More litigation is not the solution
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FLO MARTIN
What’s the definition for 600,000 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?
Yeah, yeah, I hear you. You’re telling me that you already know that
joke, huh? Well, I know of several parents in Newport-Mesa who
haven’t heard yet, so here’s the answer: a good beginning.
These same parents, featured in the Pilot article “Parents’ suit
going to the state high court,” on Feb. 13, are heading all the way
to the state Supreme Court to sue a former director of a now defunct
Costa Mesa preschool. And they’re suing the small church that housed
the preschool. What do they expect to gain? Reprisal? Recognition?
Revenge?
Who, pray tell, talked them into such craziness? A lawyer, or
maybe two, or maybe a multiple of six? Haven’t they heard that the
primary motive for most legal suits is profit? What kind of a reward
is that?
Over my 60-plus years, I’ve seen my share of litigation.
Lesson No. 1: A five-car chain rear-ender caused by a drunk driver
doing 50-plus miles an hour, who plowed into the stopped car I was
in, left me with two broken legs. I had to drop out of school for a
semester. I lost a UC Berkeley Regents’ annual scholarship. Medical
expenses were paid by the driver’s insurance company but the lawyer
took 40% of the $3,000 awarded to my family. We ended up with a net
loss.
Lessons No. 2, 3 and 4: I have been a juror in three trials. The
first was a rinky-dink waste of time and money. The second was an 11
to 1 hung jury, a very frustrating week for all. The third lasted six
months, with fancy-talking lawyers on both sides.
Lesson No. 5: My car insurance rates tripled after I was involved
in an accident set up by a shyster lawyer and crooked chiropractor
scam. The “victims” were awarded $10,000 for having lived through a
15 mile an hour tap on the rusty, already dented rear bumper of their
van after the driver had made a very sudden stop, for no apparent
reason.
But, my luck turned when I ended up as the rear-end victim, twice
no less. The first time was at a stop sign. The driver turned out to
be a chiropractor. Boy, oh, boy, did my family and I have a few
laughs at his expense. I chuckled over the prospect of “collecting” a
lifetime of chiropractic care as a settlement. But, no, that’s not my
style. No harm, no foul. Mr. Chiropractor simply paid for my car
repairs and we both went on our merry way.
The second collision happened on the San Diego Freeway. The driver
behind me was preoccupied with a cellphone and his morning coffee had
not yet kicked in, so he didn’t notice the slowing traffic. My
station wagon rear door ended up looking like an accordion for the
second time. And, wouldn’t you know it, the Martin clan had another
huge laugh. This time the driver was a lawyer.
I’m laughing right now, just thinking about the damage I could
have done to his wallet. But, no, that still wasn’t my style. I told
him so. And, would you believe, as a “thank-you,” the lawyer asked me
to sign a thick packet of legal forms stating that I would never,
ever, ever sue him? Sign I did. Then, and only then, did my car get
the necessary face-lift, or I should say, rear-lift.
Enough digression. Let’s get back to the South Coast Early
Childhood Learning Center lawsuit. Didn’t the parents willingly
enroll their toddlers in the school? Didn’t the parents tour the
facilities beforehand? Didn’t the parents notice the hazardous
chain-link fence every morning when dropping their kids off? Didn’t
the parents wonder about the fence every day while collecting their
kids?
Two beautiful little people died and lots more were hurt, but not
because of a negligent school director or a negligent church. This
lawsuit has no merit. Even the lawyers know that.
* FLO MARTIN is a retired high school teacher, lectures part-time
at Cal State Fullerton in the Foreign Language Education program and
supervises student teachers in their classrooms.
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