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  1. #1
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Robert Bork Sues Yale Club for More Than $1 Million

    By David Glovin

    June 7 (Bloomberg) -- Former U.S. Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork sued the Yale Club of New York City for more than $1 million, claiming he tripped and fell because of the club's negligence as he ascended a dais to give a speech.

    Bork, 80, a former Yale Law School professor, said the club was grossly negligent for failing to provide steps or a handrail between the floor and dais at an event for the New Criterion magazine last June, according to a complaint filed yesterday in Manhattan federal court.

    "Because of the unreasonable height of the dais, without stairs or a handrail, Mr. Bork fell backwards as he attempted to mount the dais, striking his left leg on the side of the dais and striking his head on a heat register,'' he said in the complaint.

    Bork is seeking more than $1 million in damages and punitive damages. The fall caused a "large hematoma,'' or swelling, on his leg that burst, requiring surgery and months of physical therapy, and it left him with a limp, he said in the complaint.

    "There were dozens of witnesses to the incident, and Judge Bork suffered serious injuries as a result of the Yale Club's gross negligence,'' Bork's lawyer, Randy Mastro of Los Angeles- based Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, said in an interview.

    Bork was a speaker at a dinner in honor of New Criterion co- founder Hilton Kramer and to launch the publication's 25th anniversary, magazine office manager Cricket Farnsworth said. Bork gave his speech after the fall, she said.

    'Excruciating Pain'

    Timothy Hill, a spokesman for the Yale Club, which on its Web site calls itself a "historic clubhouse'' for Yale alumni, declined to comment.

    Bork claims the Yale Club was grossly negligent for not having a "safe dais and stairs,'' a supporting handrail or any other "reasonable support feature.''

    "Bork suffered excruciating pain as a result of this injury and was largely immobile during the months in which he received physical therapy,'' he said in the complaint.

    Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court failed in 1987 after Democrats in Congress and others opposed the conservative legal scholar. At the time of his nomination by then-President Ronald Reagan, he served as a federal appeals court judge in Washington.

    Bork, a Yale Law School teacher for more than 15 years before his appointment to the bench, was rejected by the Senate by a 58-42 vote after critics said his legal views were too extreme.

    Punitive Damages

    Bork didn't ask for a specific amount of punitive damages in his lawsuit. In a June 2002 article in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Bork suggested there might be instances where punitive damage awards are excessive.

    "Proposals, such as placing limits or caps on punitive damages, or eliminating joint or strict liability, which may once have been clearly understood as beyond Congress's power, may now be cons utionally appropriate,'' Bork and a co-author wrote in an article that discussed Congress's power to regulate commerce.

    In a 1995 opinion piece published in the Washington Times, Bork and Theodore Olson, who later became a top Justice Department official, criticized what they called the "expensive, capricious and unpredictable'' civil justice system in the U.S.

    "Today's merchant enters the marketplace with trepidation -- anticipating from the civil justice system the treatment that his ancestors experienced with the Barbary pirates,'' they wrote.

    The Supreme Court in February tightened the cons utional limits on punitive damages, setting aside a $79.5 million award in a smoker case against Altria Group Inc.'s Philip Morris USA unit.

    The case is Bork v. Yale Club, 07-cv-4826, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...uno&refer=news

    The ironing is delicious.

  2. #2
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Okay, I'm going to break my self-imposed don't-respond-to-the-idiot's-posts to see if you can explain what is ironic or hypocritical about the story or Judge Bork's action.

    Can't wait.

  3. #3
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    Pussysucker, Bork and other ultra-conservative radicals are all for ins utions crushing individuals rights and protections (eg, just like France favors ins utions to individuals), eg, castrating tort law.

    But Bork himself gets injured, his frailty and bad health being no fault of anybody but himself, nobody forcred him to go up on the "dais of death" after all, so he hires an slimy ambulance chaser to use tort law to the max to line his pockets.

    "Depends on whose ox is being gored"
    Last edited by boutons_; 06-09-2007 at 01:35 AM.

  4. #4
    "Have to check the film" PixelPusher's Avatar
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    Okay, I'm going to break my self-imposed don't-respond-to-the-idiot's-posts to see if you can explain what is ironic or hypocritical about the story or Judge Bork's action.

