Reneau Almon’s Vindication

On May 15, 2012, in Barack Obama, by saidyloz416

Reneau Almon, who served as an Associate Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court for 24 years, died earlier this month. Justice Almon began his service on the Alabama appellate court in 1969 and was first elected to the Alabama Supreme Court in 1974. He retired from that court in 1999. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Alabama had a reputation as a “tort hell.” As Michael DeBow, a professor at Cumberland Law School, has explained: “The Alabama Supreme Court of 1994 was identified in the minds of many with a litigation climate that was hostile to defendants — particularly corporate defendants.” Whoppingly disproportionate punitive damage awards helped contribute to that reputation. In one case, confronted with the buyer of a car who claimed that he was defrauded because he wasn’t told that it had been partially repainted, which lowered the car’s resale value by $4,000, the Alabama Supreme Court cut a jury’s punitive damage award of $4 million to $2 million — still, an award-to-injury ratio of 500-1. After the U.S. Supreme Court got hold of the case, and there was modest change in the Alabama Supreme Court’s personnel, the punitive damage award was reduced to $50,000. The road out of “tort hell” began with the 1994 elections, when Chief Justice Sonny Hornsby was unseated. But Justice Almon also contributed to the transformation. One place that high punitive damages were being awarded was in cases of consumer fraud. In order to prove fraud, one must prove reliance on false or misleading information received or not conveyed. But, what kind of reliance is enough? Can a consumer simply rely on what he or she is told, or must the consumer read the documents he or she receives? The difference may not sound like much, but it means a great deal. In 1991, over a dissent by Justice Almon, the Alabama Supreme Court allowed a consumer to rely on what she said she was told. The buyer claimed she was told that, if she were hospitalized, the insurance policy she was buying would pay 80 percent of her hospital and doctor bills, with no deductible; but the policy plainly stated that it was not a major medical policy. After receiving a copy of the policy, she put it into a desk drawer without reading it. As a result, after the buyer had surgery, the policy didn’t cover what she said she thought it would. The court held that a jury could have found that she justifiably relied on what she was told, the policy’s terms notwithstanding. In his dissent, Justice Almon pointed out the difference between a “reasonable reliance” standard and a “justifiable reliance” standard. Almon explained that the “traditional” reasonable reliance standard was “flexible” and could take differences in relative “sophistication and bargaining power” into account. Under that standard, the consumer acted unreasonably. Almon wrote, “I do not think it is reasonable for a college-educated person to simply drop an insurance policy into a drawer without even a cursory look at it and later claim she has been defrauded.” He added that the buyer could have understood she was not buying major medical coverage “if she had simply glanced at” the policy. In contrast, the justifiable reliance standard the court applied “gives to parties claiming fraud undue leeway to ignore written contract terms.” Justice Almon lost that battle. But, in 1997, the Alabama Supreme Court changed the standard back to reasonable reliance. Justice Gorman Houston wrote that, since the decision to apply justifiable reliance to consumer and commercial transactions, there had been “tension” on the court. As he put it, the justifiable reliance standard “basically eliminated a person’s duty to attempt to understand the contents of a document or documents received in connection with a particular transaction (consumer or commercial).” Pointing to Justice Almon’s dissent, Houston concluded that the court would no longer apply the justifiable reliance standard to consumer fraud cases, but would instead apply reasonable reliance to all newly filed cases. Justices Almon, Janie Shores, and Harold See all filed concurring opinions making important points. Almon pointed to his earlier opinion and noted that the justifiable reliance rule, which allowed for “continuous disputation,” made commerce almost impossible. Justice Shores acknowledged that she had joined in making the change, but was willing to reconsider. She wrote that the court made a “mistake in departing from a standard in fraud cases that had served well.” Justice See, who joined the court in 1996, pointed to what happened when a buyer’s right to rely on a representation was not tied to a duty to act reasonably. As he explained, changing the rule “discouraged buyers from reading their contracts” and reduced their risk in not doing so. Second, the number of potential plaintiffs in fraud lawsuits grew from those who might have reasonably relied to include those who might have justifiably relied. Third, because justifiable reliance rests on the plaintiff’s testimony alone, cases which would have been thrown out of court because the plaintiff did not act reasonably went to a jury, which could award punitive damages. Changing the reliance standard and getting punitive damages under control helped change the business climate in Alabama. In recent years, companies like Honda, Hyundai, and ThyssenKrupp have opened plants in the state, and it’s unlikely they would have done so if it were still seen as a “tort hell.” Justice Almon’s vindication is in having helped to bring about that change in the state’s business climate.

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Reneau Almon’s Vindication

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Jindal Goes Mobile

On May 14, 2012, in Barack Obama, Congress, Health Care, Nuclear, Unemployment, by concernedcoloradoan

MOBILE, Ala. — Probably no governor in the country has had as good a start to 2012 as Louisiana’s Bobby Jindal, who orchestrated a triumphant romp through his state’s legislature of the most sweepingly exciting education reforms any state has seen in 30 years. Jindal spoke

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Gay-Marriage Legal Tests Loom

On May 14, 2012, in Barack Obama, Uncategorized, by CrespiCastel367

Legal analysts say the Obama administration is sure to face pressure to weigh in on the gay-marriage question when the issue reaches the Supreme Court—possibly this fall. Visit link: Gay-Marriage Legal Tests Loom

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Gay-Marriage Legal Tests Loom

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Will Democrats Move the Charlotte Convention?

