Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Quoted in a Recent Article in The Legal Intelligencer on the Impact of Obamacare On the Defense of Medical Expenses Claims in Civil Litigation Matters


Here is a LINK to a recent July 2, 2015 Legal Intelligencer article by Max Mitchell entitled "Can Affordable Care Act Ruling Help the Defense Bar?"

The article outlines the debate on the possible effect of the United States Supreme Court's ruling upholding the validity of Obamacare upon the ability of defense counsel in civil litigation matters to attack claims for recoveries for future medical expenses by asserting that the Plaintiff may have health insurance pursuant to Obamacare.

If you are unable to access the article online, please let me know at dancummins@comcast.net and I will email you a copy.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Mentioning Affordable Care Act at Trial Violates Collateral Source Rule

A recent trend in Pennsylvania personal injury matters involves defense counsel pointing to the Affordable Care Act to support an argument against any recovery of alleged medical expenses claimed by the Plaintiff.  The argument is that such expenses are or will be covered by insurance under the Affordable Care Act and therefore, they need not be awarded by a jury.

Plaintiffs argue that the well-settled Collateral Source Rule should preclude any mention of any benefits from a collateral source in an effort to preclude or diminish the recovery of compensation from the alleged wrongdoer.

While the Collateral Source Rule has been around for a while, the Affordable Care Act is a relatively new law.

By way of background and according to the Medicaid website, "[t]he Affordable Care Act  provides Americans with better health security by putting in place comprehensive health insurance reforms that will:
  • Expand coverage,
  • Hold insurance companies accountable,
  • Lower health care costs,
  • Guarantee more choice, and
  • Enhance the quality of care for all Americans.
The Affordable Care Act actually refers to two separate pieces of legislation — the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.L. 111-148) and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-152) — that, together expand Medicaid coverage to millions of low-income Americans and makes numerous improvements to both Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP).
This section focuses on the major provisions of the Affordable Care Act related to Medicaid and CHIP. If you are interested in the law as a whole, you can:
Source: http://medicaid.gov/affordablecareact/affordable-care-act.html


The issue of whether the defense in a personal injury litigation may refer to the Affordable Care Act during the course of a jury trial was recently addressed in the case of Deeds v. University of Pennsylvania, No. 755 EDA 2014, 2015 Pa. Super. 21 (Pa. Super. Jan. 30, 2015 Lazarus, Wecht, and Strassburger, J.J.)(Opinion by Wecht, J.).

In Deeds, a defense verdict in a medical malpractice case was reversed and remanded for a new trial. 

On appeal, the Plaintiff argued, in part, that she was "entitled to a new trial because the trial court violated the collateral source rule when it 'improperly allowed [the Defendants] to inform the jury that [the Plaintiffs’] substantial medical needs were all being attended to at little to no cost to [the Plaintiffs’] legal guardian due to the existence of state and federal education and medical benefits programs.”  Op. at p. 4.  The defense referred to Medicaid as well as to how President Obama's Affordable Care Act would impact the future care costs in the case.

The Superior Court found these references at trial to be a patent violation of the long-standing Collateral Source Rule, the purpose of which is to "avoid the preclusion or diminution of the damages otherwise recoverable from the wrongdoer based on compensation recovered from a collateral source," and, as such, remanded the case for a new trial.


Anyone wishing to review this decision may click this LINK.


I send thanks to Attorney Paul Oven of the Moosic, PA office of the Dougherty, Leventhal & Price law firm for bringing this case to my attention.



Source of imagewww.fenero.com.

Monday, October 15, 2012

ARTICLE: Tort Reform and Judicial Selection: Where the 2012 Presidential Candidates Stand

The following article of mine appeared in last week's edition of The Pennsylvania Law Weekly and is reprinted here with permission.  All rights reserved.(c)

Tort Reform and Judicial Selection:
Where the 2012 Presidential Candidates Stand


by
Daniel E. Cummins

Pennsylvania Law Weekly
10-09-2012



With the presidential election set to take place November 6, one of the issues that has not been at the forefront of this election season is the issue of tort reform. As that issue may be important to some of the readers of this column, what follows is a review of the tort reform position advocated by the presidential candidates.