    Can't wait.
    I can't wait to see what sophistry you employ to prove Bork is not a hypocrite.

  5. #5
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    I can't wait to see what sophistry you employ to prove Bork is not a hypocrite.
    Don't take the bait, Yoni.

    It's suicide.

  6. #6
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    Okay, I'm going to break my self-imposed don't-respond-to-the-idiot's-posts to see if you can explain what is ironic or hypocritical about the story or Judge Bork's action.

    Can't wait.
    I'd like to know too. Seems like to me that certain safety laws have been lax there!
    Pussysucker, Bork and other ultra-conservative radicals are all for ins utions crushing individuals rights and protections (eg, just like France favors ins utions to individuals), et, tort law. [/QUOTE]
    What? It is the liberals who keep imposing freedom impeding laws. Bork a radical? What are you smoking. Send some my way please...

    France? Do you realize the ramifications of their most recent election?
    But Bork himself gets injured, his frailty and bad health being no fault of anybody but himself, so he hires an slimy ambulance chaser to use tort law to the max to line his pockets.

    "Depends on whose ox is being gored"
    Now I do think this is going too far from just initial impressions, but we don't know all the details. He is an old man. They knew he is as old as he is. Maybe he or his people requested a hand rail and it was never installed. Maybe once it wasn't there, he didn't feel like asking for assistance up the stairs. Pride can cause problems...

    Am I right about this fictional account? Probably not. I am just an open minded person who tries not to jump to conclusions.
    I can't wait to see what sophistry you employ to prove Bork is not a hypocrite.
    Isn't the burden of proof on the accuser?

    The accusation is Hypocrite isn't it?

    If you are one who wants to live by guilty until proven innocent, then please move to a country that has such values. Don't pollute America with such nonsense.

  7. #7
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    It is interesting that Judge Bork would rail so publicly against the imposition of punitive damages (or at least the Congressional or even cons utional limitations on such damages) yet is willing to take advantage of the existence, for his own benefit, of the very laws that he is so willing to decry in his writings.

    I suppose that if Judge Bork was so steadfastly against the availability of punitive damages and a true-believer concerning the supposedly deleterious effect that such awards have on merchants and premises owners, one might expect that he would resist the opportunity to put a premises owner to that penalty and settle for obtaining only an award for his actual damages -- his medical expenses, his pain and suffering, and any psychic injuries that he claims to have suffered. His refusal to do that, it might be argued, smacks either of opportunism or hypocrisy.

    Otherwise, his lawsuit is a tacit admission that there are at least instances in which punitive damages are acceptable in our civil justice system. I don't have any particular quarrel with that argument, but it does seem surprising in this case, given Judge Bork's earlier writings. And it does seem to cut against some rather fundamental tort reform arguments.

  8. #8
    "Have to check the film" PixelPusher's Avatar
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    Isn't the burden of proof on the accuser?

    The accusation is Hypocrite isn't it?

    If you are one who wants to live by guilty until proven innocent, then please move to a country that has such values. Don't pollute America with such nonsense.
    You can get off your high horse; hypocrisy is not subject to either criminal or civil action, so your hysterical rant about due process is pointless.

    I'm still waiting for an explaination as to why someone who actively condemned the excesses of punitive litigation is not hypocritical for then engaging in that same activity (suing for damages and punitive awards) when opportunity arrises.

    Don't sweat it; his hypocrisy doesn't refute his argument (an argument I agree with, btw), it just reveals his lack of character.

  9. #9
    Believe. BradLohaus's Avatar
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    Once a lawyer, always a lawyer.

    Do you know why there are no lawyers in Heaven?

    Because nothing bad ever happens there.

  10. #10
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    "we don't know all the details."

    But your ideological knee jerks this-a-way: "Seems like to me that certain safety laws have been lax there!"

    Seem to me like your ideology forces you to defend an ultra-conservative by selecting the seemingly unknowns to meet your ideology.

  11. #11
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    @ our resident tort reformers/clue catchers.

  12. #12
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    ...I guess he won't get elected now.


    What's next...criminals calling the cops for help?

