‘Nuclear’ Verdicts Rise in Trucking Lawsuits
One key factor contributing to truckingās increasingly challenging insurance market is the proliferation of ānuclearā verdictsājudgments of $10 million or higher awarded in cases involving trucks.
Nick Saeger, associate vice president for pricing and underwriting at Sentry Insurance, said āsocial inflationā is contributing to the growth of these high-
dollar awards as plaintiffsā attorneys seek to play on the jurorsā emotions to drive the verdict, regardless of facts.
In practice, plaintiffsā attorneys are trying to reach the āreptilianā part of the jurorsā brains, which instinctively wants to protect family and community from dangerāand do so through their verdict. The strategy calls on fear and revulsion and seeks to influence juries to deliver verdicts intended to punish the defendant trucking firm and send a message to the industry.
At the same time, plaintiffsā attorneys are more aggressively targeting the trucking industry.
As part of this trend, attorneys are conducting deep research into trucking company history, operations, practices, procedures and documentation, seeking evidence to support claims of institutional negligence or bad practices that could allegedly contribute to poor safety and cause accidents.
Litigation financing is another key trend, Saeger said. In some cases, a plaintiffās attorneys may not have the financial resources to pursue what can be lengthy litigation all the way to the finish line, which could take years. But investors, such as hedge funds, seeing the prospect of a financial windfall, will finance the attorneyās expenses.
Trucking defense attorney Doug Marcello, a partner at Marcello & Kivisto, has seen the dramatic rise in aggressive law firms promoting themselves as specialists in trucking liability litigators.
With medical malpractice reforms lessening the prospect of big paydays in that arena, ātrucking has become [the] profit center for a lot of plaintiff attorneys,ā said Marcello, who, along with his law partner, also has a commercial driverās license. āThey live by the mantra, āHit a truck, get a check.ā They look at an 18-wheeler as a rolling ATM machine.ā
Source: Fox Business

