N.J. high court okays foul-ball suit

A classic application of the assumption-of-risk doctrine was the rule that ballpark owners were not liable when a foul ball hit into the stands injured a fan. But assumption of risk has been less than popular in the law schools for a long time, and is under constant pressure from the plaintiff’s bar, which would like to curtail or eliminate it. Now, per Law.com, the New Jersey Supreme Court has rolled back the foul-ball rule as regards parts of a stadium devoted to concessions, mezzanines and so forth, though apparently not (yet) seating areas. One likely result: more installation of netting and other screening, even if it impairs fans’ viewing experience. (cross-posted from Point of Law)

Tech difficulties and temporary hiatus

For the last 24 hours+ new postings to this site have been disabled due to technical difficulties. We’re back up now, for the moment, but the continuing recurrence of these technical problems is going to make it necessary to move Overlawyered to a new hosting service in place of Verio, which has been our host for the past few years.

With luck, we can accomplish this rehosting within a few days, and the site will resume its normal operation. Till then, expect a brief hiatus in posting. In the mean time both Ted and I will continue to post at the Manhattan Institute’s website PointOfLaw.com. If our ability to update Overlawyered fails again, or if the whole site goes offline, we’ll post status updates on Point of Law, so make sure to bookmark that site now.

Also, reader advice is welcome as we search for the right Movable Type-friendly hosting service. We’ve heard favorable things about Total Choice Hosting and HostingMatters. If you’ve got opinions about these or other services, drop me a line at editor-at-[this domain name]-dot-com, or if that begins bouncing, editor-at-[point of law]-dot-com.

Katrina: “hospitals likely to face litigation”

“As floodwaters consumed their hospitals, nurses and doctors throughout New Orleans took heroic measures to save hundreds of patients. But could the facilities’ owners still be liable for the effects of the disaster? Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare Corp. may be among several companies soon facing litigation over deaths inside their hospitals in the hurricane-stricken region.” (Sudeep Reddy, Dallas Morning News, Sept. 15 (reg); Rene Goux (Memorial Medical Center CEO), “At the bottom of the ‘bowl'”, Sept. 12; “In flood, hospital becomes a hell”, Sept. 4)(via Donna Rovito).

Joyce v. Washington Department of Corrections

Early one morning in 1997, Vernon Valdez Stewart, under the influence of marijuana, hot-wired a Chevy Suburban in Seattle, ran a red light in Tacoma at 60 mph, and collided with Paula Joyce’s pickup, killing her. Because Stewart was on supervised parole at the time, Joyce’s family believed that taxpayers should be held responsible, and a jury agreed, awarding $22 million in damages. Stewart had bipolar disorder, and thus, the theory went, the parole office should have taken special care to revoke his parole as soon as they could, and failed the opportunity to do so, thus making the state vicariously liable for the crimes he committed. That the state had pending notices of parole violation at the time of the accident to take Stewart into custody was apparently irrelevant; after all, in hindsight, the state could have done so sooner or asked for a bench warrant. Headlines indicate that the Washington Supreme Court overturned the judgment, which had grown to $33 million with interest. But the Court did so on a technicality of jury instructions; it reaffirmed that “the State has a duty to take reasonable precautions to protect against reasonably foreseeable dangers posed by the dangerous propensities of parolees.” The Court also held it irrelevant that a judge was not obligated to lock up Stewart for the parole violations, and might have chosen not to (just as the judge didn’t for the original crime that left Stewart on parole).

Because it’s reasonably foreseeable that a previously convicted criminal might injure someone in the course of a crime, and it’s always possible to prevent that by locking up the parolee, the decision effectively makes taxpayers liable for any crimes committed by the 29,000 parolees in the state. Here, the plaintiffs complain that the state should have been monitoring Stewart’s driving and mental health, but were given no requirement by the court to do so, effectively creating a huge expansion in the Corrections Department’s responsibility without the concomitant power to do anything about it. As the Supreme Court’s dissent notes, “How can specific conditions of release and the authority created therein give rise to a take charge relationship and a corresponding duty, but the duty created be in no way limited by the supervision conditions and authority through which the duty was enabled?” (Jonathan Martin, “Court rules state can be held liable if supervised felons commit crimes”, Seattle Times, Sep. 16; Rachel La Corte, AP, Sep. 15; Joyce v. Washington Dept. of Corrections; dissent; Morelaw trial digest; related Washington v. Stewart decision).