  13. #13
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
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    It is interesting that Judge Bork would rail so publicly against the imposition of punitive damages (or at least the Congressional or even cons utional limitations on such damages) yet is willing to take advantage of the existence, for his own benefit, of the very laws that he is so willing to decry in his writings.
    Corect me if I’m wrong, but the article said “Bork didn't ask for a specific amount of punitive damages in his lawsuit.” That means any awarded “punitive” damages would be added to his $1 milliom requested is awarded. Now his bills are not listed, but likely a few hundred thousand. I’ll bet the Million includes pain and suffering.
    I suppose that if Judge Bork was so steadfastly against the availability of punitive damages and a true-believer concerning the supposedly deleterious effect that such awards have on merchants and premises owners, one might expect that he would resist the opportunity to put a premises owner to that penalty and settle for obtaining only an award for his actual damages -- his medical expenses, his pain and suffering, and any psychic injuries that he claims to have suffered. His refusal to do that, it might be argued, smacks either of opportunism or hypocrisy.
    Again, the article clearly states no requested amount for punitive damages. Did you pass English in school? It also states his opinion as "In a June 2002 article in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Bork suggested there might be instances where punitive damage awards are excessive."

    Please explain how excessive means what is implied here in the hypocryasy aspect of the thread.
    Otherwise, his lawsuit is a tacit admission that there are at least instances in which punitive damages are acceptable in our civil justice system. I don't have any particular quarrel with that argument, but it does seem surprising in this case, given Judge Bork's earlier writings. And it does seem to cut against some rather fundamental tort reform arguments.
    Punitive damages do have a time and place. Personally, I am one that believes punitive damages should go the justice system, not the lawyers and individual.
    You can get off your high horse; hypocrisy is not subject to either criminal or civil action, so your hysterical rant about due process is pointless.
    What the are you talking about? You completely lost me.
    I'm still waiting for an explaination as to why someone who actively condemned the excesses of punitive litigation is not hypocritical for then engaging in that same activity (suing for damages and punitive awards) when opportunity arrises.
    My God… You are a ing idiot. He did not ask for punitive damages. Did you read the article?
    Don't sweat it; his hypocrisy doesn't refute his argument (an argument I agree with, btw), it just reveals his lack of character.
    I see a complete lack of character in you! Get the facts strait please.
    "we don't know all the details."

    But your ideological knee jerks this-a-way: "Seems like to me that certain safety laws have been lax there!"

    Seem to me like your ideology forces you to defend an ultra-conservative by selecting the seemingly unknowns to meet your ideology.
    I only defended the aspect that we don’t know all the facts and shouldn’t jump to conclusions. It does seem to me that Bork is out of line in asking for the million. I am also surprised that a law school would be so stupid in seeing such an obvious potential for litigation. I acknowledging that there might be cir stances that do qualify the action he is taking. I won’t pretend to know all the OSHA regulations, but I think hand rails are one of them that is required for steps. I am against most regulations, but some are proper. As a conservative, I believe in the “Time, Place, and Manner” approach to rules and regulations.

  14. #14
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    "an obvious potential for litigation."

    obvious? we've heard only the ambulance chaser's $$self-$$serving opinion of the setup, but that's enough "facts" for you.

    Nobody forced the decrepit old fart up those stairs. Does this ultra-conservative radical not accept ANY personal responsibility for his own spastic -up?

    I thought ultra-conservatives were big on personal responsibility, as in "I got mine, and I'll you up to keep you from getting yours", and "blacks and other minorities are poor, dumb, uneducated, addicted, under-aged pregnant, etc because they have no personal responsibility".

    Or are ultra-conservatives just like all of hypocritical, childish America, all for total freedom but with NO responsibility?

    Just in case some kid doesn't know who Bork is, he's the guy in Nixon's DoJ who agreed to fire the Watergate special prosecutor to protect the disgraced Repug Nixon when DoJ people above refused. 20 years ago, Bork later lost an extremely bitter SCOTUS nomination that the "all-pissed off, all the time" ultra-conservative/Repugs are still pissed off about. I'm sure Repug fat cats will donate millions to Bork ambulance chaser's bills and fight this all the way to the SC.

    Last edited by boutons_; 06-09-2007 at 08:10 AM.