Although the issue of tort reform has traditionally focused on medical malpractice and health insurance issues, changes in those areas could obviously impact other areas of personal injury litigation. In fact, if tort reform is ever passed in its entirety, these changes could drastically impact the way the plaintiffs bar and the defense bar conduct business in civil litigation matters.

Another important issue for attorneys with respect to this presidential election is each candidate's criteria for the potential selection of future members of the U.S. Supreme Court and the federal bench.

Legal Background of the Candidates

Some voters may base their votes, in part, upon the extent of the legal background of the candidates for president.

In that regard, President Barack Obama completed his magna cum laude J.D. degree at Harvard Law School in 1991. According to his biography as contained on his campaign website, following law school, Obama worked as an associate attorney for a Chicago law firm and focused on discrimination claims and voting rights cases. He was also a lecturer of constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School before leaving the practice of law altogether to focus on his political career.

Republican candidate Mitt Romney has a law degree as well. In his campaign, he has portrayed himself as more of a businessman than a lawyer. According to the biography materials on the Romney campaign website, Romney earned a bachelor of arts degree from Brigham Young University in 1971. In 1975, Romney obtained a joint J.D. and master's of business administration degrees from Harvard University. From Romney's biography, it appears that he then went on to spend a career in the business sector and did not practice law.

The Candidates on Tort Reform

Generally speaking, opinions regarding caps on personal injury damages are split along party lines, with the Republicans usually favoring them and the Democrats generally voting against arbitrary caps on damage awards and other limitations on access to the courts.

Romney has come out publicly in favor of national tort reform. He was recently quoted in the press as saying, "Another burden on our economic future is our out-of-control tort system. Last year, U.S. health care corporations spent more money on tort claims then they did on R&D. If innovation is the key to our long-term leadership, then some tort lawyers are cashing out our country's future."

"I spoke with one member of the plaintiffs bar the other day," Romney was quoted as saying. "He said that the tort lawyers are OK with state reform, but not national reform. You know what state level tort reform means — it means that as long as there is one lawsuit-friendly state, they can sue almost any major, deep-pocket company in America. No thanks. America needs national tort reform."

According to research, from his 1994 Senate race through his campaign for governor of Massachusetts in 2002, as well as throughout his four years as the governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney was a strong proponent of tort reform. As governor, he supported proposed legislation for capping personal injury claims in automobile-related cases. Romney also advocated for overhauling Massachusetts' medical malpractice system.

During his campaign for governor, Romney also supported capping punitive damages. In 2003, Romney supported a bill to cap non-economic awards at $500,000. In May 2006, the Romney administration in Massachusetts also issued a tort reform proposal that called for the closing of any loopholes in the $500,000 cap on non-economic damages in Massachusetts.

In contrast to the general position of the Republican party, rather than capping jury awards, the Democrats generally favor efforts to reduce medical errors and steps to increase the reporting of errors as ways to cut the overall number of medical malpractice cases.

As president, Obama has repeatedly confirmed that he is not willing to consider the capping of medical malpractice judgments, a tort reform proposal consistently put forward by Republicans. Some of the alternatives to caps on limits that Obama has suggested he may be willing to consider include having medical experts review malpractice suits before they go to court to ensure that the case meets some threshold of credibility. Obama has also suggested that he may consider, when appropriate, some form of mediation or arbitration in place of lawsuits.

In a 60 Minutes interview, the president conceded that the Democrats and Republicans may not be able to reach an agreement on the specific idea of capping damages. In that regard, Obama stated, "I think there's also been philosophical issues and differences about whether or not patients who really have been subject to negligence, whether it's fair to just say to them, 'You know what? You can only get a certain amount no matter how egregious it is.' So there's been a philosophical difference within the parties."

