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Fair Play for Navy Veterans
Mesothelioma has a particular affinity
for navy veterans. Caused by asbestos, mesothelioma is a cancer that
begins in the lining of the lungs or abdomen and requires timely,
rational, cutting edge therapies to provide maximal help for patients.
Survival rates from the time of diagnosis may measure in weeks or
months, depending on factors such as staging, cell type, age, and the
therapies used.[1]
Navy veterans suffer disproportionately from this cancer, and shipyard
cities like San Diego, Seattle and Los Angeles reflect
this in the number of people there who die from mesothelioma.[2]
Just like they need
medical care, navy veterans need a level playing field in the courts.
Navy vets who pursue
civil claims are confronted by loopholes in the law that allow shrewd
asbestos defense lawyers to either harmfully delay the prosecution of a
claim (called “federal officer” removal to federal court), or delay the
claim altogether (called the” MDL Black Hole”).
These two procedural
weapons have been sanctioned by the federal government, which ultimately
must answer to the most massive, unforgivable miscarriage of justice in
the history of this country. The solution? Court sanctions for frivolous
removals whose primary objective is delay and an order from the US
Supreme Court voiding the 1991 order that created the “black hole.”
In the Navy
Naval ships built
from the 1930’s to the mid-1970’s used asbestos in numerous components,
but nowhere more intensively than in the engine and boiler rooms. Navy
machinists, officers and sailors breathed in the lethal asbestos while
repairing, maintaining or replacing hi-temp equipment. These hot, dusty,
below-deck compartments were often thick with asbestos fibers, and
8-hour work shifts in the engine room were as lethal as swimming in any
toxic soup. Navy personnel and civilian shipyard workers oftentimes
tragically brought the poisonous fibers home to their families as dust
that covered their hair, skin and clothing.
As a result, of the
4,000 Americans diagnosed with mesothelioma every year, about a third
were exposed in the navy or in navy shipyards. This number does not
include family members who contracted the illness from the “take-home”
asbestos.
It can take as long
as 50 years from the time of exposure to the onset of mesothelioma
symptoms.[3]
When the victim of asbestos poisoning gets diagnosed, the shock is
extraordinary: primary care physicians who know little about
mesothelioma treatment options may deliver the news by saying, “Get your
affairs in order and take a long cruise to Tahiti.”
[4]
For a navy veteran
or shipyard worker who was poisoned aboard a seagoing vessel, being
advised to “take a cruise” is its own special kind of irony. Although
veterans with asbestos cancers face treatments that are expensive,
elusive, and daunting, excellent medical care is available with
specialists such as Dr. Robert Cameron of UCLA’s David Geffen School of
Medicine, and each year more and more mesothelioma patients find their
way to his office. Regrettably, as we have written before, the VA does
not have a current meso research and treatment program for vets.
Double Ordeal
Treatment options do
exist to extend the life of some mesothelioma patients. Surgery,
chemotherapy, radiation, and immunotherapy are all part of the
specialist’s arsenal.[5]
Once the treatment begins—treatments which can drain a family’s
financial resources—many patients seek legal redress. They need to pay
for travel, for the expensive chemotherapy and surgery. They need
compensation to make up for lost wages, or loss of future earning
capacity. And they need it fast. The only thing that grows more quickly
than the tumor is the stack of medical bills.
The defense knows
that time is not on a meso patient’s side, so they attempt to “run out
the clock.” When a meso patient files his case in state court, alleging
exposures while serving on a navy vessel, the asbestos company lawyers
lick their chops. Why? Under a tortured reading of the rules of
jurisdiction, they contend that federal law, not state law, should
apply. The product manufacturer’s theory is that they made, sold
or used asbestos inside Navy ships because they were ordered to
do so by the federal government. Consequently, they argue, the case
should be removed from state to federal court.
Why would an
asbestos company care if the case was heard in state court or federal
court? The answer is in the question. Victims want access to a jury.
Defendants despise juries. Delay is a victim’s worst enemy. Conversely,
delay is the mass poisoner’s best friend. The fact is that if you’ve got
mesothelioma and you served your country in the navy, if your case gets
removed to federal court, you will never see a jury trial. Never.
In many states such
as California, if a case is not resolved during the life time of the
patient, and the patient dies from his cancer, then a big percentage of
his compensation expires with him. States like California do not allow
widows to recover the damages for the decedent’s pain, suffering,
anguish, and bodily disfigurement. The law penalizes the victim for
dying of his injury, and rewards the poisoner for making a product so
lethal that it kills quickly. The law rewards the bad guy for hiring
lawyers who know how to manipulate the procedural law so that their
corporate client gets a windfall when the case drags on and their victim
perishes.
How the Shell
Game Works
When a navy veteran
with mesothelioma files a personal injury lawsuit in state court, the
corporate defendant will often invoke a federal rule that allows it to
“remove” the case from state to federal court (think of it as an
automatic transfer from a state courthouse to a federal courthouse down
the street). The wrongdoer will contend that federal not state law
should apply. Their argument is that when a claim results from actions
directed by a federal officer, the best place to try the case is before
a federal judge in federal court with a federally empanelled jury under
federal law.
As Jeffrey Simon,
one of the top asbestos trial lawyers in America says, “If they want to
try the case in federal court, great. Bring it on. But that’s not
what they want. They want to delay until the plaintiff is dead or
the case vanishes into the MDL ‘black hole,’ never to see light of day.”
