Payola Justice: How Texas Supreme Court Justices Raise Money from Court Litigants
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Appendix II.
Activist Court
Like the scandal-plagued Texas Supreme Court of the 1980s, the current
justices have been criticized for being activists who throw precedents
out the window with decisions that benefit the special interests that finance
their campaigns. In its July 1997 report, "The Texas Supreme Court
in 1996-97," Texas Citizen Action identified the court's "Terrible
Ten" decisions, which have helped tilt Texas court rooms to the favor
of corporate board rooms at the expense of consumers. The Terrible Ten
cases are presented here with any money that parties in these cases contributed
to the seven justices studied in this report.
1. Arthur Andersen v. Perry Equipment (#95-0444)
Makes it harder for injured consumers to find lawyers and for plaintiff
lawyers to fund future cases (see page XXX). $500
linked contributions
2. St. Luke's Hospital v. Agbor (#96-0085)
Shields hospitals that grant the right to practice to physicians who
are known to be dangerous (See page XXX). $45,100
linked contributions
3. State of Texas ex rel. v. Hardberger (#96-0643)
Trumps a legislative statute allowing voters to fill judicial vacancies,
replacing it with the governor's constitutional power to appoint replacements. $3,950
linked contributions
4. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals v. Havner (#95-1036)
Expands judicial rules covering expert testimony on novel scientific
theories (so-called "junk science") to cover all scientific testimony
by witnesses. $0 linked
contributions
5. American Tobacco Co. v. Grinnell (#94-1227)
Allows tobacco companies to dodge some liabilities for the harmful
health effects of their products. $17,161
linked contributions
6. Richey v. Brookshire Grocery Co. (#95-0692)
Holds that merchants need not exercise care in filing charges against
inadvertent shoplifters. $16,247
linked contributions
7. New Summary Judgment Rule
New rules on pre-trial motions for case dismissals add to litigant
expenses and remove safeguards designed to prevent abuses. $0
linked contributions
8. Gulf States Utilities v. Public Utility Commission et al. (#94-1229)
Helps utilities stick consumers with costs that they typically cannot
pass on to their customers. $0
linked contributions
9. Texas Utilities v. Timmons (#96-0247)
Holds that a frequently scaled electric tower was not attractive to
the 14-year-old boy who was electrocuted while climbing it. $36,300
linked contributions
10. Lefmark Management Co. v. Old (#95-0983)
Shields mall managers who fail to report and remedy security problems
from any liability for the deaths of customers who get attacked on the
property. $0 linked
contributions
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