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Response to the US Chamber of Commerce as it steps up attacks on trial lawyers

9/30/2015

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"We want to thank the Chamber for highlighting the hard work the American Association for Justice and trial lawyers across the country do every day to help protect consumers from the corporate scams and abuses of Wall Street corporations who put their bottom lines over consumer safety. From tobacco to asbestos, the Chamber has never met a defective product they didn't like and have lobbied for decades to change the rules so they can't be held accountable by the public.

Last week, we saw the CEO of the Peanut Corporation of America receive a 28-year prison sentence for his role in a deadly salmonella outbreak, and now we're working with our allies to stop a Chamber-backed bill in Congress that would immunize Volkswagen for knowingly defrauding its consumers. What the [Chamber] report details so well is that the American Association for Justice is fighting for a world with more accountability, less injury, and more justice for consumers."
                                                             --- Linda Lipsen, American Association for Justice

 
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Great explanation of why Americans need class action cases

9/22/2015

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Hat tip to National Law Journal for running this great, down-to-earth explanation of why it is so important that Americans be able to band together as a class to seek a remedy when their individual damages are too small to make a lawsuit sensible.
A Threat to Class Actions Looms in High Court

By Judith E. Schaeffer.

A very important case being heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in the upcoming term is Campbell-Ewald Co. v. Gomez, one that could further diminish the ability of individuals to bring class actions against corporate wrongdoers.

The pending case brings to mind my own experience in a class action. Although I never thought that I would one day be a named plaintiff in such a lawsuit — as the litigant, not the lawyer — in the mid-1980s, that's exactly what I was. Along with thousands of others, my spouse and I had taken advantage of falling interest rates to refinance our home mortgage, using a major lender.

Shortly before the refinance closing, we learned that the lender was going to charge us a fee of $95 for what it called a "lender's inspection." When I asked the loan officer about this, he told me it was a fee for them to "drive by the house" and "see if it's there." This sounded suspicious. Not only were we living in the house, but we had just paid the lender hundreds of dollars for its appraiser to inspect our house and render an appraisal. Clearly, the lender knew that our house was there.

Indeed, the loan officer also told me that he was not aware of any "lender's inspections" being done. When I insisted that we not be charged the $95, I was told by another representative that they would do the inspection within 90 days after the closing. This was preposterous, and I again protested the $95 fee. Nonetheless, the lender required that we pay the fee at closing.

When we later asked the lender for the report of their "inspection" of our home, our request was ignored — not surprisingly, since no such inspection had been done. Having researched the relevant law, I concluded that, by charging us for something it had not done, the lender had violated federal law governing real estate closing practices. Obviously, no one would bring an individual federal lawsuit to recover $95, but a lawsuit was necessary to get this corporation to cease its wrongdoing. That's where class actions come in.

TOO SMALL TO PURSUE

Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows someone with a claim too small to pursue on its own to sue on behalf of a "class" of all others who have been victimized by the same wrongdoer in the same way. And so my spouse and I, represented by counsel, brought a federal class action lawsuit against this lender.

Although the lender denied any wrongdoing, it agreed to settle, paying back about a half-million dollars to thousands of members of the class and ending its practice of charging for "lender's inspections." Had it not been for a class action, this could not have been accomplished.

Over the years, consumer class actions have helped achieve similar vindication of Americans' legal rights in many different contexts. But now, class actions are under attack by corporate America, which recognizes that such lawsuits help level the playing field between individuals and businesses.

In recent years, pushed by big business, the Supreme Court has made it easier for corporations to use mandatory-arbitration clauses in standard contracts to prohibit consumers and others from bringing class claims against them. The court has also made it harder for employees victimized by discrimination to pursue class actions.

In this term's case, Campbell-Ewald Co. is arguing that if a class action defendant makes an offer of judgment to individual named plaintiffs to give them complete relief on their individual claims before the class is certified, they can no longer pursue their own claims or the claims of the class, even when they have rejected that offer.

As my organization, Constitutional Accountability Center, has explained in a friend-of-the-court brief, that argument fundamentally misunderstands the role of the federal courts in our constitutional system in protecting the rights of individuals. It also ignores the critical part that class actions play in facilitating that role by enabling similarly situated individuals to seek relief in federal court even when their injuries are too small to make individual lawsuits feasible.

Consider what would have happened in my case, if Campbell-Ewald's argument had been the rule. If our lender had been able to do away with the class action by making an offer of judgment to my spouse and me of complete relief on our individual claim (a few hundred dollars in statutory and actual damages), it would very likely have been able to continue its lucrative scheme with impunity, and it certainly would not have had to provide financial relief to the thousands of others who had also been victimized.

Even if another borrower had the tenacity to bring another lawsuit, the lender could have picked that person off with the same stratagem. In fact, the mere existence of the "pick-off" strategy being pushed in Campbell-Ewald would likely deter the bringing of many class actions in the first place, which is why this case has the potential to cause such great damage.

