• stanleytweedle@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I was on a jury in a civil case where the entire case was built on sympathy for the plaintiff. She’d been rear-ended at very low speed by a company owned truck and was suing the insurance company for >3 million dollars even though there were no injuries.

    The plaintiff was a very elderly woman and she was brought in in a wheelchair, the accident was almost two years prior. They submitted volumes of medical records that couldn’t possibly be related to the accident but claimed somehow the accident had caused ‘suffering’ that manifested as medical issues that most 80 year olds face. I pointed out to the jury that one of the receipts was for the wheelchair she was sitting in and was dated only a week ago.

    Myself and one other juror thought the 50K the company was offering was more than appropriate, but the rest of the jurors wanted to award the full 3 million. I was arguing with one of the other jurors about the amount and she said “If it was your grandmother, wouldn’t you just want to give her more money?”. I briefly tried to explain that wasn’t our role as jurors, but I kind of gave up after that- you can’t talk sense to sentiment. And since a civil case didn’t require unanimous jury she got the 3 million or whatever that was after her scummy legal team took their cut.

    I will say the lawyer for the insurance company was a bumbling fool that didn’t seem to care one way or the other so that didn’t help, but it was clear to me this was just lawyers using an old lady and the legal system to pull money from a tap.