More recently, while still stopping short of supporting federal caps on damages awards, in his 2011 State of the Union Address, the president said he would be open to "medical malpractice reform to rein in frivolous lawsuits." Based on his prior statements on the issue, it would appear that Obama and the Democrats would not be willing to go as far on the issue of tort reform as desired by the Republicans or Romney.

The Candidates on Selection of Federal Judges

Another consideration in this ?presidential election campaign could ?be the future makeup of the U.S. Supreme Court and the rest of the federal judiciary.

In terms of the Supreme Court, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is 79 years ?old and dealing with health issues, Justice Antonin Scalia is 76 years old, Justice Anthony Kennedy is 76 years ?old and Stephen G. Breyer is 74 years old.

According to reports on the presidential candidates' positions in this regard, Romney has stated he would appoint judges to the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary who strictly follow the constitution and do not make laws from the bench. Romney has asserted he would support judges having philosophies similar to that of Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Justice Samuel A. Alito or Scalia. Romney is on record as having opposed the nomination of Justice Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court.

Sotomayor was nominated to the Supreme Court by Obama during his term as president. Obama also selected solicitor general Elena Kagan to replace Justice John Paul Stevens.

According to his views, Obama seeks the qualities of a high intellect, an appreciation of the limited role of the judiciary and "an understanding of how the world works and how ordinary people live" in judicial appointees.

As such, it is clear that justices nominated by Obama or Romney would have much different ideas of the Supreme Court's role in construing and interpreting the law. As such, it is readily apparent that the future makeup and the philosophy of the Supreme Court as well as the federal bench across the land will be directly impacted by which candidate makes it into the White House in the next election.

Be Heard With Your Vote

Whatever one's politics may be, the most important thing is to get out and exercise your constitutionally protected right to vote. The Democratic and Republican candidates have strong and divergent views on the issues of tort reform and the makeup of the federal bench. If Pennsylvania litigators wish to be heard on these matters and have any say on the future of civil litigation practice as we know it, all it takes is a quick visit to the voting booth on Election Day. •


Daniel E. Cummins is a partner and civil litigator with the Scranton law firm of Foley Comerford & Cummins. His civil litigation blog, Tort Talk, may be viewed at www.torttalk.com.

Source of image:  www.miamiagentmagazine.com.

Monday, May 10, 2010

President Obama Nominates Kagan To U.S. Supreme Court

On Monday, May 10, 2010, President Obama announced that he was nominating Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the United States Supreme Court. If she is appointed she will be the youngest justice and would give the Court three female Justices for the first time ever.


Some background information on the nominee can be found in this link to a May 9, 2010 article by a Peter Baker and a Jeff Zeleny in the New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/10/us/politics/10court.html?scp=1&sq=Obama%20Kagan&st=cse

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Justice Stevens to Retire From United States Supreme Court

By now you have surely heard that Justice John Paul Stevens, appointed to the Supreme Court in 1975 by President Gerald Ford, sent a letter to the White House on Friday morning announcing his intention to retire from the United States Supreme Court when it concludes its business over this upcoming summer. To read Justice Stevens' letter to the President, click this link (a short note, but still pretty neat to see): http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/us/20100409-JohnPaulStevens-Letter.pdf.

President Obama now has a rare opportunity to make back-to-back nominations to the Court. Whereas during the Reagan and Bush years, there were appointments of Justices with a decidedly conservative bent, it is anticipated by the commentators that President Obama will continue his efforts to create a Bench where the pendulum shifts to left of center.

In an oft-repeated quote issued during his campaign for the Presidency pertaining to the selection of judges, Obama stated, "We need somebody who's got the heart, the empathy to understand what it's like to be poor, or African-American, or gay, or disabled, or old. And that's the criteria by which I am going to be selecting my judges."

After Justice Stevens' announcement of his planned retirement, President Obama has been quoted as saying he would look for a candidate who possessed what he described as qualities similar to that of Justice Stevens: “an independent mind, a record of excellence and integrity, a fierce dedication to the rule of law and a keen understanding of how the law affects the daily lives of the American people.”