AGGREGATE FINANCIAL WINDFALL

Numerous federal laws protect the rights and pocketbooks of individual Americans as we go about our daily lives. When a corporation violates one of these laws, the harm to a single person may be relatively small, but the aggregate financial windfall to the corporation may be quite large, as my own case shows. Without the benefit of class actions, it would be difficult, if not impossible, for individual Americans to vindicate many of our rights and bring an end to corporate wrongdoing.

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VW and Audi Owners

9/19/2015

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If your Oregon Volkswagen or Audi is affected by the recall for the "defeat device" that VW installed to defeat US emissions testing, I would like to speak with you.
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On your birthday each year, check this site

9/17/2015

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In addition to spending 30-90 minutes reviewing your estate plans (will/trust, durable power of attorney, advance directive, HIPAA release forms and most important, your beneficiary orders with all your financial institutions), you should also take 10 seconds of each birthday to check and see if the State of Oregon is holding any lost or unclaimed property of yours.  It's surprising what people can lose track of:


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If you may have been snared by an identity thief . . . 

9/16/2015

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NOLO Press has a good, step-by-step guide if you think you or someone in your family may have been snared by an identity thief:
(Screenshot below only part of the guide).
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Click the photo to get the complete guide for what to do if you think your identity may already have been stolen or could be stolen because someone might have obtained your private information (SSN, date of birth, etc.)
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Free service stops junk credit card offers like a "do not call" list

9/5/2015

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This is a great service, and it's free. Junk credit solicitations are a blight, and a real risk -- the one that hits you right when you're feeling pinched can tempt you into accepting one of those cards, which can easily lead to years of woe and even bankruptcy.  Hat tip to "Cool Tools" for promoting this free service.

If you are inundated with credit card offers, OptOutPrescreen.com is the best way to stop them. It’s like the “Do Not Call” list for credit card offers.

About a year after I started college, I began getting credit card offers. On a bad day I’d receive up to four offers from various credit card companies. Having to deal with that much junk mail was a real annoyance, and I tended to throw the envelopes into a box and either shred them or burn them all at one time. One day, a year or so after I finished college, I was sitting in the lobby of my mechanic shop and reading the newspaper. That’s when I read a column extolling the virtues of OptOutPrescreen.com, a service that claimed to get that pesky first-year-no-interest monkey off my back.

So that afternoon I went to the website and filled out the required info (name, address, SSN, and date of birth.) For roughly two weeks I still received the same volume of CC offers as before signing up. After a month, however, the flow of credit card offers had dramatically slowed. Within two months, I was getting NO offers. Fantastic!

My experience matched with OptOutPrescreen.com’s confirmation page, which states “Your request will be completed within 5 business days. Although your request becomes effective with Equifax, Experian, Innovis and TransUnion within five business days of your request, you may not see an immediate reduction in the amount of offers you receive. This is because your name may have already been provided to some companies that have not yet mailed their offers to you. You may continue to receive certain firm offers for several months.”

Here’s how it works: Once you sign up for the service, they will then send your information to the companies that provide consumer credit reporting services (Equifax, Experian, Innovis and TransUnion.) These companies will then take you off the mailing lists they distribute to credit card companies and you will stop receiving offers from those credit card companies. Simple as that.

The website states your request to opt-out of CC offers is good for five years, however this can change if you sign up for a service that sells your name and address to CC companies, or apply for a credit card. I noticed recently after purchasing a website domain and space to set up a friends’ commercial website, the credit card offers started pouring in again. I went back to OptOutPrescreen.com and re-applied. I thought now would be an apropos moment to write a review of this great resource.

Finally, they do warn you that “while your name will be removed from the lists that Equifax, Experian, Innovis and TransUnion provide to businesses for the purpose of making you a firm offer of credit or insurance, you may continue to receive offers from sources that do not use Consumer Credit Reporting Companies to compile their lists.”

Great service, highly recommended.

-- Owen Kelly

OptOutPrescreen.com
Free
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LAWYERLY FINE PRINT:

John Gear Law Office LLC and Salem Consumer Law.  John Gear Law Office is in Suite 208B of the Security Building in downtown Salem at 161 High St. SE, across from the Elsinore Theater, a half-block south of Marion County Courthouse, just south of State Street. There is abundant, free 3-hour on-street parking throughout downtown Salem, and three multi-story parking ramps that offer free customer parking in downtown Salem too.

Our attorneys are only licensed to practice law in Oregon. This site may be considered advertising under Oregon State Bar rules. There is no legal advice on this site so you should not interpret anything you read here as intended for your particular situation. Besides, we are not representing you and we are not your attorneys unless you have hired us by entering into a representation agreement with me. While we do want you to consider us when you seek an attorney, you should not hire any attorney based on brochures, websites, advertising, or other promotional materials.  All original content on this site is Copyright John Gear, 2010-2022.

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