Do You Want To Be A Plaintiff?

I’m sitting in my office, writing an introduction to a response brief once again because the Defendants filed yet another senseless motion.  To a non-attorney, it’s harassment.  To this attorney, that is exactly what it is, and we should call it that.  This is a case where our client was turned away by other attorneys because a series of battles to get any sort of justice from any one of the many bad actors was clearly in store.

Fortunately, he heard about us, and we agreed without hesitation to take the case on.  He’s paralyzed.  He did nothing wrong.  Still, years later, I’m writing another intro to explain to the court why we are asking once again for a ruling in our favor.  We don’t quit.  We don’t back down.  But, we do get frustrated with the system.

Of course, I don’t like seeing my clients jerked around.  But to them, it’s much more than that.  It’s years of being denied.  It’s years of no or inadequate medical care.  It’s years of no income because the injuries prevent the Plaintiff from working.  So, I get over myself, and start typing.

The introduction to a legal brief is sometimes the only place you can strongly appeal to a judge from an emotional standpoint.  That is why it had me thinking across many cases and many Plaintiffs we have represented who also were seriously or catastrophically injured or worse.

Just after I had graduated law school, one of my mentors said often to me and to anyone that would listen, “there is the law, and then there is what is right.  They are not always one and the same.”  That too is why we take chances and fight for clients who don’t have the law solidly in their favor.  We fight the constant battles because we know it is the right thing to do.

Perhaps you have heard about one such case that was very much in public view in Savannah.  A young mother of two, Shanta Greene was catastrophically injured when on July 2, 2010, a large limb of a decaying, centuries-old Live Oak Tree literally fell from the sky above.  The massive limb brought to a halt the pickup truck in which she was riding, and it impaled her, as it crashed through the windshield and into the cab of the truck.  Most have heard of the incident and of the trial that rocked Savannah in 2013, but most likely have no idea of the gravity of the injuries she sustained.  Shanta’s own Life Care Planner made her leave the courtroom when she testified at trial, because she did not want to damage Shanta’s incredible strength and drive to overcome as many odds and challenges as she could.

We hear often about “ambulance chasers,” how we are a “litigious society,” how “insurance rates go up because of lawsuits,” and so on.  People following Shanta’s trial against the City of Savannah heard that the jury delivered the largest verdict against the City ever.  What we don’t hear about so much is that Shanta had to fight for three years to have her day in court.  She was denied completely for three years.  She lived in poverty and had to sleep sitting up in her living room chair for three years because her bed was not an option due to the constant, debilitating pain.  I could go on and on with more examples, but you get the idea.  There was no doubt that she was catastrophically injured.  There was no doubt that she did nothing wrong to cause her injuries.  Still, attorneys turned her away before she heard of us because the legal footing regarding both liability and suing the sovereign City was not rock solid.

Even those Plaintiffs with the law solidly in support of their cases are not always treated by the Defendants and their attorneys any differently.  The tactics are usually the same:  Deny, deny, deny.  Delay, delay, delay.  Wear the Plaintiff and their lawyers out with constant and expensive work and uncertainty.  Make the Plaintiff say “uncle” and settle for less just to have it all over.

What many did not hear about Shanta’s case is that even after the verdict, the battles did not end.  The City appealed, and then, finally, after more fighting, the case settled.  It took Shanta three years to have a jury of her peers tell her that she deserved justice that the City denied her.  Three years later, in early 2017, she is facing more risky surgeries, any one of which could lead to complications and more surgeries down the road.  Surgeries have been a constant staple in Shanta’s life since that day in July of 2010.  Essentially, even when it’s over, it’s not over.

This is the plight of the Plaintiff that got the largest verdict in history against the City of Savannah: twelve million dollars.  She was and is now in the best position.

Do you want to be a Plaintiff?

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