'The Impropriety of Punitive Damages in Mass Torts': Highlights, Observations
Complex Litigation columnist Michael Hoenig writes: When a scholar of such superior mettle as Cornell Professor of Law Emeritus James A. Henderson Jr. warns against the law crossing the bounds of propriety in mass tort case handling, we ought to pay attention. He recently wrote that despite the legitimacy of punitive damages and mass torts when employed separately, "loud warning signals should sound when, as with drinking and driving, they are combined."
September 08, 2017 at 02:03 PM
17 minute read
Are punitive damages inappropriate in mass tort cases? Should they be eliminated from all forms of mass tort litigation? “Yes”, says Cornell Professor of Law Emeritus, James A. Henderson Jr. Who is Professor Henderson? Why do his observations and opinions deserve our attention? Well, for one thing, he is a respected scholar whose prodigious articles on torts issues over the years have helped inject principles of reasonableness into the tort liability explosion of the 1970s to this day.
Second, he is the co-reporter (along with Prof. Aaron D. Twerski) of the American Law Institute's prestigious Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability (1998), an authoritative treatise that is widely consulted and cited by lawyers and courts around the country. And, if that weren't enough, his two textbooks (co-authored with Twerski), “Torts: Cases and Materials” and “Products Liability: Problems and Process,” help guide the education of thousands of law students. So, when a scholar of that superior mettle warns against the law crossing the bounds of propriety in mass tort case handling, we ought to pay attention.
Henderson's new article is called, “The Impropriety of Punitive Damages in Mass Torts.” It is published as part of Cornell Law School's Legal Studies Research Paper Series (No. 17-33; the paper can be downloaded without charge from the Social Science Research Network Electronic Paper Collection). The Cornell Law Faculty Research Program and the U.S. Chamber Institute of Legal Reform provided research support.
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