According to the news articles, the President may be considering up to ten candidates, but that three have emerged as front-runners: Merrick B. Garland, 58, a federal appeals court judge in Washington, D.C., Elena Kagan, 49, the solicitor general and former Harvard Dean, and Diane P. Wood, 59, a federal appeals judge and former fellow law professor of President Obama at the University of Chicago.

Source: Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Gary Savage. "Stevens' Retirement is Political Test for Obama." New York Times article (4/10/10).

Monday, August 10, 2009

Judge Thomas I. Vanaskie Nominated to Third Circuit Court of Appeals

On Friday, August 8, 2009, President Obama nominated Pennsylvania Middle District Federal Court Judge Thomas I. Vanaskie to serve on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals.

Judge Vanaskie is a graduate of Lycoming College and the Dickinson School of Law. After law school, he clerked for the Honorable William J. Nealon.

After many years in private practice, he was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the Middle District 15 years ago. He went on to serve as the Chief Judge of the Middle District Federal Court from September of 1999 through August of 2006.

With the appointment of Judge Vanaskie to the Third Circuit and another Judge to the Sixth Circuit, President Obama said these two nominees "have displayed exceptional dedication to their communities through their work" and "will be diligent, judicious and esteemed additions" to the courts.

Once Judge Vanaskie secures his seat on the Third Circuit, there will then be three openings on the bench in the Middle District of Pennsylvania. It remains to be seen who will be nominated for those openings.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

President Obama Nominates New Jersey U.S. District Court Judge Joseph A. Greenaway, Jr. for a seat on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals

Over this past weekend, on Saturday, June 20, 2009, President Obama nominated Judge Joseph A. Greenaway, Jr. for a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Judge Greenaway currently sits on the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey located in Newark.

Judge Greenaway was an adjunct professor at Rutgers School of Law in Newark from 2002 to 2006 and also currently teaches at Cardozo School of Law.

Judge Joseph A. Greenaway, Jr., 51, has served as a U.S. District Court Judge in New Jersey for more than 12 years. Prior to coming to the federal bench as appointed by President Clinton in 1996, he was an in-house general attorney at Johnson & Johnson for six years. Before that, Judge Greenaway served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Newark where he worked in the Criminal Division. Prior to that he also worked in private practice and clerked for Judge Vincent Broderick in the U.S District Court for the Southern District of New York.

The Judge is a graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School, the law school being President Obama's alma mater.

Judge Greenaway was an adjunct professor at Rutgers School of Law in Newark from 2002 to 2006 and currently teaches at Cardozo School of Law. If his nomination is approved, he will fill the seat vacated when Judge Samuel A. Alito was elevated to the United States Supreme Court.

There remains one more seat to be filled on the Third Circuit. There is speculation that that vacancy will be filled by way of a nomination of a Pennsylvania Judge.

Information for this post was obtained from www.webnewswire.com/node/459055 and other news sources.

Monday, May 18, 2009

A Look Ahead: President Obama Expresses Thoughts on Selection Criteria for Next United States Supreme Court Justice

The article below, by Charles Babington of the Associated Press and copied from the May 18, 2009 Times Leader newspaper from Wilkes-Barre, outlines President Obama's philosophy in terms of choosing the next United States Supreme Court Justice to replace Justice Souter. It looks like, after years of a rightward direction, the pendulum of the Court's decisions may start swaying more to the left someday down the line.

May 18

‘Empathy’ in judge divisive:
GOP senators interpret Obama’s comments on high court nominee as code for activist, partisan jurist.


by CHARLES BABINGTON Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — As a senator, Barack Obama said President George W. Bush’s Supreme Court nominees John Roberts and Sam Alito were clearly qualified. He voted against them anyway.

In a series of votes and speeches more than three years ago, Obama strongly defended a senator’s right to oppose high court nominees because of their philosophical and political views, not just on the narrower grounds of character and temperament.

