months - he could have sued the company and my collegue, he did not, but he did claim for compensation and won. My collegue had to live with the guilt of seeing a once athletic young lad limping around with one leg now shorter than the other - it had a profound affect on him that no one could help with - you could say that both parties were damaged in that accident.
exactly... that coworker of mine did not sue the company for lost wages during his time off due to his mistake... he made a mistake by working unsafely on a ladder (something we all have done.. many times) and not letting the screw go. He got the medical and partial wage benefits while out of work. All he wanted was his job back when he recovered.
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: limeyrob
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 14:14
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I`,ve mentioned this before on the site.
Some dumbass went through a stop sign and hit one of my dogs about 4 years ago. It cost me a king`s ransom in vet bills or else I would have lost the dog. I threatened to take the jerk to court and sue him for ten times the vet bill. Now before you go on about " you should have had the dogs on a leash" They are Australian Cattle Dogs, very loyal and obedient ( ACDs are in the top 5 percentile of canine intelligence ) and they walk close beside me and will not even chase a squirrel and automatically sit at an intersection before I give the all clear to cross. This occured in a residential area close to where I live and take them for their run in a park specifically designated for dogs. This dumbass was doing three times the speed limit and a bystander had to chase the guy down and of course I called the cops.
Through a lawyer we settled out of court although I would have prefered to choke the guy to death.
Sometimes suing someone is the only way to teach them a lesson.
Point of order please. This would be described as vengeance and taking the law into your own hands (so to speak)
Posted By: visitor2035
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 22:10
Stupidity should not entitle you to sue...and in modern countries with an NHS and sick pay benefits the loss of earnings is not an issue. Unless your a greedy b@s££d.
Posted By: horsewithteeth11
Date Posted: April 04 2009 at 23:35
visitor2035 wrote:
Stupidity should not entitle you to sue...and in modern countries with an NHS and sick pay benefits the loss of earnings is not an issue. Unless your a greedy b@s££d.
Ahuh.
Looks like someone has already made up their mind on this issue.
-------------
Posted By: crimhead
Date Posted: April 05 2009 at 01:04
Sometimes a lawsuit is your only avenue. Health insurance companies are dictating how a doctor should treat his patients. They say that they have their doctors looking at patients files and telling what can and should be covered. Doesn't that scare anyone? Would you want a doctor that hundreds of miles away telling the doctor that is physically in the same room what he can and can't do? My g/f has been fighting with her healthcare insurance provider for years now about her daughters care and it took her getting a new job with different healthcare insurance to get the procedure done.
Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: April 05 2009 at 05:25
visitor2035 wrote:
Stupidity should not entitle you to sue...and in modern countries with an NHS and sick pay benefits the loss of earnings is not an issue. Unless your a greedy b@s££d.
Obviously you've never had to leave your car parked in a hospital carpark for 48 hours while you undergo an emergency operation. You even have to pay to watch television during your stay. These are some of the valid out of pocket expenses that you are entitled to claim for - since you would not have had to pay them if the accident didn't happen.
Statutory Sick Pay is £75.40 a week and is only payable for the first 28 weeks.
As we have been discussing in another thread - the USA does not have a national health system. That accounts for a third of the population of your "modern countries".
People do not make claims for telephone-number amounts - they are simply not allowed to - they can only claim for compensation for expenses and nothing more - these are called Compensatory Damages. The woman in the McDonald's case originally claimed for $20K - that is not an unreasonable amount of money (health care, loss of earnings etc.) - McD's refused to pay and lost the case. They had to pay out eight times that to cover the expense of forcing the claimant to pursue the case. Making that claim, or accepting the payout, has nothing to do with greed.
The courts can also award Exemplary Damages (or Punitive Damages in the USA) in cases where the defendant's conduct was calculated to make a profit for himself - these are the silly numbers you read about in the red-tops and the value of them is not the "fault" of the person making the claim - they are based upon the "greed" of the person who was responsible for the accident and take into account the amount of money they earned as a result of their irresponsible action. The purpose of this is to stop them from doing it again. In the McD case that was $2.7 million - or 2 days sales of coffee and it was imposed as a punishment on the company for their action - she never claimed for that amount, it was awarded by the court.
The system is geared towards big-business and against unreasonable and excessive claims. The cases where the little-guy wins big bucks are very rare, but when they do it makes the headlines - being awarded £3K for a minor accident isn't going to sell newspapers or cause indignant outrage in the minds of Sun and Daily Record readers
------------- What?
Posted By: crimhead
Date Posted: April 05 2009 at 11:25
A firefighter suing fire departments and fellow fire fighters.
Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 06 2009 at 09:44
limeyrob wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I`,ve mentioned this before on the site.
