Ohioans may soon have a greater uphill battle if they seek justice following a mesothelioma diagnosis.
Recent news reports indicate the state senate has approved a measure
that makes it more difficult for mesothelioma victims to take their
cases to court. Supporters countered that the measure "evens the playing
field." You can bet the "supporters" are not innocent citizens
victimized by this terrible cancer.
Our plaintiff mesothelioma lawyers
understand that House Bill 380, sponsored by a Cincinnati Republican,
would require that a person who files an asbestos claim must list every
other entity they previously sued - including federal bankruptcy trusts.
Not only that, but plaintiffs would have to provide detailed and
specific evidence that they used in those cases. Further, if a defendant
had some reason to suspect the plaintiff was withholding pertinent
information or that he or she did not sue another entity they should
have, the defendant could petition the judge to delay the trial.
The proposed law stems from the mistaken belief that there are an
abundance of mesothelioma patients who are attempting to game the system
by suing as many different entities as they can, in an effort to
collect multiple damage awards. Supporters say they want to prevent
"double-dipping" by limiting the amount a defendant should be made to
pay to the share of the judgment for which the defendant is deemed by a
jury or judge to be at fault.
However, the truth of the matter is that mesothelioma patients and
their families don't have much time left. The disease takes years to
develop, and once it is diagnosed, it progresses rapidly and is fatal.
Overwhelmingly, that sought by those who are dying is not greed, but
justice. And the sad fact is that the companies responsible too often
engage in an endless series of delays. In fact, extensive delays are
already a primary tactic of these firms.
CBS
Corporation, a machine manufacturer who used to supply asbestos-laden
turbines to the U.S. Navy, is seeking immunity in a mesothelioma case,
arguing that it was acting under federal authority.
No
matter how aggressively defendant asbestos manufacturers try to argue
that Chrysotile asbestos doesn't cause mesothelioma - they're wrong.
Justices
of the Virginia Supreme Court threw out a sizable mesothelioma verdict
after a defense appeal argued the trial judge failed to allow critical
evidence that would have lessened the burden of responsibility.
Following passage of Ohio's new "asbestos transparency" law late last year, another state is now mulling the same.
The
primary reason so many people in this country have been terminally
sickened by exposure to asbestos is that employers and manufacturers
failed in their obligation to warn workers of the dangers and to take
all precautionary measures to keep them safe.
A rare form of aggressive, terminal cancer sweeps across the
industrialized world over the course of several decades, caused by
exposure to asbestos produced by businesses that know the risks, yet
continue to use it anyway.