  15. #15
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    It is interesting that Judge Bork would rail so publicly against the imposition of punitive damages (or at least the Congressional or even cons utional limitations on such damages) yet is willing to take advantage of the existence, for his own benefit, of the very laws that he is so willing to decry in his writings.
    In a June 2002 article in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Bork suggested there might be instances where punitive damage awards are excessive.
    Notice he didn't say unwarranted. Also notice he didn't "rail" but suggested, in a Harvard Journal of Law article.

    For comparison, Al Gore rails about global war...global climate change.

    In a 1995 opinion piece published in the Washington Times, Bork and Theodore Olson, who later became a top Justice Department official, criticized what they called the "expensive, capricious and unpredictable'' civil justice system in the U.S.
    Again, notice the absence of any expression that damages (punitive or otherwise) are unwarranted.

    It would only be hypocritical if Bork had sought excessive punitive damages. He didn't.

    And, it would only be ironic if, because of the Supreme Court decision cited at the end of the article, he received "excessive" punitive damages and said "excessive" punitive damages were set aside as being "excessive." In the absence of his request for "excessive" punitive damages -- or, any punitive damages at all -- the irony does, and will fail, to materialize.

    God, you people are such simpletons sometimes.

  16. #16
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Don't take the bait, Yoni.

    It's suicide.
    Don't worry, I have peepee on ignore, boutons too. And, I'd have SpunkDumper on ignore but, he's a ing mod, if you can believe that, and they won't let you put them on ignore.

    Just had to stop and point out his stupidity for a moment.

  17. #17
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    Notice he didn't say unwarranted. Also notice he didn't "rail" but suggested, in a Harvard Journal of Law article.
    You must not have ever read anything that Judge Bork has written. He frequently rails in his academic writings, which would include publications such as the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy. But if you don't like "rail," how about "advocated?" Does that better fit your semantic needs?

    Again, notice the absence of any expression that damages (punitive or otherwise) are unwarranted.

    It would only be hypocritical if Bork had sought excessive punitive damages. He didn't.
    It would be asinine to argue that actual damages ("or otherwise," I suppose) could ever be unwarranted. The notion of tort is intended to compensate victims for the wrongdoings of others by providing a means to recover actual damages. Legislatures have decided that there are laudable public policy goals to be attained by requiring certain tortfeasors to pay additional penalties for their wrongdoing -- particularly where the tortfeasor was grossly negligent or acted with malice in undertaking its tortious conduct or misfeasance.

    In this case, Judge Bork didn't request any sum of punitive damages -- and frequently, litigants don't ask for any such sums in specific denominations. Instead, like most other litigants, Judge Bork's pleadings leave to the jury the option to decide how extensive his punitive damages, if any, might be. Accordingly, the jury could award him no punitive damages or it could award him the very excessive punitive damages that Judge Bork has so actively advocated against. Again, it seems to me that if Judge Bork thinks that punitive damages are anathema to our civil justice system and that they are somehow a bane to business and commerce, the right-minded solution would be to plead for his actual damages only. Of course, Judge Bork didn't do that -- choosing instead to play "jury lottery" like the very plaintiffs that his writings decry.

    And, it would only be ironic if, because of the Supreme Court decision cited at the end of the article, he received "excessive" punitive damages and said "excessive" punitive damages were set aside as being "excessive." In the absence of his request for "excessive" punitive damages -- or, any punitive damages at all -- the irony does, and will fail, to materialize.
    But he did request punitive damages and that, you see, is the rub. It's not as if he was ever going to plead that a jury award him excessive punitive damages. Instead, apparently, he simply said (paraphrasing) "I believe that I am en led to punitive damages and I leave it to the whim of the jury to determine what the extent of such damages should be." Fortunately, for the sake of ensuring that his original argument is fulfilled to some degree, the Supreme Court has already said that there are certain thresholds beyond which punitive damages awards are presumptively uncons utional.

    God, you people are such simpletons sometimes.
    Indeed. Asking for consistency out of those who advance an agenda that, if fulfilled to its logical end, would cir scribe limits upon compensation available to tort victims no matter how egregious the tortfeasor's conduct is really such a simplisitc idea.
    Last edited by FromWayDowntown; 06-09-2007 at 09:23 AM.

  18. #18
    We are the Championship ggoose25's Avatar
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    As ususal, FWD pwns

  19. #19
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    I just wonder, did he ask the University to pay his medical bills
    and they refused. I am not at all familiar with this incident.