Republican senators might cite Obama’s actions if they decide to make a serious stand against the current president’s eventual choice to replace retiring Justice David Souter.

But conservatives will find less comfort in the more important details of Obama’s comments from 2005 to 2007 about the Supreme Court. That’s when he outlined the type of justice he wants: someone with a heart as well as brains, who empathizes with the downtrodden and is wary of the establishment’s power.

Obama used almost exactly the same language this month. “I will seek someone who understands that justice isn’t about some abstract legal theory,” he said. He wants someone with “that quality of empathy, of understanding and identifying with people’s hopes and struggles.”

Such language worries many conservatives.

If a justice relies on empathy, then “politics, preferences, personal preferences and feelings might take the place of being impartial and deciding cases based upon the law,” GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah said recently on ABC’s “This Week.”

The key question for nominees is will they be “fair to the rich, the poor, the weak, the strong, the sick, the disabled?” asked Hatch, a longtime member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which reviews Supreme Court nominations.

As a senator, Obama said he felt Bush’s nominees were too quick to side with the rich and powerful.

Roberts, now chief justice, was qualified and talented enough for the court, then-Illinois. Sen. Obama said in a September 2005 speech. But Roberts, he said, “has far more often used his formidable skills on behalf of the strong in opposition to the weak.”

The young senator said he probably would have no trouble with Roberts’ rulings in 95 percent of the high court’s cases. But “what matters on the Supreme Court is those 5 percent of cases that are truly difficult,” when “legal process alone” will not suffice, Obama added.

“That last mile can only be determined on the basis of one’s deepest values, one’s core concerns, one’s broader perspectives on how the world works, and the depth and breadth of one’s empathy,” he said. “In those difficult cases, the critical ingredient is supplied by what is in the judge’s heart.”

Hatch said that emphasis on a nominee’s “politics, feelings and preferences” raises red flags. “Those are all code words for an activist judge, who is going to, you know, be partisan on the bench,” Hatch said.

Obama and his fellow Senate Democrats were in the minority in 2005, and some liberal groups implored them to try to block Roberts with a delaying tactic known as a filibuster. Obama called the idea “a quixotic fight” that he would not support.

Four months later, however, he joined a futile Democratic effort to block Alito’s confirmation with a filibuster.

“I have no doubt that Judge Alito has the training and qualifications necessary to serve,” Obama said in a January 2006 speech in the Senate chamber. But he said he was “deeply troubled” because Alito as a federal judge “consistently sides on behalf of the powerful against the powerless; on behalf of a strong government or corporation against upholding American’s individual rights.”

As a presidential candidate, Obama continued to stress the plight of people who lacked advantages when dealing with powerful people and institutions.

In November 2007, he said the Supreme Court should “protect people who may be vulnerable in the political process: the outsider, the minority, those who are vulnerable, those who don’t have a lot of clout.”

“If we can find people who have life experience, and they understand what it means to be on the outside, what it means to have the system not work for them, that’s the kind of person I want on the Supreme Court,” he said.

At a different campaign appearance that year, Obama said: “We need somebody who’s got the heart to recognize, the empathy to recognize what it’s like to be a young teenage mom. The empathy to understand what it’s like to be poor or African-American or gay or disabled or old.”

Because there are only 40 GOP senators today, Republicans have little chance of blocking Obama’s eventual nominee. That hasn’t stopped conservative groups from urging senators to sharply question the judicial philosophies of the president and his nominee.

For example, the Committee for Justice says on its Web site: “The next Supreme Court nominee must be asked whether they share the president’s decidedly activist view that judges should consider, not just the law and facts, but also empathy for certain classes of people, including African-Americans, the poor, gays, and the disabled.”


The commentary in other articles on the topic of the next selection mainly predict that the nominee will be a woman, particularly since President Bush replaced Sandra Day O'Connor with a man, Justice Alito. It is also anticipated that the nominee will be relatively young so that they could spend a decent amount of time on the Court in the hopes that they would counter the decisions of the relatively youthful Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito.