Is the Majority in Wright v. Royal Carpet Really the Majority?

WIll Bardwell raises a great point on the Wright v. Royal Carpet decision that I wrote about earlier today:

Ultimately, though, it may be much ado about nothing, because technically speaking, I'm not sure that the decision creates binding precedent. The Court's opinion drew only five votes -- not a majority of the Court -- and one of its members, Judge Irving, joined in result only. Judge Maxwell's separate opinion, on the other hand, pulled a total of five full votes (why that doesn't make it the "majority" opinion, I don't know). Suffice it to say, though, that a majority of Court's members declined to concur in the lead opinion's reasoning. 

I didn't notice the vote counting issue when I read the opinion. The concurrence, which I mistakenly refer to as the dissent in my post, had five votes. The majority opinion included Judge Irving who concurred in result only. But the concurring judges also concurred in the result. It's how they got there that's in dispute.

And it looks like the concurring opinion is really the majority. I'm missing something on the vote counting at the Court of Appeals.

Miss. Court of Appeals Rules that a Party who Lost Motion in Limine Waives Objection by Mentioning the Evidence at Trial

In a 5–4 [correction: 4-5-1] decision in Wright v. Royal Carpet Services, the Mississippi Court of Appeals ruled on Tuesday that a party who loses a motion in limine waives their objection to the admission of the disputed evidence by being the first to refer to the evidence at trial. The case was an appeal from a defense verdict in the Lowndes County Circuit Court. The plaintiff alleged in the case that the defendant was responsible for mold that developed in her house.

The issue of whether the majority is really the majority is discussed here.

Before trial, the plaintiff moved to exclude evidence of liability insurance under the collateral source rule. The trial court denied the motion because the issue was relevant to the defendant’s defense that plaintiff failed to mitigate her damages. All nine judges agreed that this ruling by the trial court was proper and I have no criticism of it.

But the five judge majority ruled that plaintiff waived the issue on appeal by being the first to raise the subject of insurance at trial. Judge Roberts wrote for the majority and was joined by Judges Myers, Griffis, Ishee and Irving (in result only with no separate opinion). The Court ruled that Quinn v. State, 873 So. 2d 1033 (Miss. App. 2003) was on point and that the issue was “procedurally barred by her failure to raise a contemporaneous objection at trial.”  

Judge Maxwell dissented in an opinion joined by Judges King, Lee, Barnes and Carlton. The dissent cited several Mississippi Supreme Court cases that held that where a judge has already ruled on the evidence, a party does not waive an objection by being the first to mention it at trial in order to attempt to take the sting out of the evidence. The dissent characterized the situation as one where the trial court makes an adverse ruling on the motion in limine and the party adjusts their trial strategy by introducing the evidence to limit its ill effects on the jury.

The dissent states:

I believe Wright was entitled to play the hand the court dealt her and that she is not procedurally barred from asserting these issues on appeal.

I agree with the dissent.

First, Quin is not “on point.” Quin did not deal with a situation where a party did not object at trial to the admissibility of evidence where the court had ruled it admissible in ruling on a motion in limine. Quin dealt with the opposite. In Quin, the State violated a motion in limine ruling at trial and the court found that the defendant waived the issue by not objecting at trial:

The State did in fact violate the motion in limine regarding the amount of money Quinn had on her person by specifically questioning Brister about the matter. However, the record is devoid of any objection by Quinn when such question was asked of Brister. Therefore we find that an issue that is not properly brought to the attention of the trial court by appropriate timely objection is waived. Carr v. State, 655 So. 2d 824, 832 (Miss. 1995). The supreme court has repeatedly held that "if no contemporaneous objection is made, the error, if any, is waived." Id.

There was no violation of a motion in limine in Wright. Instead, plaintiff adjusted her trial strategy to account for the court’s prior ruling.

Second, the dissent’s position has superior support in the case law than does the majority’s position. The majority cites one case that arguably does not apply at all. The dissent cites several Mississippi Supreme Court cases that support the dissent’s view.

Third, the majority ignores “reality on the ground” in the courtroom. it has been my experience that trial judges get annoyed fast when lawyers repeatedly object on the same issue. Trial judges seem to consider the issue to be preserved for appeal once an objection has been made and an adverse ruling issued. A motion in limine that has been ruled on should count as lodging an objection and in my experience, it has. I have seen plenty of times when a lawyer stands up and asks: “judge, I lost on my motion in limine, I don’t have to keep objecting do I?” Invariably the answer is “no—your objection is noted in the record” and usually the opposing attorney is shaking his/her head in agreement. Lawyers should not have to keep objecting repeatedly for fear of waiving the objection. It slows trials down and annoys both the judge and jury.

Finally, a valid reason for filing a motion in limine is to determine what evidence will be in play at trial. The party that loses should be entitled to adjust their trial strategy to account for the ruling. A party being the first to mention damning evidence is a trial strategy that is routinely taught in trial practice courses and practiced in the courtroom. According to the Court of Appeals, you cannot do it in Mississippi because if you do, you have waived your objection to the evidence.

That doesn’t seem fair. I agree with the dissent’s analogy that at that point, you are simply playing the hand that you are dealt. 

I would like to hear what other trial attorneys think about this decision.       

Lawyers Still Falling for E-mail Collection Scam

The ABA Journal reported on Monday that two more law firms have fallen for an e-mail collection scam targeting lawyers:

Two law firms in Honolulu were scammed out of $500,000 in an e-mail scheme that's apparently targeting the legal community.

During the past six weeks, six different law firms have been targeted, according to the FBI, which issued a warning today (PDF). Two of the six fell for the scheme and lost a total of $500,000.

The FBI reports that the scam begins with e-mail contact from a prospective client who is seeking legal representation in a civil matter, such as a divorce. The supposed client sends the law firm a cashier’s check for a retainer in an amount far exceeding the firm's rate.

When the law firm responds that the client has overpaid, the client requests and the unsuspecting firm sends a wire transfer with the refund. It's after the refund that duped firms learned that the cashier's checks are counterfeit.

As I discussed last June, the Mississippi bar warned Mississippi lawyers about these scams last year. As far as I know, no Mississippi lawyers have fallen for the scam.

But I continue to receive several e-mails every week attempting to get me to fall for the scam. I estimate that I receive about five of these e-mails a week. If they were legitimate I could make a killing by focusing my practice on collecting debts for Asian companies.