  20. #20
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    The story will come full circle when General Olsen handles the appeal and has to defend the exemplary damages awarded to Judge Bork.

  21. #21
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    You must not have ever read anything that Judge Bork has written. He frequently rails in his academic writings, which would include publications such as the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy. But if you don't like "rail," how about "advocated?" Does that better fit your semantic needs?
    Nope. Because the article doesn't characterize his opposition to excessive punitive damages as "railing," you did. Can we stick to the case and cir stances at hand?

    It would be asinine to argue that actual damages ("or otherwise," I suppose) could ever be unwarranted. The notion of tort is intended to compensate victims for the wrongdoings of others by providing a means to recover actual damages. Legislatures have decided that there are laudable public policy goals to be attained by requiring certain tortfeasors to pay additional penalties for their wrongdoing -- particularly where the tortfeasor was grossly negligent or acted with malice in undertaking its tortious conduct or misfeasance.

    In this case, Judge Bork didn't request any sum of punitive damages -- and frequently, litigants don't ask for any such sums in specific denominations. Instead, like most other litigants, Judge Bork's pleadings leave to the jury the option to decide how extensive his punitive damages, if any, might be. Accordingly, the jury could award him no punitive damages or it could award him the very excessive punitive damages that Judge Bork has so actively advocated against. Again, it seems to me that if Judge Bork thinks that punitive damages are anathema to our civil justice system and that they are somehow a bane to business and commerce, the right-minded solution would be to plead for his actual damages only. Of course, Judge Bork didn't do that -- choosing instead to play "jury lottery" like the very plaintiffs that his writings decry.
    Again, nothing in the article indicates Judge Bork is opposed to punitive damages, as you suggest. And, nothing I've seen, read, or heard -- except from you, indicates Bork believes punitive damages are "anathema" to our civil justice system. Only that he is opposed to excessive punitive damages. There's a whole lot of presumption in your characterization. Not very lawyerly, if you ask me.

    But he did request punitive damages and that, you see, is the rub. It's not as if he was ever going to plead that a jury award him excessive punitive damages. Instead, apparently, he simply said (paraphrasing) "I believe that I am en led to punitive damages and I leave it to the whim of the jury to determine what the extent of such damages should be."
    From where is that paraphrased? And, again, why is seeking punitive damages or -- if you prefer -- not precluding them up front, necessarily hypocritical in this case. Judge Bork's opposition seems to be directed at excessive punitive damages -- not punitive damages in general.

    I would agree that if a jury awards excessive punitive damages and Judge Bork accepts that, it would be hypocritical but, we're no where near that stage in this suit. Are we?

    Fortunately, for the sake of ensuring that his original argument is fulfilled to some degree, the Supreme Court has already said that there are certain thresholds beyond which punitive damages awards are presumptively uncons utional.
    So, there's little likelihood anything approaching hypocrisy will occur in this case, then. Right?

    Indeed. Asking for consistency out of those who advance an agenda that, if fulfilled to its logical end, would cir scribe limits upon compensation available to tort victims no matter how egregious the tortfeasor's conduct is really such a simplisitc idea.
    Being opposed to excessive punitive damages while being awarded reasonable punitive damages is not inconsistent.

    The whole of the hypocrisy argument rests in a belief that by opposing excessive punitive damages Judge Bork is opposed to any punitive damages at all. I don't get that from Judge Bork's writings and, anyone who does, is a simpleton.

    You should get your money back on that legal education. You are trying to become a lawyer, right?

  22. #22
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    The story will come full circle when General Olsen handles the appeal and has to defend the exemplary damages awarded to Judge Bork.
    Exemplary damages? What are those?

    ex·em·pla·ry
    adj.
    1. Worthy of imitation; commendable: exemplary behavior.
    2. Serving as a model.
    3. Serving as an illustration; typical.
    4. Serving as a warning; admonitory
    Why would anyone have to defend exemplary damages?

    If you're trying to imply excessive damages well, once again, you're being presumptive and are way out in front of Judge Bork, the Judge, and the jury in this case.

    For all you know, the damages awarded could be, well, exemplary.