Stewart’s punishment for his original crime given his juvenile criminal history and his subsequent parole violations was absurdly weak; it shouldn’t have taken a felony-murder to get him jail for more than 86 days. But that’s at least as much fault of the state’s laws and the judge as of the prosecutors, perhaps more so. And even if taxpayers should be required to compensate the victim of this crime, as opposed to other crimes, $22 million is also an absurd amount. It’s also worth noting that Stewart’s criminal jury did not find him insane, but the plaintiffs in the civil case were allowed to argue that he was psychotic.

It’s a regular complaint of the criminal defense bar and law professors that parole is poorly designed and can cause recidivism in convicted criminals. If future parole conditions seem especially strict in Washington state, you can thank the plaintiffs’ bar’s regulation through litigation. Then again, the Department of Corrections said that they would not change their policy in response to the decision; why should they, when they’re not paying the bill?

“Doctor says FEMA ordered him to stop treating hurricane victims”

By reader acclaim:

In the midst of administering chest compressions to a dying woman several days after Hurricane Katrina struck, Dr. Mark N. Perlmutter was ordered to stop by a federal official because he wasn’t registered with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. “I begged him to let me continue,” said Perlmutter, who left his home and practice as an orthopedic surgeon in Pennsylvania to come to Louisiana and volunteer to care for hurricane victims. “People were dying, and I was the only doctor on the tarmac (at the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport) where scores of nonresponsive patients lay on stretchers. Two patients died in front of me.

“I showed him (the U.S. Coast Guard official in charge) my medical credentials. I had tried to get through to FEMA for 12 hours the day before and finally gave up. I asked him to let me stay until I was replaced by another doctor, but he refused. He said he was afraid of being sued. I informed him about the Good Samaritan laws and asked him if he was willing to let people die so the government wouldn’t be sued, but he would not back down. I had to leave.”

In a formal response to Perlmutter’s story, FEMA said it does not accept the services of volunteer physicians:

“We have a cadre of physicians of our own,” FEMA spokesman Kim Pease said Thursday. “They are the National Disaster Medical Team. … The voluntary doctor was not a credentialed FEMA physician and, thus, was subject to law enforcement rules in a disaster area.”

However, Perlmutter says once back in Baton Rouge his group

went to state health officials who finally got them certified — a simple process that took only a few seconds.

“I found numerous other doctors in Baton Rouge waiting to be assigned and others who were sent away, and there was no shortage of need,” he said.

(Laurie Smith Anderson, The Advocate (Baton Rouge), Sept. 16; Toby Harnden, “‘I could have saved her life but was denied permission'”, Daily Telegraph (UK), Sept. 18).

Read On…

Thanks, Palmer & Dodge

For stepping forward to represent the prison grievances of one of Massachusetts’s most infamous killers, Daniel LaPlante, supposedly on a pro bono basis; for your skill at turning into a civil rights claim LaPlante’s complaints that jailers were intercepting the pornographic pictures he was being sent in the mail, and that a guard had stolen his shower shoes; and for the smoothness with which you turned your supposedly pro bono efforts into a profit opportunity after you prevailed, submitting a $125,000 bill to state taxpayers of which federal judge Nancy Gertner approved $99,981. “We did it as efficiently as we could,” claimed George Olson [no relation], a partner at the elite Boston firm. “When we took the case, we didn’t expect to be compensated.” Thanks for that too! (Brian McGrory, “Injustice for almost all”, Boston Globe, Sept. 16).