Here is the text of an email that I received three times within minutes on Saturday:

BaiLi Hose Co.,Ltd

 

No.790 NingAn Road,Hengshui,

Hebei Province Hengshui Hebei

053000 China

 

Attention: Counsel,

 

We the management of BaiLi Hose Co.,Ltd ,require your legal representation for our American Customers. BaiLi Hose Co.,Ltd, a manufacturer and supplier of chemical, we are been owed payment on a shipment that we made to a customer in America in June 2008 and now seeking advice and possible representation in litigation against the non-paying company.

 

 

We are of the opinion that the ability to consolidate payments from America will eradicate delays due to inter-continental monetary transaction between the Asia and America. We understand that a proper Attorney Client Retainer will provide the necessary authorization and we are most inclined to commence talks as soon as possible.

 

Your consideration of our request is highly anticipated and we look forward to your prompt response.

 

Sincerely,

Chen Yang,

Managing Director.

chenyang9@live.com     

I also recall receiving the version of the scam e-mail claiming to be from a person seeking to collect on alimony or child support payments in “you state.” The scammers also bait the line by filling out the contact form on my blog.

Almost none of the e-mails are personalized, and are addressed to "counsel." At the top left where the recipients address should be listed, they list a bogus sender address instead. The scammers do not even go to the trouble of listing the state that I am in. I can probably expect to receive more of these e-mails now that Sid Salter has explained what a moron I am.

While I am not surprised that there have been unsuspecting lawyers who fell for the scam, it is surprising that the scam is still working given the publicity that it’s received in the legal community.

Mississippi Not the Only State Where Judiciary Clashing with Other Branches of Government Over Budget Issues

I recently posted about the Mississippi Supreme Court’s Order preventing Governor Barbour from cutting the judiciary’s budget. Looks like Mississippi is not the only state with these types of issues. As reported yesterday on the WSJ Law Blog, the New York Court of Appeals rendered a decision on the related issue of judicial pay:

In a 5-to-1 decision, the Court of Appeals found that the legislative and executive branches illegally pegged judges’ pay raises to unrelated legislation. As such, the actions violated the separation of powers doctrine under the New York state constitution. Click here for the NYT article; here for the opinion.

Mississippi state court judges are underpaid at every level of the judiciary. But with the state in a budget crisis, it will be hard for judges to get a needed pay raise and any raises will probably not be to needed levels. It will be interesting to see whether at some point the judiciary tries to order their own raises.

State Auditor Pickering Denies Politically Motivated Lawsuit Against Attorney General Jim Hood Based on Politics

 Former State Auditor and current Lieutenant Governor Phil Bryant’s (R) lawsuit that challenged the payment of attorney’s fees to lawyers who Attorney General Jim Hood (D) hired to sue MCI is clearly politically motivated. So naturally current Auditor Stacey Pickering (R) denied that the suit is politically motivated, as reported in the Clarion-Ledger on Saturday:

[Hood’s attorney Fred] Krutz said he thinks the auditor's office waited two years to go after the attorneys fees because the case is politically motivated.

"It was always about politics," he said.

Pickering denies that's the case. "It is our belief that precedent is on our side," he said. "Any money recovered would be public funds."

Pickering is a politician. Most people assume that most acts by politicians are politically motivated. The odds that Bryant’s lawsuit against Hood was politically motivated are somewhere north of 99%.

The MCI case resulted in $100 million in cash and $7 million in property paid to Mississippi. Former Mississippi attorney Joey Langston’s law firm received a $14 million attorney’s fee in the case, which MCI paid. 

Hinds County Circuit Court Judge Winston Kidd threw the case out last week finding that:

Since the subject attorney's fees were not paid by the state and did not come out of any state funds, this Court finds that there is absolutely nothing improper or illegal about MCI's payment of attorney's fees to the Langston Law Firm," Kidd's ruling states.

I previously criticized aspects of Hood’s hiring outside counsel, particularly his hiring Texas lawyers who made a huge campaign contribution to Hood. But Hood is right in this case. The argument that a lawyer already hired and paid must give the fee back is thin. Even thinner is the argument that it’s the Legislature’s job to dole out the fee. The Legislature’s job is to pass laws—not administer attorney’s fees in a lawsuit.

If Bryant and Pickering do not like the system, then they should lobby the Legislature to change it—not file grandstanding lawsuits that cost the taxpayers money.

How much money? Both Hood and Pickering hired outside counsel in this case, who are paid by taxpayers—not MCI. Pickering’s lawyers alone cost the State $340,000 for a loss—with Pickering promising to take his gamesmanship to the Mississippi Supreme Court. The appeal will cost the State an additional six figures in attorney's fees. 

There is a big difference from the outside counsel fee in the MCI case and in Bryant/ Pickering's lawsuit:

  • In the MCI case taxpayers paid nothing for outside counsel.
  • In the Bryant/ Pickering case taxpayers paid hundreds of thousands for outside counsel.
  • In the MCI case Mississippi won.
  • Bryant/ Pickering lost their case.
  • The MCI case made valid claims against a crooked corporation.
  • Bryant/ Pickering's case made novel claims that lost.   

In the MCI case, Hood hired a Mississippi law firm that recovered $107 million for Mississippi from a crooked corporation. Hats off to Jim Hood on this one. I’m sure that money has come in handy over the last view years given the State’s terrible budget crisis.

Pickering needs to stop the taxpayer bleeding and shut this lawsuit down.

Voters who are tired of the political gamesmanship need to remember this episode when Bryant runs for governor and Pickering runs for whatever he decides to run for next.

Miss. Supreme Court Holds One Year Statute of Limitations Applies to Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress Claim Even Though Claim Not Listed in Applicable Statute

In a 5–4 decision on Thursday, the Mississippi Supreme Court issued its opinion in Jones v. Fluor, holding that a one-year statute of limitations applies to the claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress. Justice  Pierce wrote the Court’s opinion and was joined by Chief Justice Waller and Justices Carlson, Randolph and Chandler.

Here is the Clarion-Ledger article on the case, which got the number of votes wrong (6–3).

The applicable statute is Miss. Code Ann. 15–1–35, which lists a one year deadline for filing actions for “assault and battery, maiming, false imprisonment, malicious arrest, or menace, and all actions for slanderous words concerning the person or title, for failure to employ, and for libels…”

The statute does not say that there is also a one year statute of limitations for actions “like these”, but that is what the court found.

Justice Dickinson dissented and was joined by Justices Lamar, and Kitchens. Justice Kitchens wrote a separate dissent joined by Justice Graves and Justice Dickinson, in part.

Justice Dickinson’s dissent states that intentional infliction of emotional distress “clearly is not subject to the one-year statute of limitations” because the statute “specifically lists the intentional torts to which it applies.” The dissent also observes:

It requires no analysis or particular legal insight to observe that the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress is not included in the language chosen by the Legislature.