  23. #23
    Boring = 4 Rings SA210's Avatar
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    at Yoni trying to defend Bork as not being a hyopocrite.

  24. #24
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    Exemplary damages? What are those?
    Punitive damages -- stated more specifically, since not all damages for gross negligence are considered punitive in nature. Since you're so big on wordsmithing these days, the difference should be rather simple to see. Exemplary damages provide an example to others (as well as the tortfeasor) to avoid particular sorts of conduct or nonfeasance. They are both punitive and exemplary.

    Why would anyone have to defend exemplary damages?
    Because exemplary damages are punitive damages.


    Again, nothing in the article indicates Judge Bork is opposed to punitive damages, as you suggest. And, nothing I've seen, read, or heard -- except from you, indicates Bork believes punitive damages are "anathema" to our civil justice system. Only that he is opposed to excessive punitive damages. There's a whole lot of presumption in your characterization. Not very lawyerly, if you ask me.
    So then the point is that Judge Bork is willing to draw perfectly arbitrary lines and you're okay with that?

    It would seem to me that if Judge Bork was truly concerned with the notion that businesses are impaired by excessive awards of exemplary damages, a solution consistent with that concern would be a personal commitment to avoiding attempts to recover such damages. Were I making academic arguments seeking to limit the recovery of exemplary damages, I would have a difficult time squaring that argument with my own effort to recover exemplary damages in a personal injury suit. Of course, I disagree with Judge Bork in principle -- I think Legislatures and Courts have undertaken to impose more than sufficient curbs on awards of exemplary damages; I also think that there are times when huge exemplary damage awards are defensible. In any event, it does seem to me that it's rather difficult to express concern for the claimed negative effect that exemplary damage awards have on business while at the same time seeking to recover those very awards for oneself. Perhaps you don't see that as inconsistent.

    From where is that paraphrased?
    From any standard pleading seeking exemplary damages.

    And, again, why is seeking punitive damages or -- if you prefer -- not precluding them up front, necessarily hypocritical in this case. Judge Bork's opposition seems to be directed at excessive punitive damages -- not punitive damages in general.
    I find it hypocritical because Judge Bork's position -- apparently -- is that there is some level of exemplary damages that is essentially just an acceptable cost of doing business, but he and his allies should be in a position to determine at what level the effect becomes too harmful. Again, if his concern is protecting businesses and premises owners, then isn't it contrary to his own expressed concern to demand that those he wishes to protect pay the very damages that he finds so problematic?

    Being opposed to excessive punitive damages while being awarded reasonable punitive damages is not inconsistent.
    It is if your argument is one aimed at protecting businesses, I think. If you want to protect businesses from some harm created by exemplary damages, then one way to further that interest is to resist the opportunity to seek exemplary damages. Otherwise, again, its a matter of arbitrary line drawing as to what is or is not excessive.

    The whole of the hypocrisy argument rests in a belief that by opposing excessive punitive damages Judge Bork is opposed to any punitive damages at all.
    Actually, the whole of the argument rests on the fact that Judge Bork cites particular policy justifications for advancing his contentions but then conveniently ignores his own policy justifications when it suits him personally.

    You should get your money back on that legal education. You are trying to become a lawyer, right?
    Ad hominem, eh? That's a suprising turn, coming from you.

  25. #25
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Actually, the whole of the argument rests on the fact that Judge Bork cites particular policy justifications for advancing his contentions but then conveniently ignores his own policy justifications when it suits him personally.
    I disagree with this characterization. Nothing in Judge Bork's opinions say he is opposed to punitive damages and therefore, the argument of hypocrisy based on the possibility of him receiving same are bogus.

    It's only hypocritical for him to win excessive punitive damages and not refuse them. And, while the term excessive is subjective, I'm pretty sure a careful study of his writings would reveal what he believes to be excessive.

    In any case, since no award has been made, cries of hypocrisy are premature, at best.

    Ad hominem, eh? That's a suprising turn, coming from you.
    My apologies.

    I do think you're being willfully ignorant of the argument though. Equating a disdain for the obscene excesses in jury awards -- as can be seen in certain cases over recent decades -- with a belief all punitive awards are unwarranted is, you should admit, an unwarranted characterization.
    Last edited by Yonivore; 06-09-2007 at 12:01 PM.

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