http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/casey/5325241.html
Incredible
lawsuit tales
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle
Recently one of my oldest and dearest friends, a man whose Harvard Ph.D. doesn't
begin to measure his intellect and wisdom, sent out one of those mass e-mails
meant to amuse and appall.
"OMG! It's
even worse than we thought," his message began. It was followed by
something called the annual Stella Awards, a list of the year's seven "most
outlandish lawsuits and verdicts in the
In last place
was the tale of Kathleen Robertson of
"The store
owners were understandably surprised by the verdict, considering the running
toddler was her own son," the e-mail said.
Numbers six
through two are more ridiculous. Then comes numero uno.
"This
year's runaway First Place Stella Award winner was Mrs. Merv Grazinski, of
"Not
surprisingly, the motor home left the freeway, crashed and overturned. Also not
surprisingly, Mrs. Grazinski sued Winnebago for not putting in the owner's
manual that she couldn't actually leave the driver's seat while the cruise
control was set.
"The
The e-mail
concludes: "Are we, as a society, getting more stupid?"
The
answer may well be yes, stupid enough to believe that this sort of nonsense
really happens.
My friend was
not the only credulous one. A Nexis search for the name "Merv Grazinski"
turned up scores of articles, the vast majority buying the Winnebago story as
gospel truth.
More than a few
are lazy columnists, who were too dazzled by marvelous stories to do even the
easiest research to determine whether they were true.
Among outlets
falling for the hoax were the New York Daily News, CNN and U.S. News & World
Report.
American writers
weren't alone in their gullibility. Even more credulous mentions of the daffy
Mrs. Grazinski (or Mr. Grazinski in some accounts) appeared in foreign papers.
Readers in
To its credit,
the Austin American-Statesman debunked the story of Ms. Robertson and her
toddler several years ago, when the "Stella Awards" started making the
rounds.
Los Angeles
Times reporter Myron Levin went one better. He called Winnebago.
"Wide
acceptance of the myths has been an eye-opener for Sheila Davis, public
relations manager for Winnebago Industries in
I'm not saying
that frivolous lawsuits don't happen. I've been sued twice in my 40 years in the
business.
Once was by a
retired cop who was involved in a truck-theft operation. Funny thing was, I
didn't even name him in the article.
The other time
was by a small-time charity operator who was offended by coverage of his request
for a huge government subsidy.
He had a hard
time showing damages. Contributions to his anemic treasury had risen modestly in
the wake of publicity, apparently because of an increase of name recognition for
his organization.
Both suits were
tossed by judges.
That is the fate
of most frivolous suits. Even ones such as the notorious McDonald's scalding
coffee suit are not nearly so silly as they become in manufactured legends.
The Albuquerque
jury did award Stella Liebeck, 79, (after whom the "Stellas" are
named) almost $3 million after she spilled coffee on her lap, causing
third-degree burns, a week's hospitalization and skin grafts.
But the jury had
learned that McDonald's served its coffee much hotter than other restaurants,
that it had received more than 700 previous complaints and had paid more than
$500,000 in earlier settlements.
Liebeck
originally asked for just $20,000 to cover her medical bills and other expenses,
and that McDonald's serve its coffee at a more moderate temperature. McDonald's
offered her $800.
Shortly before
trial, a mediator recommended McDonald's pay $225,000. The company said no.
Jurors awarded
$160,000 in damages and $2.7 million in punitives, hoping to change the
company's behavior. The judge lowered the punitives to $480,000, and the case
settled for an undisclosed amount, presumably less.
Here's the
lesson: The next time an Internet tale makes you think things are even worse
than you thought, check it out. Especially when the tale suggests that the
American system is stacked against wealthy corporations.
One easy way: www.snopes.com, an excellent site that investigates urban myths. It took less than 30 seconds to ask for "Stella Awards" and receive the verdict: "False."