Justice Dickinson’s dissent is very persuasive. I’m surprised that his opinion was not for a unanimous court.

My biggest criticism of the majority’s holding is that it makes life difficult for lawyers. If the majority can read words that are not there into this statute, then it can do it in other statutes. It is not fair to lawyers or their clients that they have to figure out what language the Court believes should be in a statute, but isn’t.

I don’t have a problem with there being a one year deadline for intentional infliction of emotional distress actions. Typically, it is just a throw-in claim with the real claim at issue in a case. But if it’s going to be a one year deadline, then the statute should list the claim. It does not and Justice Dickinson is dead on.

Justices Kitchens and Graves opined that the defendant waived the statute of limitations defense.

 The Court is slowly developing an irreconcilably inconsistent body of law on the issue of waiver of affirmative defenses. In some cases the court finds a waiver based on the passing of a certain amount of time. In other cases, it finds no waiver for similar or longer amounts of time. Efforts to distinguish the different cases are un-persuasive. It appears that what the Court is really doing is basing its waiver decisions on subjective feelings about who should win the case. I’m not saying that is what the Court is actually doing. But that is how it’s starting to look—and that’s a problem. 

Verdicts in High-Speed Pursuit Cases May Cause City of Jackson to Stop Chasing Suspected Criminals

Thursday’s Clarion-Ledger reports on a $700,000 verdict entered by Hinds County Circuit Court Judge Winston Kidd on February 5 in a bench trial against the City of Jackson.

The case involved a fatal car wreck in Jackson involving a suspect who was running from Jackson police officers. The suspect crashed into the plaintiffs. One person was killed and the other two injured. Judge Kidd awarded $500,000 to the estate of the deceased and $100,000 to each of the survivors. The city argued that the officer stopped the pursuit before the crash. The case was tried in April 2008. Warren Martin represented the plaintiffs.

Jackson City Attorney Pieter Teeuwissen stated that the city will appeal because the Tort Claims Act caps the total possible recovery at $500,000:

City Attorney Pieter Teeuwissen said the city will appeal, in part because the judgment appears to exceed the amount of damages that can be levied against a Mississippi city. State law states that "damages against a governmental entity .... arising out of a single occurrence" are capped at $500,000.

I have not researched the law to analyze this issue. I suspect that Teeuwissen is right, since the Tort Claims Act stacks the deck in favor of governmental entities. That being said, I agree that the way Judge Kidd applied the cap should be the law.

Other recent verdicts in pursuit cases against the city include:

  • In September, Hinds County Circuit Judge Swan Yerger handed down a $500,000 verdict against the city in the case of WLBT Channel 3 meteorologist Eric Law and his wife, Kristina, both of whom were seriously injured when struck by a suspect fleeing police in 2006.

  • In May, Special Hinds County Circuit Judge William Coleman order the city to pay $400,000 in damages for its part in a chase that began in Raymond and ended when Alice Marie Wilson struck a vehicle driven by Alice Faye Clausell, killing her and injuring her two daughters.

The city’s response to these verdicts may be to stop chasing suspected criminals:

Teeuwissen said he is concerned about the way judges have been treating these cases. Such large awards against the city may force the Jackson Police Department to abandon pursuits because the city cannot afford it, he said.

And that could hamper the city's ability to fight crime, he said.

"If these cases are upheld we are heading to a point where you can't have a pursuit in an urban area. If that is the case you can imagine the effect it will have on crime," he said. "You may have to tell your officers, 'We don't want you thinking in the field and making split-second decisions on whether this suspect is worth pursuing.' "

 

I don’t have the answer to this dilemma. The police need to be able to pursue suspects, but pursuits need to be carried out in a way where innocent bystanders are not injured. 

A&O Update: Wahab and Co-conspirators Owe $16.5 Million in W Financial Litigation

The Texas Federal Court Judge who held Adley and Sarah Wahab in contempt has entered a final judgment of over $16.5 million against Wahab, W Financial, Michael Wallens, Sr. and Michael Wallens, Jr. Here is the Final Judgment.

Here is a photo of Wahab. image

The judgment finds the four defendants jointly and severally liable for $14,506,449 in profits and interest from their improper conduct. In addition, the Court fined each defendant $500,000 in civil penalties.The court gave the defendants ten days to pay the fine and thirty days to pay the principal amount.

I’m not sure what will happen to the Defendants when they do not pay, but I suspect that the judge may hold them in contempt and order them jailed.

Just days before entering the judgment the court entered this order revising its October order holding Adley Wahab in civil contempt for making unauthorized transfers of assets. Wahab got caught moving his assets to off-shore accounts and probably planned to flee the county. The court ordered Wahab to surrender his passport to the SEC. The court issues a warrant for Wahab’s arrest and stated that Wahab “holds the keys to his prison” because he can get out of jail by complying with the court’s order.

I predict that any freedom that Wahab gains will be short lived. He’s going to be hanging out with the likes of Bernie Madoff and Martin Frankel for a long time.  

Finally, here is the text of an email that I received on June 10, 2009 from Andrew T. McKinney, an attorney in Houston, Texas:

Dear Mr. Thomas:  if you had taken the time to investigate, even superficially, your factual assertions and speculations—defamatory assertions and speculations--you would know that Mr. Wahab is not an owner of A&O Life Funds LP or any related or affiliated entity.  Mr. Wahab sold his interest in A&O Life in the late summer of 2007.  Two material points in connection with that sale are: (1) the funds in escrow were audited and verified by the purchaser, prior to sale, and found to be exactly as represented and (2) a subsequent, post-sale audit was conducted and all funds represented to be in place, in fact were in place.  These two facts conclusively absolve Mr. Wahab of any post-sale wrongdoing since he has had no ongoing managerial or other ‘control’ role with A&O Life Funds LP.  You are invited to withdraw any and all comments about Adley Wahab on your website or plan to litigate this matter in Mr. Wahab’s home town off Houston, Texas

 

 

Andrew T. McKinney IV

McKinney & Cooper, L.L.P.

Three Riverway, Suite 500

Houston, Texas  77056

Toll Free: 1(866) 928-8215

Telephone:  (713) 623-6868

Facsimile:   (713) 623-8222

e-mail:  mckinney@mckinneycooper.com

I did not withdraw my comments about Wahab and my suspicions about him being a crook have been confirmed.

Mr. McKinney claims to be knowledgeable about Wahab and A&O. A&O investors with questions about their investment should consider contacting Mr. McKinney with their questions.  

Finally, disgruntled A&O investors continue to contact my office with questions about the scandal and the possibility of my firm representing them. I do not represent investors in A&O litigation and am not going to. I covered the A&O scandal on my blog in order to bring exposure to the scandal and provide information to the victims. 

I have repeatedly stated my opinion that if you are a victim who lost money in the scandal, you are going to have to find someone other than Wahab and his co-conspirators to sue. For most people this means suing the person who sold you the investment. If that person is continuing to tell you that this will all work out, then they are lying to you. If you want to recover any money you are going to have to sue that person for selling you an innappropriate investment.

 When began covering A&O on this blog I was afraid that A&O was still preying on its victims by luring in new investors. With state and federal authorities investigating and national media convering the scandal, my coverage of the scandal will continue to be sporadic.  

Justice James Graves Remains 5th Circuit Front-Runner

It has been five months since 5th Circuit Judge Rhesa Barksdale announced that he was taking senior status, giving President Obama a slot to fill on the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. After initial speculation that the position would be filled by someone from Texas or Louisiana, word leaked that the President would fill the position with an African-American Mississippian.

Mississippi Supreme Court Justice James Graves immediately emerged as the favorite for the nomination, as discussed in this post. Other names mentioned for the nomination at one time or another in legal circles include:  

  1. Hinds County Circuit Court Judge Winston Kidd,
  2. Hinds County Chancery Court Judge Denise Owens,
  3. former Hinds County Circuit Court Judge Robert Gibbs,
  4. Jackson attorney Doug Minor,
  5. Assistant U.S. Attorney Felicia Adams,  
  6. Circuit Court Judge Margaret Carey-McRae,
  7. Jackson attorney Walter Johnson, and
  8. Jackson attorney and presumptive District Court nominee Carlton Reeves.

I believe that the White House has interviewed at least several people on this list.

Speculation continues to center on Justice Graves as the front-runner for the nomination. He is the only person on  the list with appellate court experience, in addition to previously serving as a trial judge in Hinds County Circuit Court. Justice Graves is rumored to have the support of individual(s) with close ties to the White House Counsel’s Office.

Although Justice Graves may not have universal support in conservative circles, he is rumored to have the tacit approval of Governor Haley Barbour, who would like to appoint an African-American to the Mississippi Supreme Court to strengthen his 2012 presidential bid. Governor Barbour is effectively running for President now, which should be kept in mind when viewing his political moves.

One thing the Governor needs to do before the official campaign starts is to repair his glaring deficiency in appointing minorities to judge positions, as discussed here and here. Since criticism of Barbour ‘s minority appointment record became public last year he quietly appointed several African-American judges, including appointing Macolm Harrison to fill the seat of Bobby DeLaughter. If Justice Graves is confirmed for the 5th Circuit, Governor Barbour will get to name his replacement on the Mississippi Supreme Court. Appointing an African-American to the Supreme Court would go a long way to blunt the criticism of Barbour’s record on minority appointments.

One thing that appears certain is that the White House better get moving if it intends to fill Judge Barksdale’s seat. There is less than two years until the Iowa caucuses. But the 2012 presidential race will kick off a year before that—meaning that we are less than a year from formal announcements from Republican presidential candidates. Doesn’t that sound like fun? Presidential election campaigning less than a year away?

Once the presidential election cycle begins confirmation of judicial nominees in the Senate takes a back-seat to campaigning and political gamesmanship. At some point, the Republicans will stall votes on all nominees in hopes of regaining the White House. Look for that point to be at least a year before the election in 2012. 

This means that the clock is ticking for President Obama to fill federal court vacancies. And with Supreme Court Justices Stephens and Ginsberg expected to step down this year or next year at the latest, the White House will focus on filling those vacancies. 

President Obama needs to nominate someone for the 5th Circuit soon and press for a Senate vote this year. Failure to do so could result in a lost opportunity to add diversity to the Court and would be a black-eye for the Obama administration. It has been known for close to a year that Judge Barksdale would be taking senior status and he made his formal announcement in September. It's inexcusable that it has taken the White House this long to name a replacement--and we're still waiting.

One More Question for Michael Guest: Why Didn't you Prosecute Ed Peters?

You can ask Madison-Rankin DA Michael Guest one question—what would it be? If you’re like me, it would be why hasn’t he prosecuted Ed Peters for conspiring to bribe Bobby DeLaughter?

But if you’re Clarion-Ledger columnist Sid Salter, it would be questions like “what’s your favorite color?” Here is Salter’s Sunday morning with Michael Guest. Questions included soft-balls such as “what attracted you to the job of District Attorney” and “tell us about your childhood.”

Inexplicably, Salter did not ask Guest why he did not bring charges against Ed Peters for conspiracy. Peters, Joey Langston, Steve Patterson and Tim Balducci met at the Jackson or Madison airport to discuss the bribing Judge Bobby DeLaughter. Both the Jackson and Madison airports are in Guest’s jurisdiction. 

Federal authorities granted Peters immunity for his cooperation with respect to federal charges. But Guest could have asserted state charges against Peters (and others). His failure to do so is one of the mysteries of the judicial bribery scandal. It would have been nice if Salter had asked him about it.  

Update: Recent Ford Trial was Second Hung Jury in Jasper County Case

Last week I reported a hung jury in a Jones County Ford Motor Co. trial. The case was actually tried in the Paulding district of Jasper County. Jones County Circuit Judge Billy Joe Landrum presided over the trial because Judge Robert Evans recused himself from the case.

This was the second trial for this case. The first trial was in 2004 and resulted in a mistrial for one of the two plaintiffs and a hung jury for the other.

The basis for the case was the 2001 Ford Explorer accident that resulted in the death of professional baseball prospect Brian Cole of Meridian. Here is a New York Times article about Cole following the accident. Cole was considered the New York Mets’ third best major league prospect at the time of the accident and played for the club’s double-A minor league affiliate.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiff based Cole’s lost wages on the assumption that Cole would have been a regular all-star in the majors—a questionable assumption based on Cole’s minor league statistics. The plaintiffs asked for $140 million in damages.

The case was originally tried in 2004 for three weeks with Judge Evans presiding. Plaintiff lawyers included Wayne Ferrell, Jim Nobles and Texas lawyers.

For the 2010 re-trial, plaintiffs added Tab Turner to the attorney roster. Both sides had many attorneys in the courtroom. The second trial lasted two weeks and resulted in a hung jury for both of the two plaintiffs.

Barry Ford and other Baker Donelson lawyers were involved in both trials on the defense side. Ford typically also brings in out-of-state lawyers to try cases in Mississippi.

It would not be surprising to see this case tried for a third time. The plaintiffs probably have expenses in the case in the six-figure range, which will make settlement difficult. In addition, Ford is not afraid to try cases in tough jurisdictions like Paulding.

Hung Jury in Jones County Ford Motor Co. Trial

On Thursday Circuit Judge Billy Joe Landrum declared a mistrial after a Jones County Circuit Court jury was unable to reach a verdict in a products liability trial against Ford Motor Co. The trial lasted for several weeks.

Baker Donelson and out-of-state lawyers represented Ford. I do not yet know who represented the plaintiffs or the alleged defect at issue.

Update: Greenwood Commonwealth's Full Article on $12 Million Leflore County Verdict

Here is the Greenwood Commonwealth’s article about the recent $12 million Leflore County jury verdict for former Valley basketball player Michael Archie. Information included:

  • A judge issued a default judgment in 2005 finding that the owner of Itta Bena’s now-defunct Club Focus, Rosie Meeks Brown, was liable in the case. Brown had never responded to legal filings. The jury’s job, therefore, was to set the amount of damages.
  • A second defendant, security guard Johny King, re-sponded to the suit and was going to represent himself, according to Moore. However, King did not show up for the trial.
  • When asked if he expected the defendants would ever pay, [Carlos] Moore said he reserved comment. However, Club Focus did have insurance, according to Moore. “They can pay voluntarily, or we can make them pay,” he said.

Burkhalter Looks Horrible in Paul Minor Recusal Flap

For the life of me I can’t figure out why interim U.S. Attorney Don Burkhalter says that his office has recused itself from the Paul Minor judicial bribery case when it's clearly not true. Here is the relevant paragraph from Thursday’s Clarion-Ledger article on the subject:

But interim U.S. Attorney Don Burkhalter of the Southern District said his office is indeed recused from the case, with the exception of two attorneys. He said [Ruth] Morgan and Dave Fulcher are working with the Department of Justice on court filings in the trio's appeal, but he is not involved.

Not knowing to quit when he is behind, Burkhalter digs his hole deeper:

"You don't see my signature on the motion," Burkhalter said.

If you don’t personally sign it then your office is not working on it? You know that is bullshit untrue don’t you? Since you are the U.S. Attorney, if anyone who works in the Southern District U.S. Attorney’s office—which includes Morgan and Fulcher—is working on it, then your office is working on it.

Federal public defender George Lucas’ comment is dead-on:

"It appears their perception of a recusal is different than mine."

I would add that their perception of recusal is different from anyone’s living in reality.

Burhalter is playing word games that make him look like a liar. Morgan and Fulcher are assistant U.S. Attorneys in Burkhalter’s office. If they are working on the case, then the office has not recused itself from the case.

Saying that the office is recused—except for the two lawyers who have been assigned to the case—is a bizarre word game that reinforces negative stereotypes about politicians and lawyers. Most people would simply call it a lie. It would be like saying: “I don’t steal—except on Fridays.” The qualifier negates the statement. 

What I can’t figure out is why is Burkhalter playing games on this issue? Who cares if his office has recused itself?

Update: $12 Million Verdict Was a Damages Hearing on a 2005 Default Judgment

Word on the street in Greenwood is that the $12 million LeFlore County verdict rendered on Wednesday was a damages hearing on a 2005 default judgment. Sources tell me that the defendant nightclub went out of business shortly after the shooting and did not defend the case. No attorney ever appeared to defend the club owner. Plaintiff’s attorney was Carlos Moore of Grenada.

Apparently, the trial involved the plaintiff putting on evidence related to the victim’s damages and the jury making a damages award. The fact that the verdict was high is not surprising, since the underlying injury was severe, the facts presented at the trial were uncontested and the arguments one-sided.

This raises the question of whether the plaintiff will ever collect any of the judgment. Typically, a no-show defendant is a bad sign for the plaintiff.

There is some conflicting information related to this verdict. There are reports that the plaintiff’s attorney is claiming that the club did have liability insurance. But if that is true, the insurer would presumably have hired counsel to defend the case. There are times when there are screw-ups and cases end up with a default judgment even when there is insurance, but the insurance company wakes up at some point and tries to get the verdict set aside.

I appreciate reports from readers regarding the verdict and will post any new information that I receive.   

$12 Million Verdict for Victim of Nightclub Shooting

The Greenwood newspaper is reporting a $12 million verdict Tuesday for the victim of a 2003 nightclub shooting in Itta Bena. According to the report:

A jury awarded $12 million today to a former Mississippi Valley State University basketball player made a paraplegic by a stray bullet at an Itta Bena nightclub in 2003.

Michael Archie, a Greenwood native, was shot at Club Focus on Jan. 26, 2003, after a fight he was not involved in broke out on the dance floor, Archie testified Monday.

As for the component of the verdict:

The jury awarded $12 million in compensatory damages and $1 per defendant in punitive damages.

Unfortunately, the article is short on details. I am assuming that the trial was in Leflore County. I would like to know how much of the verdict was for non-economic damages, since that component of damages is subject to Mississippi’s $1 million cap on non-economic damages.

I will post more details on this verdict if I obtain them.

WSJ Article Focuses on Risks of Life Settlement Investments

Saturday’s Wall Street Journal had this article about life settlement investments, which are also known as viatical settlements. The investors buy life insurance policies and pay the premiums until death. The sooner the insured dies the better the investment return. If the insures lives longer than expected, it's the investor who gets killed.

The article pointed out that in an industry full of scam artists, even investors who may not have been scammed can end up taking a bath on the investments.

One example:

Carol Tonzi, a court reporter in Palmyra, N.Y., sank $51,700 into partial ownership of a $5 million policy in 2003 from the now-defunct Mutual Benefits Corp. of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She says her tax preparer touted the investment as "safe and secure" and said her money in five years would grow to $82,720, a 60% increase.

But Ms. Tonzi, 52, is still waiting for the policyholder, now 89, to pass away. Over the past three years, she says she has shelled out an additional $15,000 in premium payments. She is suing the tax preparer, Richard H. Nichols, in state court in New York, alleging negligent advice. "It's a mess," she says. "If I wanted to gamble, I would have left the money in the stock market."

Prudence is the key for people thinking of investing in life settlements:

Only people with ample financial assets should venture here. Much as with hedge funds, a Life Partners investor must have an annual income of at least $200,000 ($300,000 for a couple) and a net worth of $1 million or more.

"This is not a place for amateurs," says Doug Head, executive director of the Orlando, Fla.-based Life Insurance Settlement Association. "It's a high-risk investment that requires considerable sophistication."

One worrisome issue: fraud. Between January 2004 and July 2009, Conning says, the Securities and Exchange Commission took legal action against 27 U.S. life-settlement funds and advisers. It isn't clear just how many of them there are, but life settlements make the top-10 list of "investor traps," says the North American Securities Administrators Association.

In some instances, the industry has been a magnet for shady operators. California financier Danny Pang died in September battling SEC allegations that his Private Equity Management Group misrepresented hundreds of millions of dollars of investments, including life-insurance policies. When those didn't generate enough profit to cover the cost of the premiums and deliver returns, the SEC alleges, he used money from new investors to cover the shortfall. Ponzi operators who deal in life settlements have also surfaced in Idaho, New Jersey and Texas.

Texas? Adley Wahab and A&O Life anyone?

My advice to someone who has been approached about investing in a life settlement is to be very careful. If the person pitching the investment to you is a life insurance agent, then you probably need to run. Not only should you invest in life settlements only if you have a high net worth, but you should also only invest a fraction of your net worth—say 10% or less. Do not be one of these people who gets talked into investing their whole life savings in any one investment—particularly one as risky as life settlements. As with all investing, diversifying your investments is a key to reducing the risks of investing. 

Main Justice: Shelby Lifts Holds on DOJ and Other Nominees

Main Justice is reporting today that Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama withdrew most of his holds on presidential nominees late last night:

Shelby’s office announced late last night that the senator would drop his “blanket hold” on more than 70 nominees pending on the Senate Executive Calendar. A hold is when a senator — often anonymously — lets it be known he would oppose a unanimous consent request to bring a particular bill or nomination to the Senate floor.

Main Justice confirms that the reason for Shelby’s holds was pork projects:

The Alabama senator had held up the more than 70 nominees since Thursday over concerns he has about a tanker contract that could bring 1,500 jobs to Mobile, Ala., and over funds he is requesting to build an FBI counterterrorism center in his state. Northrop Grumman is vying to win the tanker contract, and if successful, would assemble the planes in Mobile.

Shelby's tactics remind me of something other than pork that is found in barnyards.

Alabama Pork Projects Blocking Obama's Appointments

According to this Washington Post article, Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama is blocking all presidential nominees from Senate votes in an attempt to secure federal funding for two pork projects for Alabama. The block apparently applies to everything from Court of Appeals judges to more mundane positions within federal departments. According to the article:

Shelby is seeking funds for the KC-135 Air Force tanker fleet, a project that could generate thousands of jobs in Alabama. He is also demanding that the administration restore funding cut from the budget for the FBI's Terrorist Explosive Device Analytical Center, a facility to test defenses against the improvised bombs used in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Shelby placed the hold because of "unaddressed national security concerns," according to a statement released by his office. He "has made the administration aware of these concerns and is willing to discuss them at any time." The statement said Shelby was holding up "several" nominees, but the White House and Reid's office placed the number at more than 70.

Shelby’s tactic is an example of the partisanship that it significantly damaging our county. This type of partisanship is the reason that many Americans have such a negative opinion about Congress. Perhaps the most frustrating aspect of the partisanship is that it continues despite the American people disliking it.

Republicans have made it clear that they are not going to work with the President under any circumstances. In doing so, Republicans are putting partisan politics over the American people. Republicans no doubt believe that this strategy will return the party to power in Washington (if they ever lost it). It will be sickening if they are right, since it will encourage more of the same in the future. 

Attorney General Jim Hood Recovers $18.5 Million for Mississippi Following "Loss" in Zyprexa Litigation

Last week Attorney General Jim Hood announced an $18.5 million settlement with Eli Lilly & Co. based on the company’s improper marketing of Zyprexa in Mississippi. Here is an L.A. Times article about the settlement.

In this post in December, I described a ruling in the case for Eli Lilly as basically throwing out the case. I was wrong. In retrospect, my opinion on the decision was influenced by posts on blogs that are cheerleaders for the pharmaceutical industry. 

These blogs are good sources of information regarding the latest decisions in pharmaceutical cases. The problem is that they offer no objectivity. They are typically written by lawyers who are industry honks who want to look like true believers for the industry in order get hired in more cases. Every decision is either a big win for the industry or wrongly decided by a stupid judge. In the future, I will try to do a better job of using these blogs for information on recent decisions while ignoring the commentary.

Here are amounts recovered by some of the other states who settled Zyprexa cases:

  • Idaho– $13 million
  • Utah- $24 million
  • West Virginia– $22 million
  • Connecticut– $25.1 million
  • South Carolina– $45 million

There is no doubt that the ruling hurt Mississippi’s claim and reduced the state’s recovery in the case. But the ruling was not a disaster for Mississippi.

It still looks bad for Jim Hood that one of the firms handling the case was a Texas firm (Bailey Perrin) that donated $75,000 to Hood. That looks like a pay-for-play situation. The Texas firm and a Mississippi firm (McCraney Montagnet & Quin) will divide a $3.7 million attorney fee in the case.

But with Mississippi in a budget crisis and Governor Barbour cutting the budget regularly, General Hood will not have to apologize for adding revenue to state coffers.    

Governor Barbour Appears Set to Live with Supreme Court's Order Barring Further Judiciary Budget Cuts

On Friday a unanimous Mississippi Supreme Court entered this Order that prevents Governor Barbour from further reducing judicial appropriations as part of budget cuts caused by dismal revenue collections by the State. Since Friday I’ve eagerly awaited the Governor’s response, which came today in a meeting between Governor Barbour and the Clarion-Ledger’s editorial board [who knew they still had one?]:

  "It's not the way I read that statute," Barbour said, "but there's no use appealing it to the Supreme Court, would be my view."

At least the Governor has kept his sense of humor during the budget crisis.

As far as the Supreme Court’s Order, I side with the Court. That should not be surprising, since I work in the judicial arena. If the Governor can cut the judicial branch’s budget what would prevent a Governor deciding that we don’t need the judicial branch and cutting its budget to zero?

And the Court’s Order shows that the Court recognizes the severity of the State’s budget crisis:

….the appellate and trial courts of this state are fully aware of the economic difficulties facing our state and its people.

The Court goes on to state that it has and will continue to do all that it can to reduce expenditures without compromising its constitutional mandate to administer justice fairly and efficiently. The judicial branch cannot do that without adequate funding.

Does U.S. Supreme Court's Decision in Citizens United Case Matter?

Unlike the titles to many of my posts, this is not a rhetorical question. I really don't know the answer.

The background is that a couple of weeks ago the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 5–4 decision in the Citizens United case that corporations can freely spend money in federal election campaigns. Pandomonium among liberals ensued, with Keith Olbermann nearly stroking out on live TV. But don't worry. If anything happens to Olbermann, Ben Affleck is willing to take over.

Here are links to Citizens United coverage by the Wall Street Journal and NMC

Am I wrong that corporations were already finding ways to funnel all the money they wanted into election campaigns? For instance, this article discusses corporations funneling millions of dollars into elections via the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. 

The article states:

The Chamber has a several-pronged approach in its campaign to eviscerate the public's right to take the country's more detested industries to court. One is to funnel major industry money into state election campaigns, especially races involving judges and state Attorneys General.

On September 11, 2001, a most unfortunate day for a major news story to appear, the Wall Street Journal ran an eye-opening article by Jim VandeHei about how some of this country's largest corporations were pouring millions of dollars into the Chamber, allowing companies to hide behind the Chamber's logo while the group did their dirty work.

Last fall, for example, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., DaimlerChrysler AG, Home Depot Inc. and the American Council of Life Insurers all kicked in $1 million each for one of the chamber's special projects: a TV and direct-mail advertising campaign aimed at helping elect business-friendly judges.

Indeed, that year the Chamber raised over $5 million targeting judges in Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana and Alabama who had, according to the Journal, "rendered verdicts against one or more of the companies contributing to the effort."  

No wonder secrecy is a hallmark of the U.S. Chamber/ILR's strategy when getting involved in these electoral races. Indeed, the organization sometimes goes to great lengths to keep its involvement and funding a secret.

This leaves me wondering about what will be the practical difference in the new law, if any.

Wall Street Journal Article Focuses on Pay-to-Play in State Pension Shareholder Lawsuits

Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal contains this article about pay-to-play political donations by law firms that specialize in shareholder actions. WSJ’s analysis revealed that leading plaintiff shareholder lawsuit firms donate massive amounts of cash to state officials, apparently leading to the firms getting hired to represent states in shareholder actions against companies whose shares are owned by state pension funds.

Mississippi was not mentioned in the article and none of the law firms mentioned are located in Mississippi.

The WSJ investigation:

found that 25 leading firms, their lawyers and family members contributed a total of more than $21 million in the past decade to state-level candidates and party funds, as well as to national-party groups that work to elect state officials. Less than 40% went to candidates within the law firms' home states.

Some plaintiffs firms defend the donations as legitimate:

Asked why its lawyers gave to a county treasurer in a state not its own, Labaton Sucharow said its "members and their families make perfectly legal political contributions to elected officials and candidates who support shareholder rights."

But other plaintiff lawyers admit that there are places where you have to pay-to-play:

"There are certain places where, to be in the game, you have to donate," said Steven Toll, a partner at Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC in Washington. It has contributed only modestly—$62,000 to out-of-state candidates—and Mr. Toll says he is sure its low level of giving has cost the firm business. But "we want to be chosen on merit, not because we contributed money," he said.

Other plaintiff lawyers are afraid to not donate:

Some lawyers say they aren't sure whether contributing helps them get government business, but are afraid not to. Some track how much rivals donate so they don't fall too far behind.

Critics of the pay-to-play culture include some plaintiff lawyers:

Some lawyers say widespread political giving by plaintiffs' law firms, especially outside their home states and near the time when counsel are chosen, is evidence of a corrosive pay-to-play culture in the securities-litigation industry.

"Plaintiffs' lawyers donate because they think it buys them access to people who make decisions over how pension funds select counsel," says Fred Isquith, a partner at Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP, a plaintiffs' firm in New York. Such giving "creates an appearance of complete impropriety," he says, and "should be outlawed."

The American bar Association also does not approve:

The ABA, in giving guidance on ethics, says lawyers shouldn't accept a "government assignment" if they made a political contribution "for the purpose of obtaining or being considered for" such a job.

The incentive to get shareholder cases is high:

In the biggest cases, legal fees can run in the [tens of] millions.

In Mississippi there have been pay-to-play allegations involving lawsuits where the attorney general hires outside counsel to assert claims on behalf of the State.

Do not look for pay-to-play to end anytime soon despite media attention and criticism from the public and bar. As long as any firms can legally make political contributions and then get hired in a big lawsuit, they will do it. Even firms that despise the system will make the donations because they fear that they have to in order to get the cases.  

Is Mississippi Supreme Court Correctly Applying Daubert?

Last week the Mississippi Supreme Court issued its newest Daubert opinion in a 7–2 decision in Hill v. Mills. Justice Dickinson wrote for the majority. Justice Chandler wrote a dissent joined by Justice Graves.

The case originated in the Lincoln County Circuit Court with Judge David Strong as the trial judge. Judge Strong is a popular judge, despite his sad allegiance to Ole Miss athletics—a school that he did not attend until law school when he graduated from the famed Class of 1993.

The case was a medical malpractice case following a miscarriage that plaintiffs claimed could have been prevented by the defendant doctor. Plaintiff’s expert witness could not support his opinions with medical literature. In contrast, the defendant offered literature that supported his expert’s opinions.

 The trial court concluded that this made the opinions of plaintiff’s expert unreliable and excluded the expert’s opinions. Since expert testimony was required in the case, the trial court also granted summary judgment.

The Mississippi Supreme Court basically affirmed the trial court. The Court reversed on the grant of summary judgment for plaintiff’s claims that were unrelated to the wrongful death. But that claim was not the focus of the case and the Court’s decision was a big defense win.

The opinion’s key holding was:

We think the better practice is, when an expert (no matter how qualified) renders and opinion that is attacked as not accepted within the scientific community, the party offering that expert’s opinion must, at a minimum, present the trial judge with some evidence indicating that the offered opinion has some degree of acceptance and support within the scientific community.

The Court clarified that this does not mean that there is a requirement that an expert’s opinion be supported by peer-reviewed articles.  

I do not take issue with the decision that the expert in the case should not have been allowed to testify. But I do question whether the Court is following Daubert and its progeny in reaching its decisions and in the scope of its rulings. My criticism is similar to my criticism of the Court’s opinion in Vaughn v. Mississippi Baptist Medical Center that I wrote about here.  