On May 10, 2012, in Al Gore, Barack Obama, Congress, by PolitowskiWander129

It was December of 1992. And the New York Times was furious. In the November election that had occurred a month earlier, while most Americans were fixated on the presidential race between President George H.W. Bush, Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton and businessman Ross Perot, in Colorado something else was going on. That something else was known as Amendment 2. On election day, by a margin of 100,000 votes, Coloradans, in the words of the Chicago Tribune : “amended their constitution to outlaw ordinances in Denver, Boulder and Aspen that banned discrimination in hiring and housing on the basis of sexual orientation.” Gay rights groups were apoplectic. Barbra Streisand vowed a celebrity boycott — no small threat in Colorado ski havens like Aspen where stars like Cher, Jack Nicholson, Michael Douglas, and other Hollywood power names vacationed. The Times was frothing. So there was a decision to strike back at Colorado. Fumed the Times in a December 21st editorial titled “The Case for the Colorado Boycott”: Deciding where to go for a skiing vacation ordinarily poses no moral dilemma. But this winter it surely does. Colorado, site of some of the finest ski areas in the nation, adopted a bigoted anti-gay initiative last month, shattering the state’s reputation for tolerance. Gay groups and others are urging a boycott; their call deserves to be heeded. Duly noted. So the obvious question. On Tuesday North Carolina voters overwhelmingly approved an amendment to the state constitution banning same-sex marriage.

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Obama Targets the Tea Party

On May 8, 2012, in Barack Obama, Congress, Nancy Pelosi, by HigleyLocklear930

The Obama 2012 campaign is in full gear and playing from the Saul Alinsky playbook that has served it so well. You know the drill. Pick a target, freeze it, personalize it and polarize it . Obama’s re-election team has set it sights on the Tea Party. Of course, it’s not the first time the Tea Party has been in Team Obama’s crosshairs. Just last month, while appearing on CNN’s State of the Union, David Axelrod told Candy Crowley that Republicans in Congress “were in the thralls of this reign of terror from the far right that has dragged the party to the right.” So if one of Obama’s top advisers is prepared to liken his political adversaries to terrorists then you know there’s no limit to what Obama and his acolytes are prepared to say about the Tea Party. In two of its campaign ads with its Maoist inspired theme ” Forward ,” the voiceover solemnly says, “Some said our best days were behind us,” accompanied by images with Tea Party protesters. Tea Partiers, like a majority of Americans, believe the country is going in the wrong direction under President Obama’s policies. But that’s a far cry from believing that America’s best days are behind us. As someone who addressed the Tea Party Tax Day Rally in Worcester, Massachusetts, last month, I can personally attest that Tea Party activists want to leave their children and grandchildren with a better America. Consider this portion from the Worcester Tea Party Mission Statement: The Worcester Tea Party is a local, all volunteer, non-profit organization. Across the greater Worcester County area we are building the bottom-up organization to return our country back to the principles that made her great. We need to connect with our neighbors to form strong local groups, ready to take on whatever challenges we face. Together, there’s no limit to what we can achieve. Now that doesn’t sound like an organization that believes America’s best days are behind it. If the Worcester Tea Party or any other chapter of the Tea Party believed that it wasn’t possible for America to have a better future, then the Tea Party would not be much of a political force and would have ceased to exist long ago. It could be that President Obama knows about as much about the Tea Party as he does about the authority of the Supreme Court to overturn legislation, the difference between the Maldives and the Malvinas. or how many states there are in the Union. Or it could very well be that President Obama knows exactly what the Tea Party represents and simply isn’t telling the truth. With regard to the Obama campaign’s targeting of the Tea Party, Daniel Halper of the Weekly Standard writes that “one expects this line of attack many times over before November’s presidential election.” Halper is no doubt correct in his assessment. Obama’s targeting of the Tea Party has only just begun. Yet this shouldn’t be viewed as a negative development. After all, it wasn’t so long ago that obituaries were being written for the Tea Party. Back in January, Markos Moulitsas of the Daily Kos wrote , “The Tea Party proved itself ineffective, irrelevant and co-opted this primary cycle.” A year after the mid-term elections, Robert Schlesinger of U.S. News & World Report sardonically wrote , “Remember the Tea Party? It was all the rage back in ’10, inspiring fear in establishment Republicans and loathing in Democrats.” Last September, Will Bunch of Media Matters argued that the Tea Party was basically a creation of “the right-wing media, and it echoes.” Bunch’s argument is basically a variation on the theme put out by former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi who once characterized the Tea Party as “Astroturf.” But if the Tea Party is so ineffective, irrelevant, co-opted, artificial, and as out of style as a polyester suit, then why does the Obama 2012 campaign feel the need not only to conjure up images of the Tea Party but to misrepresent its positions? If anything, Obama’s attention towards the Tea Party demonstrates its strength and resonance with a significant portion of the electorate. So by all means I hope the Obama campaign continues to target the Tea Party. In his pursuit of re-election, President Obama might end up making the Tea Party stronger than ever.

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