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Florida Justice Reform Institute

DeSantis taps Couriel, Francis for Supreme Court

March 26, 2020/in The Florida Times-Union

 

Florida Times Union

DeSantis taps Couriel, Francis for Supreme Court

           John Couriel                                                Judge Francis

                    Couriel [Wilfredo Lee/Associted Press]                                                                 Francis  [Wilfredo Lee/Associted Press]

Posted May 26, 2020 at 5:18 PM
   
John Couriel, a Miami litigator, and Renatha Francis, a Palm Beach County circuit judge, are new Florida Supreme Court justices

TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday appointed John Couriel and Renatha Francis to the Florida Supreme Court, choosing two justices expected to cement the court’s conservative majority for years to come.

DeSantis said the appointments came two months late because he was focused on the state’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, noting that he wanted to dedicate sufficient time to properly vet the candidates.

In selecting Couriel and Francis, DeSantis tapped two justices who share his conservative views on the limited role of the courts, after a liberal-leaning bloc for years thwarted Republican lawmakers and governors on numerous high-profile policy fronts.

“The Florida Supreme Court protects the people’s liberty, and part of doing that is respecting the limited role that judges play in our constitutional system of government. As judges, we exercise neither force nor will, merely judgment,” Francis said at a news conference in Miami.

Francis, a Palm Beach County circuit judge, was born in Jamaica and will become the first Caribbean-American to serve on the Supreme Court, DeSantis said. She also will be the first black justice since Peggy Quince retired early last year.

“Her understanding of the Constitution reminds me of another famous Caribbean-American, Alexander Hamilton,” DeSantis said. “Hamilton articulated what Judge Francis deeply understands: that the judiciary lacks authority to indulge its legislative preferences.”

DeSantis also praised Couriel, a Miami litigator.

“One of the things that John brings is he instinctively understands the proper role of the judiciary. He understands the structural limitations in the Constitution, all those things that you would want,” DeSantis said.

Couriel, who once served as a federal prosecutor and who was recommended by U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, will bring “extensive business experience” to the court, DeSantis said.

“They [the Supreme Court justices] are all great judges, but I think John brings something additional, which will be very, very good going forward,” the governor said.

Couriel and Francis will replace former justices Barbara Lagoa and Robert Luck, who last year were appointed by DeSantis and later picked by President Donald Trump for positions on the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Tuesday’s appointments were quickly lauded by a legal group that works closely with business and insurance interests.

William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, applauded the governor’s effort to “reshape the Florida Supreme Court.”

“The governor’s appointments of John Couriel and Renatha Francis as the 90th and 91st Justices continue his mission to restore the court to its proper role as the interpreter of our laws, not the author,” Large said in a prepared statement.

The appointments’ two-month delay raised some questions in the legal community.

The Florida Constitution says the governor was obligated to make the appointments 60 days after the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission certified a slate of nine nominees on Jan. 23.

But the governor missed the March 23 deadline because of the coronavirus pandemic, he said. And in late March, DeSantis said he would make the appointment by May 1, a deadline he also missed.

The decision to push back his Supreme Court picks past the initial March 23 deadline appeared to be the first time a governor used a state of emergency to delay the selection of justices, Florida Supreme Court spokesman Craig Waters said at the time.

“We were going through the vetting process in my office once we had the certified list, but the state of emergency with the coronavirus prompted us to delay the selections,” DeSantis said Tuesday.

Adam Richardson, an appellate attorney in West Palm Beach, has repeatedly questioned the legality of DeSantis’ appointment delay.

“The governor handled the process poorly. He exceeded his constitutional authority when he delayed the appointments and never explained why he believed he could do that,” Richardson told The News Service of Florida on Tuesday.

Richardson has also raised questions about Francis’ appointment to the Supreme Court.

Francis is ineligible to sit on the Supreme Court until Sept. 24, when she will mark her 10th year as a Florida Bar member. The Constitution requires 10 years as a Bar member to serve on the state’s highest court.

