[Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

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WildBill
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#46

Post by WildBill »

I believe that this explains the law:
Charles L. Cotton wrote:There was a lot of misunderstanding about the civil liability protection afforded by the "Castle Doctrine" bill when it passed. Many people thought it prevents someone from being sued, but it does not. No law can be written denying people access to the courts; it would be unconstitutional. The "Castle Doctrine" grants immunity from civil liability, not immunity from suit. You can still be sued, but you will win and probably win early in the case. Chas
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#47

Post by KFP »

:iagree: I have the utmost trust in Charles's professional opinion. You may also notice the dac weighed in on both of these threads, so I trust that he has some personal knowledge of the process through his friend.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#48

Post by WildBill »

KFP wrote::iagree: I have the utmost trust in Charles's professional opinion. You may also notice the dac weighed in on both of these threads, so I trust that he has some personal knowledge of the process through his friend.
This brings up another question. "What is civil liability"? Is it only monetary damages? Could you be sued for something other than "civil liability"?
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#49

Post by KFP »

WildBill wrote:
KFP wrote::iagree: I have the utmost trust in Charles's professional opinion. You may also notice the dac weighed in on both of these threads, so I trust that he has some personal knowledge of the process through his friend.
This brings up another question. "What is civil liability"? Is it only monetary damages? Could you be sued for something other than "civil liability"?
I'm getting close to the point that I'll need to draw a diagram for myself to keep from getting confused. :lol:

I believe that it is only monetary damages.

OJ still owes the Goldman family a rather hefty sum for being found liable for the death of their son during the civil trial, although the glove didn't fit...so the jury in the criminal trail had to acquit.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#50

Post by jester »

WildBill wrote:
KFP wrote::iagree: I have the utmost trust in Charles's professional opinion. You may also notice the dac weighed in on both of these threads, so I trust that he has some personal knowledge of the process through his friend.
This brings up another question. "What is civil liability"? Is it only monetary damages? Could you be sued for something other than "civil liability"?
I'm not sure what you're asking. You could for example be sued for divorce, or the plaintiff could seek an injunction (e.g. TRO, gag order) rather than money.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#51

Post by WildBill »

jester wrote:
WildBill wrote:
KFP wrote::iagree: I have the utmost trust in Charles's professional opinion. You may also notice the dac weighed in on both of these threads, so I trust that he has some personal knowledge of the process through his friend.
This brings up another question. "What is civil liability"? Is it only monetary damages? Could you be sued for something other than "civil liability"?
I'm not sure what you're asking. You could for example be sued for divorce, or the plaintiff could seek an injunction (e.g. TRO, gag order) rather than money.
I am not sure what I'm asking either. :mrgreen:

Restricting this to the OP about the Castle Doctrine, could the person "win" something in a lawsuit other than monetary damages? Maybe like a "gag order" that says the home owner couldn't say anything bad about the guy he shot?
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#52

Post by srothstein »

baldeagle wrote:Then civil immunity is meaningless, because it is whatever the civil trial jury says it is.
Almost true. It means what the courts say it means, up through the Supreme Court. Of course, this is according to the realism school of legal philosophy. On something like this, I have to agree with their thoughts.
You're right we have a disagreement. To me, if civil immunity is to have any meaning at all, it means you cannot be sued for an act that qualifies under the immunity clause. Diplomats have immunity. It means they cannot be sued. Not that they cannot be found liable. You cannot even file a suit against them. Your contention is that, in the case of the use of deadly force, immunity merely means you cannot be found liable after you have been sued if the jury finds you not liable.
Almost true but not quite. You can file a lawsuit against a diplomat, just as I could arrest one when i was an officer. As soon as he proves his diplomatic immunity, I had to let him go and the court would dismiss the lawsuit, but the immunity still had to be proven to the court.

As Charles pointed out in the other thread referenced by KFP, you cannot stop a person's access to the courts, just direct the court's verdict.

Let me put this to you a different way. If the suit could not be filed, who made the decision that the shooting was justified? I have shown why no one could make that binding decision under our system, so the court must be able to make that decision, which requires a trial or hearing of some type
.
The legal definition of immunity is "exemption from a duty or liability that is granted by law to a person or class of persons " cite. Your contention is that you still have a duty to defend yourself in a civil suit and that you must prove your innocence before the immunity applies. IANAL, but I doubt seriously that is what civil immunity means.

My question to you would be, if immunity means what you think it means, then why was the wording of the law changed from "It is an affirmative defense to a civil action for damages" to "is immune from civil liability" for the legal use of deadly force? I believe the wording was changed precisely because, in the former case, a citizen who used deadly force lawfully still had to go through the process of a civil suit. Otherwise, the change in wording is meaningless.
I am not sure of the reasons for the change or exactly what benefit it provides. I am confident it has to do with the different levels of proof needed between an immunity from liability and an affirmative defense, as well as possibly how those facts can be determined and the amount of protection provided. But, not being a lawyer, I am not sure of the exact differences between the two.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#53

Post by The Annoyed Man »

Quoting Charles L. Cotton from that thread (Direct Link) on Sat Dec 26, 2009:
Charles L. Cotton wrote:There was a lot of misunderstanding about the civil liability protection afforded by the "Castle Doctrine" bill when it passed. Many people thought it prevents someone from being sued, but it does not. No law can be written denying people access to the courts; it would be unconstitutional. The "Castle Doctrine" grants immunity from civil liability, not immunity from suit. You can still be sued, but you will win and probably win early in the case.

Chas.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#54

Post by baldeagle »

Am I the only one who thinks our legal system is nuts? You can't sue me, but you can file a suit against me? I can think of only one reason to have such illogical rules; so lawyers can make money. You can't win a suit against me, but you can force me to incur costs that I should not incur by filing a suit against me? Only in America.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#55

Post by Charles L. Cotton »

baldeagle wrote:Am I the only one who thinks our legal system is nuts? You can't sue me, but you can file a suit against me? I can think of only one reason to have such illogical rules; so lawyers can make money. You can't win a suit against me, but you can force me to incur costs that I should not incur by filing a suit against me? Only in America.
The statute doesn't say you can't be sued; it says you are immune from liability. Also, the Texas Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to access the courts with grievances and this is why no law can bar people from filing suit. Tell me just how attorneys make money filing suits they can't win? I'd really like to know that so I can tell my buddies how we can get rich losing.

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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#56

Post by TexasGal »

I think that point went to Charles "rlol"
This entire topic has been interesting. I have wondered if I needed some sort of legal insurance and the laws are confusing to many of us apparently--myself included. It is a bummer to learn I would still possibly have to go through a civil trial, but it is nice to know our laws are such that I can be reasonably sure I would win.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#57

Post by sjfcontrol »

Charles L. Cotton wrote: Tell me just how attorneys make money filing suits they can't win? I'd really like to know that so I can tell my buddies how we can get rich losing.

Chas.
Umm, by not working on commission? Fee for service billed to your client, win or loose? :mrgreen:
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#58

Post by baldeagle »

Charles L. Cotton wrote:
baldeagle wrote:Am I the only one who thinks our legal system is nuts? You can't sue me, but you can file a suit against me? I can think of only one reason to have such illogical rules; so lawyers can make money. You can't win a suit against me, but you can force me to incur costs that I should not incur by filing a suit against me? Only in America.
The statute doesn't say you can't be sued; it says you are immune from liability. Also, the Texas Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to access the courts with grievances and this is why no law can bar people from filing suit. Tell me just how attorneys make money filing suits they can't win? I'd really like to know that so I can tell my buddies how we can get rich losing.

Chas.
The tort system is tilted decidedly in the favor of plaintiffs from a financial standpoint. In the case of suits where the attorney take a case on contingency and expects to collect from the defendant (either through settlement or decision), the plaintiff incurs no costs at all. The defendant, OTOH, immediately incurs costs whether he is in the right or not. And those costs mount up so quickly that many defendants settle rather than go to court simply because it's less expensive. I have personal experience with just such a case. The attorneys were so aware of the flimsiness of the plaintiff's case that they structured the settlement to give her as little of the proceeds as possible. The rest went to her attorney. But the settlement was for $15,000, and that doesn't include the costs the company incurred for depositions, legal research or affidavits.

In the case we're discussing, a plaintiff could file suit pro se, and the defendant still incurs costs from hiring an attorney and paying court and filing costs, even though the law will always hold him harmless. As you well know, attorneys are not inexpensive. Even a low fee attorney is going to be charging over $100/hr. Then you have court costs and filing fees, all to get a summary judgment for a case that never should have been brought to begin with. That's precisely why I said I would defend myself pro se - to reduce my costs as much as possible. But I shouldn't have to incur any costs at all.

I do not understand the "logic" that says because a citizen is guaranteed the right to access the courts for grievances he should therefore have the right to file a suit that that law clearly states he cannot prevail in. And I can only think of one reason that "logic" exists. It's another way for attorneys to collect fees. The only other logic that makes any sense is that the legal system has decided that it's acceptable for plaintiffs to financially harass a plaintiff via the court system. I doubt anyone would argue that that is the case.

Instead, in the case of civil immunity, the court should simply inform the plaintiff that he has no right to sue in this instance, negating the need for the defendant to incur costs for something for which he is clearly not liable. The plaintiff still has access to the courts for any other grievances he or she might have, so the Constitution has not been nullified.
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boba

Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#59

Post by boba »

If the lawyer gets a percentage of the winnings, they should be considered a party to the suit, and subject to countersuit for the defendant's lost work time, mental anguish, etc.
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Re: [Pre-paid legal service] and Pre-Paid Legal

#60

Post by Charles L. Cotton »

sjfcontrol wrote:
Charles L. Cotton wrote: Tell me just how attorneys make money filing suits they can't win? I'd really like to know that so I can tell my buddies how we can get rich losing.

Chas.
Umm, by not working on commission? Fee for service billed to your client, win or loose? :mrgreen:
Too bad personal injury clients won't hire you on an hourly basis; especially if they have a weak case.

Chas.
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