Some dumbass went through a stop sign and hit one of my dogs about 4 years ago. It cost me a king`s ransom in vet bills or else I would have lost the dog. I threatened to take the jerk to court and sue him for ten times the vet bill. Now before you go on about " you should have had the dogs on a leash" They are Australian Cattle Dogs, very loyal and obedient ( ACDs are in the top 5 percentile of canine intelligence ) and they walk close beside me and will not even chase a squirrel and automatically sit at an intersection before I give the all clear to cross. This occured in a residential area close to where I live and take them for their run in a park specifically designated for dogs. This dumbass was doing three times the speed limit and a bystander had to chase the guy down and of course I called the cops.
Through a lawyer we settled out of court although I would have prefered to choke the guy to death.
Sometimes suing someone is the only way to teach them a lesson.
Point of order please. This would be described as vengeance and taking the law into your own hands (so to speak)
I said I would have PREFERED. Instead I got $10,000 out of the idiot through a lawyer. Point of order ???????
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Posted By: micky
Date Posted: April 06 2009 at 12:22
hell yeah.... what seperates us from the goons out there is while we would PREFER to take action and kick some ass... we know better and just feel it... not act on it.
some a****le cut me off in traffic today and ...hahahhah... I sh*t you not.... made me spill my fresh hot Micky D's coffee in my lap (thank God for the old broad or I'd be an IT right now). I thought twice about taking my much larger vehicle and putting him off the road... but like the good citizen I am... i just rode his bumper for a few miles and cussed him out like a sailor and showed him the birdie when I got to pass him later.
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 06 2009 at 12:32
As Dirty Harry would say : " I hate the goddam system, but until someone comes along with some changes that make sense, I`ll stick with it."
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Posted By: debrewguy
Date Posted: April 06 2009 at 21:19
Or how about this - if only the exceptions to the rule were not constantly trotted out as examples, without the actual arguement presented before the court, nor the reason for the judgement being presented . "cause don't you know, sometimes when you know it all , you actually know why . Not that ignorance ever stopped someone from making an overgeneralized comment to support a blinded view of the world.
------------- "Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: April 06 2009 at 21:24
Vibrationbaby wrote:
As Dirty Harry would say : " I hate the goddam system, but until someone comes along with some changes that make sense, I`ll stick with it."
"Nothing wrong with shooting, as long as the right people get shot."
-- from the same film, a chilling but terrific line
Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 07 2009 at 10:36
How about this one from Pink Cadillac :
" I have strong feelings about gun control. If there`s a gun around, I want to be controlling it. "
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Posted By: limeyrob
Date Posted: April 08 2009 at 05:57
Vibrationbaby wrote:
limeyrob wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I`,ve mentioned this before on the site.
Some dumbass went through a stop sign and hit one of my dogs about 4 years ago. It cost me a king`s ransom in vet bills or else I would have lost the dog. I threatened to take the jerk to court and sue him for ten times the vet bill. Now before you go on about " you should have had the dogs on a leash" They are Australian Cattle Dogs, very loyal and obedient ( ACDs are in the top 5 percentile of canine intelligence ) and they walk close beside me and will not even chase a squirrel and automatically sit at an intersection before I give the all clear to cross. This occured in a residential area close to where I live and take them for their run in a park specifically designated for dogs. This dumbass was doing three times the speed limit and a bystander had to chase the guy down and of course I called the cops.
Through a lawyer we settled out of court although I would have prefered to choke the guy to death.
Sometimes suing someone is the only way to teach them a lesson.
Point of order please. This would be described as vengeance and taking the law into your own hands (so to speak)
I said I would have PREFERED. Instead I got $10,000 out of the idiot through a lawyer. Point of order ???????
Perhaps I shouldn't comment across threads but I was obviously being unsuccessfully sarcastic about taking a life for a life.
Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 08 2009 at 10:21
On the evening news back in the 80s sometime there was this news clip from the US somewhere about this guy who`s son had been sexually molested and they had caught the guy responsible. They showed a video clip of the child molester being led into or out of the court room ( I can``t remember which ) shackled and cuffed. Then they highlight another guy in the background on a payphone. What happens next is the guy on the payphone pulls out a handgun and pumps at least 3 or 4 rounds into the child molester killing him and then drops the gun and raises his hands. It was the child`s father.
I can`t say I blame the guy. Sometimes, especially here in Canada the court system is too lenient and full of bleeding heart prosecutors and judges. Just this week here in Montréal there is a case that has been adjourned for a couple of months while a judge and jury thinks about this : A guy gets all cranked up on ecstasy and alchohol and stomps a girl`s head in killing her. The defense is going for manslaughter while the prosecution is going for 2nd degree murder.
If I was the girl`s father I think I would solve the problem myself and save the courts some time and money. Just as BaldFriede pointed out in another thread the courts f*** around with cases and drag them out causing people uneccessary emotional and financial grief while they count their $$$$$$. If this guy gets say ten years for manslaughter he`ll be out in about 3 years counting time served as double!