Francis has been on maternity leave, and DeSantis cited that as the reason for her “ascension to the court in September.” He did not mention that September is also the month when she’ll be constitutionally qualified.

Richardson said he does not believe DeSantis is allowed to wait out her eligibility and noted that her appointment could be challenged if a citizen or taxpayer files a challenge directly to the Florida Supreme Court.

Helen Aguirre Ferre, a spokeswoman for the governor, did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the appointment process or Francis’ eligibility.

DeSantis has been able to reshape the court, in part, because Quince and former justices Barbara Pariente and R. Fred Lewis were forced to retire in January 2019 because of a mandatory retirement age. They had been part of a generally liberal majority that controlled the court.

Shortly after taking office in January 2019, DeSantis appointed Lagoa, Luck and Carlos Muniz to replace the retiring justices. Combined with remaining conservative justices Charles Canady, Ricky Polston and Alan Lawson, the three newcomers immediately created a conservative majority.

Even with the elevation of Lagoa and Luck to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the court has retained a four-member conservative majority, with Justice Jorge Labarga dissenting on some high-profile issues. Labarga often joined with Pariente, Lewis and Quince in the past.

https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20200526/desantis-taps-couriel-francis-for-supreme-court

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2020-03-26 15:56:472024-11-25 09:43:58DeSantis taps Couriel, Francis for Supreme Court
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Weinstein ‘fully supportive’ of bill to add protections for automakers in liability lawsuits

January 27, 2011/in The Florida Times-Union

 

Florida Times Union

By Matt Dixon (PolitiJax) January 27, 2011 – 9:33am

Rep. Mike Weinstein, R – Jacksonville, says he is in favor of a bill (SB 142/HB201) that would provide automakers more leverage when they are sued over product defects.

Currently Florida is one of a handful of states where a defective part can leave automakers liable regardless of the role that driver error played in an accident. The bill would allow additional evidence, including driver error, to be entered when automakers are sued over product defects.

“Bottom line is the bill just gives more information to juries,” he said.

(Here is a Senate analysis of the bill.)

Weinstein met with William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform League, Wednesday to discuss the bill, which was filed in the House by Rep. Marlene O’Toole, The Villages. He sits on a subcommittee that will hear the legislation being pushed by Ford Motor Company.

“He just wanted to make sure I was comfortable with the bill, and he encouraged me to vote for it,” Wesinstein said of his meeting with Large. “I am fully supportive of it, just like I was last year.”

The Florida Justice Reform League was created in 2005 by the Florida Chamber of Commerce to “fight wasteful civil litigation through legislation, promote fair and equitable legal practices and provide information about the state of civil justice in Florida,” according to its Web site.

Opponents of the idea say that the bill takes the incentive away from automakers to strive to build safe cars. In an editorial on similar legislation filed last session, the St. Petersburg Times editorial board opined that the bill would “allow carmakers to shift the blame for their unsafe cars back on to negligent drivers.”

The Senate version of the bill, sponsored by Sen. Garrett Richter, R-Naples, earlier this month passed 5-1 out of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

http://jacksonville.com/opinion/blog/403455/matt-dixon/2011-01-27/weinstein-fully-supportive-bill-add-protections-automakers

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2011-01-27 15:59:482024-12-11 17:56:53Weinstein ‘fully supportive’ of bill to add protections for automakers in liability lawsuits
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Legislature: Both Sides Claim Victory in this Year’s Fight Over Civil-justice Reform

April 20, 2010/in The Florida Times-Union

TALLAHASSEE – As the House voted Tuesday to send the final pieces of major court legislation to the governor for his signature or veto, both sides moved to claim victory in this year’s fight over civil-justice reform.

In all, the Legislature passed four major bills dealing with lawsuits, two of which have already been signed by Gov. Charlie Crist. Tuesday’s House action sent to Crist’s desk a bill essentially reinstating parental waivers for children at places like theme parks and a measure raising the caps on legal settlements between local governments and plaintiffs.