When the wrongdoer
files its motion to remove the case to federal court, the stakes become
life or death, because if the case is successfully removed it is
assigned to a special multi-district litigation (MDL) federal court in
Pennsylvania.[6]
The asbestos MDL is commonly referred to as “a black hole” because cases
sent to it languish with no discovery or trials every taking place[7]
while the victims die awaiting a trial that will never occur. The
injustice is so great that it mirrors the horrific “Trial” by Franz
Kafka.
The solution is
simple. Give the patients their day in state or federal court by voiding
the judicial order that created MDL-875. And if defendants continue to
trot out feeble arguments simply to delay, slap them with sanctions.
Outrage by the
Court
To understand the
finality of having your case removed to federal court and then sent to
MDL-875 in Pennsylvania, consider the following from a memorandum filed
with federal court in South Carolina protesting the “black hole”:[8]
“The data collected by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict
Litigation clearly illustrates what an empty promise MDL-875 is, even
for the sick and dying. By August 10, 2000, more than 86,000 cases had
been transferred to MDL-875. Yet, during Fiscal Year 1998 only four
cases were remanded back for trial. In Fiscal Year 1999, only six cases
were remanded back for trial.”
Other courts have
recognized the injustice of the current scheme.[9]
Veterans with mesothelioma, quite simply, deserve their day in court.
The defendants who
intentionally used asbestos knowing that it would disable, injure, and
kill those exposed to it, deny that removal to federal court is a delay
tactic. They argue that that removal to federal court is perfectly
allowable because of the federal officer rule cited above.
The argument that
removal to federal court is proper under “federal officer” jurisdiction
for navy veterans with mesothelioma is both absurd and cruel. Stripped
of all the gobbledygook, the asbestos companies are claiming that the
navy ordered them to use asbestos without warning about the dangers.
They are claiming essentially that the federal government put a gun to
their head and commanded them to use a deadly product and, presumably
over their sincere and overwrought protestations, commanded them not to
warn about the danger.
Can you imagine
that? The same companies who tested the asbestos, knew about the
dangers, concealed the dangers from the consumers, thwarted medical
research on asbestos, and raked in the profits, stand in front of a
judge and argue with a straight face that they, as good humanitarians,
wanted to warn, but were ordered not to by the bad old Federal
Government, which of course everybody loves to hate (unless you’re one
of their favorite no big contractors).
No defendant has
ever shown, after thousands of asbestos trials, that any federal officer
ever directed a defendant not to warn of asbestos hazards, through the
use of placards, notices, placards or manuals. To the contrary, military
specifications manuals instructed that manufacturers of shipboard
equipment were specifically permitted to provide “notes, cautions and
warnings” in the technical manual “to emphasize important and critical
instructions . . . in accordance with the following definitions: . . .
(c) ‘Warning” – Operating procedures, practices, etc., which will result
in personal injury or loss of life if not correctly followed.’”[10]
Jumping through the
flaming hoops to douse this silly claim takes time off the clock while
both sides brief the issues, set the motions for hearing, argue the
motions, and sit idly by while the federal judges huddle and make their
decision. Though federal courts will often deny the wrongdoer’s request
and send the case back to state court, by the time the wheels of justice
have lurched forward the patient has lost precious time. The simple
solution is to stop allowing MDL to swallow up these cases.
Lawyerly Lies
For wrongdoers,
threatening a victim with federal court removal is win-win. If the case
gets removed, it is sent to wither away in the basement of a federal
court in Pennsylvania. If the case is returned to state court, the
plaintiff has lost valuable time because his mesothelioma has likely
progressed.
A former machinist
on an aircraft carrier and mesothelioma patient put it like this: “These
companies made a bunch of money selling their equipment to the navy
without warning us that decades later we’d be dying from using it. I
think the officers on my ship were as uninformed about asbestos as the
rest of us. They didn’t make the boilers, or the turbines, or pumps, or
the gaskets or pipe covering. The navy wasn’t negligent then, but if
they continue to do business with these corporations that are killing us
and covering it up, and if the federal courts allow the crimes to
continue, then maybe my government is negligent now. I guarantee it, if
the Navy threatened to stop ordering equipment from GE or Westinghouse,
they’d ‘fess up and settle real fast.”
Tell the family of
Admiral Elmo Zumwalt that they should not grieve the loss of their
father, who died of mesothelioma. Tell the family that Admiral Zumwalt
was responsible for his own demise, because he supposedly ordered
corporate America to sell the navy
asbestos lade machinery without warning sailors about the dangers of
asbestos.
The time to help
navy veterans get their day in court? After more than 86,000
miscarriages of justice, perhaps the time is…now
*** POSTED MARCH
26, 2007 ***
[2]
The San Diego Union-Tribune, March 15, 2004
[4]
The Anniston Star, March 30,
2005
[6] Multi-district litigation courts are
created pursuant to federal law, 28 U.S.C. §1407
[7] In re
Maine Asbestos Cases, 44 F.Supp.2d
368, 374 (D.Me 1999).
[8] In the United States District Court for
the District of South Carolina, Rock Hill Division, Milton Duncan
and Mary Ann Duncan vs. Alfa Laval, Inc., et. al., Plaintiffs’ Emergency Motion for
Remand for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction and Memorandum in
Support Thereof
[9] The United States District Court for the
Southern District of Texas found that if the cases were not
remanded, “They will surely be transferred to the
MDL Court in the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania. There are thousands of asbestos cases pending in that
forum, and, if history be any indicator, Plaintiff’s claims against
the Remaining Defendants will not be heard for many years. Keeping
these claims in federal court will not increase efficiency and
expediency. Rather the opposite is true.” Madden v. Able Supply
Company, 205 F.Supp.2d 695, 702 (May 27, 2002).
[10] MilSpecs Manual, 1961
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