The United States Supreme Court discouraged attempts to apply definitive rules to Daubert issues in Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael. In that landmark Daubert case the Court stated the following: 

  • We also conclude that a trial court may consider one or more of the more specific factors that Daubert mentioned when doing so will help determine that testimony's reliability. But, as the Court stated in Daubert, the test of reliability is "flexible," and Daubert's list of specific factors neither necessarily nor exclusively applies to all experts or in every case.  Rather, the law grants a district court the same broad latitude when it decides how to determine reliability as it enjoys in respect to its ultimate reliability determination. See General Electric Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 143, 139 L. Ed. 2d 508, 118 S. Ct. 512 (1997) (courts of  appeals are to apply "abuse of discretion" standard when reviewing district court's reliability determination). Applying these standards, we determine that the District Court's decision in this case -- not to admit certain expert testimony -- was within its discretion and therefore lawful.
  • Our emphasis on the word "may" thus reflects Daubert's description of the Rule 702 inquiry as "a flexible one." 509 U.S. at 594. Daubert makes clear that the factors it mentions do not constitute a "definitive checklist or test." 509 U.S. at 593. And Daubert adds that the gatekeeping inquiry must be "'tied to the facts'" of a particular "case." 509 U.S. at 591 (quoting United States v. Downing, 753 F.2d 1224, 1242 (CA3 1985)). We agree with the Solicitor General that "the factors identified in Daubert may or may not be pertinent in assessing reliability, depending  on the nature of the issue, the expert's particular expertise, and the subject of his testimony." Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 19. The conclusion, in our view, is that we can neither rule out, nor rule in, for all cases and for all time the applicability of the factors mentioned in Daubert, nor can we now do so for subsets of cases categorized by category of expert or by kind of evidence. Too much depends upon the particular circumstances of the particular case at issue. [emphasis added].
  • Daubert itself is not to the contrary. It made clear that its list of factors was meant to be helpful, not definitive. Indeed, those factors do not all necessarily apply even in every instance in which the reliability of scientific testimony is challenged. It might not be surprising in a particular case, for example, that a claim made by a scientific witness has never been the subject of peer review, for the particular application at issue may never previously have interested any scientist. Nor, on the other hand, does the presence of Daubert's general acceptance factor help show that an expert's testimony is reliable where the discipline itself lacks reliability, as, for example, do theories grounded in any so-called generally accepted principles of astrology or necromancy.
  • We do not believe that Rule 702 creates a schematism that segregates expertise by type while mapping certain kinds of questions to certain kinds of experts. Life and the legal cases that it generates are too complex to warrant so definitive a match. [emphasis added].
  •  Rather, we conclude that the trial judge must have considerable leeway in deciding in a particular case how to go about determining whether particular expert testimony is reliable. That is to say, a trial court should consider the specific factors identified in Daubert where they are reasonable measures of the reliability of expert testimony.
  • Our opinion in Joiner makes clear that a court of appeals is to apply an abuse-of-discretion standard when it "reviews a trial court's decision to admit or exclude expert testimony."

In Kumho Tire the Court ruled that the district court did not abuse its discretion by excluding the expert’s opinions in the case. In doing so, it refused to adopt definitive rules to apply to specific types of experts and cases. Daubert and Kumho Tire speak in terms of the trial court’s flexibility in determining whether experts should be allowed to testify.

The Mississippi Supreme Court is not properly emphasizing this flexibility in its opinions and is instead adopting the types of definitive rules that Kumho Tire frowned upon.

In Vaughn, the Court took a Daubert case and made a hard-and-fast rule that nurses cannot testify as to medical causation. In Hill v. Mills, the Court created another definitive rule requiring evidence to respond to a challenge to an expert’s opinions in all cases where a challenge is made, regardless of the circumstances. With all due respect for the Court, adopting definitive rules rather than limiting its ruling to a determination of whether the trial court abused its discretion in making a Daubert ruling is inconsistent with Kumho Tire.

Will Bardwell seemed to come to a similar conclusion in his blog:

Regardless of whether you think the Mississippi Supreme Court's treatment of Miss. Rule of Evidence 702 in Thursday's Hill v. Mills decision was correct, one can't help but conclude that it places a big, big land mine in front of trial litigants.

This is a case with bad facts, but fundamentally, my problem with the decision is that it wades (if not swims neck-deep) into the merits of the expert's opinion. Clearly he was inadequately prepared for the oncoming attack toward his conclusion. But if, as Justice Chandler argues in dissent, an expert is adequately qualified and offers an opinion based on the experience warranting that qualification, then the question of whether he's a quack is a question that should be left to the jury.

More fundamentally, though, the case seems to introduce what Justice Chandler calls a "burden-shifting scheme upon Daubert's reliability prong." And that's the biggest problem with this ruling. As a matter of law, Rule 702 doesn't (or, at least, it didn't) impose on courts the duty to weigh conflicting testimony and to decide whether one witness' testimony invalidates another's. That's a basic jury duty.

My problem with the opinion is that the Court appears to emphasize the result more than how the trial court reached its decision.

In Vaughn, the Court could have struck the expert without creating a rule that nurses can never testify about medical causation. In Hill, the Court could have found that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in striking the expert’s opinions under the facts and circumstances of the case, without creating a rule that requires in all circumstances the expert to have evidentiary support of his opinions.

But the Court went beyond that and issued definitive rules to apply to Daubert issues. This appears contrary to the rulings of the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled that Daubert does not lend itself to definitive rules.

Daubert determinations are fact specific and case specific. The trial court should have flexibility and considerable leeway in making Daubert determinations. Courts of appeals should then review the trial court’s findings under an abuse of discretion standard. Appellate courts should not take each new Daubert case as an opportunity to create another definitive rule to apply to a growing list of definitive Daubert rules.

But that is not the approach that the Mississippi Supreme Court appears to be taking.

Clarion-Ledger Report: Two Qualified for Election for Judge Barnett's Seat, None for Judge Yerger's Seat

The Clarion-Ledger ran this article on Monday about the upcoming elections to fill the seats of retiring Judge Yerger (Hinds County Circuit) and Barnett (Hinds County County). The article was largely a repeat from an October article that quoted Ashley Ogden and Jeff Weill stating that they would probably run for Judge Yerger’s seat. I wrote about and Ogden v. Weill race here.

On the County Court side, Jackson attorneys Trent Walker and Melvin Priester have qualified for Judge Barnett’s seat. Walker is a Brandon native and Jackson State graduate who lives in South Jackson. He has extensive experience on both the plaintiff and defense side in civil litigation as well as in the criminal defense arena. He recently obtained an acquittal in a murder trial in North Mississippi that sounded a little like the trial in My Cousin Vinnie. He currently works for Schwartz and Associates in Jackson.

Priester is a special circuit court judge and practices law in Jackson.

The Ledger article does not identify the date of the election or the deadline for qualifying for the races. I believe—and I am not certain about this—that the qualifying deadline is in May and the non-partisan elections are in November.