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What You (And Juries) Don't Know

Most people are very surprised to learn about certain
facts and procedures that occur in our legal system, and
that are very common in personal injury claims.
A JURY will never know if the defendant has INSURANCE
and if so, how much. The attorneys and judge are
prohibited from even mentioning whether a party is
insured, and if they do, a mistrial will typically
occur.
Practically speaking, if a case is filed in court, or if
a trial does occur, the defendant will always have
INSURANCE (unless the defendant is so wealthy to be
self-insured). A plaintiff's lawyer will not devote 100
or more hours to pursue a claim unless there is a
guaranteed source of recovery (i.e., an insurance policy
to pay a verdict). If you find yourself on a jury in a
civil case, rest assured the defendant will have the
means to pay any verdict that is handed down.
The defendant’s insurance company hires the lawyer,
decides when to settle, and pretty much makes all of the
decisions when a case is in litigation. Most of the time
a defendant has little, if any, say about how the case
is defended or if a settlement should occur. Decisions
about whether to settle, if by how much, are always made
by the INSURANCE CARRIER .
Filing a lawsuit does not mean your case will be heard
by a jury. Most personal injury attorneys would rather
have a JUDGE decide the case instead of a jury. This is
because too many jurors are highly SUSPICIOUS and
SKEPTICAL of injured plaintiffs, and often refuse to
give money for legitimate injuries based on a variety of
reasons. To have your case resolved by a jury, you must
file a specific document with the court and pay a $250
JURY FEE. If the plaintiff or defendant fails to file a
JURY DEMAND, then the judge will hear and decide the
case (unless the case settles).
In more than 90-95% of personal injury lawsuits, it is
the DEFENDANT (or more precisely the defendant’s
INSURANCE COMPANY ) that requests a jury! Why is this
true? Because juries will typically award less money
(and sometimes no money) in personal injury cases than
the judge will award.
Insurance companies are fully aware of the statistics
that show a jury will typically award much LESS MONEY to
an injured plaintiff than an experienced judge,
especially in certain types of claims, like medical
malpractice, soft tissue injuries, and other cases which
may be difficult to prove.
In most MEDICAL MALPRACTICE lawsuits (at least 90-95% of
cases), it is the doctor's defense attorney that files
the Jury Demand and pays the required jury fee of $250!
Yep, doctors complain of "runaway jury awards," yet the
DOCTORS' ATTORNEYS routinely ask that the cases against
them be heard by a jury!
Most plaintiff’s attorneys will try to resolve smaller
injury claims (less than $50,000) through settlement
negotiations or by court-ordered arbitration. A program
known as MANDATORY ARBITRATION allows the court to
appoint a retired judge or experienced attorney (someone
who is approved by the court) to decide the case in an
expedient and cost effective manner, as an alternative
to going to trial in court.
You can APPEAL an ARBITRATION AWARD by requesting that
the case be tried in court. However, if the party who
appeals the award fails to do better at trial, that
party will have to pay the non-appealing party’s
attorney fees and costs.
In more than 90-95% of personal injury claims that go to
arbitration and are appealed, it is the DEFENDANT or the
defendant’s INSURANCE COMPANY who appeal the award! Most
plaintiff attorneys will rarely appeal an arbitration
award because it creates a significant risk that the
individual client may have to pay for the defendant’s
insurance defense costs.
If an arbitration award is appealed and goes to trial,
the jury will never be told that the case was first
resolved by arbitration. And of course, the jury will
never be told the amount of the arbitrator’s award. The
jury is then left with the impression that the plaintiff
and his/her attorney has forced them to come to court to
decide a small case that should have been SETTLED .
Often times the jury will resent a plaintiff in a small
case, believing that the plaintiff is "litigation crazy"
and then award the plaintiff a very small percentage of
what would be considered a fair verdict (or sometimes
nothing at all as payback for filing a lawsuit in such a
small case).
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