Those joined the pair of proposals Crist had already signed: One increasing the burden of proof for plaintiffs when a business owner has allegedly allowed his premises to become dangerous – the so-called “slip-and-fall” legislation – and another capping the fees that the Attorney General’s Office can pay to outside attorneys.

But the state’s trial lawyers association, which was seen as politically weakened and in disarray after the uproar over a racially divisive mailer against Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, in a special election last year, was ready to declare at least partial victory Tuesday.

“We’re happy with [the session], because we think that the policy for the courts has improved this session,” said Mike Haggard, president of the Florida Justice Association.

Haggard conceded the slip-and-fall changes were opposed by the association, but he dismissed the attorney general bill as more politics for Attorney General Bill McCollum, GOP gubernatorial candidate, than substance.

And he said the waiver bill and sovereign immunity measures were both agreeable to his organization in the forms that they passed.

The association also seems to have defeated a measure providing sovereign immunity to emergency room doctors, though observers caution against labeling any bill as dead until the end of the session.

“We’ll wait to see if that’s a victory until sine die,” said Haggard, using the Latin term for “without a day” that traditionally marks the end of the session.

But business groups that support tort reform are also saying the legislative session was good for them.

“If the Florida Justice Association thinks that this is a day for victory, then I’m willing to declare it is as well,” said Barney Bishop, president of Associated Industries of Florida. “We’ll look forward to celebrating Victory Day with them again next year as well.”

Bishop wasn’t the only one warning that future sessions could see more victories those pushing additional overhauls of the civil-justice system.

“I’ve said all along I’m not out to go just poke my finger in their eye just to do that,” said Thrasher, who sponsored the attorney general’s bill and the ER measure. “But I would tell them this: I think there will be other issues down the road. I don’t know that I would necessarily declare victory or defeat on anything.”

He said the ER bill got further than it has in the past, a partial victory.

Bishop said Thrasher’s tough race in Senate District 8, which saw trial lawyers work hard for his defeat in the special election to replace the late Sen. Jim King, helped civil-justice bills move through the Legislature.

“I think the appetite was whetted by the campaign against Sen. Thrasher,” he said.

Others were less sure, saying the measures were aimed at helping industry in a tough financial environment.

“What I think this is about,” said William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institution, “is about the economy and jobs.”

See Full Article

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2010-04-20 15:58:172024-11-26 09:11:04Legislature: Both Sides Claim Victory in this Year’s Fight Over Civil-justice Reform
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Reforms Have Been Successful

December 17, 2007/in The Florida Times-Union

The Florida Times-Union

Published Monday, December 17, 2007

In 2003, the Florida Legislature overhauled the state’s workers compensation system to control skyrocketing costs and the decreased availability of insurance to pay for injured workers’ medical bills.

Since then, workers compensation has become more affordable for Florida businesses, resulting in significant decreases in the cost and availability of workers compensation for Florida businesses and employers.

In October, the Office of Insurance Regulation approved the fifth consecutive rate decrease of workers compensation insurance rates as a result of the Legislature’s reforms, approving the National Council on Compensation Insurance’s filing for an average decrease of 18.4 percent.

The reductions are estimated to result in more than $700 million in savings.

However, the savings may be short-lived if attempts to chip away at the 2003 reforms are successful.

Despite numerous rulings by the 1st District Court of Appeals upholding the constitutionality of the reforms, the Trial Bar has repeatedly filed claims challenging various aspects of the law.

The Dec. 4 article titled ” ‘Horizontal immunity’ a hit to injured workers” exemplifies the tactics that are being used to whittle away the 2003 reforms.

It attacked a component of the law intended to prevent excessive lawsuits by injured workers.

The reforms passed by lawmakers ensure that injured workers receive adequate compensation for their injuries.

However, the reforms have also helped curb the skyrocketing cost and decreased availability of affordable workers compensation insurance by enacting measures to prevent the proliferation of lawsuits that were becoming a drain on the system.

One component of the reforms was horizontal immunity. Horizontal immunity ensures that lawsuits arising from a work-related accident do not target businesses or subcontractors also on the job site.

It raised the standard for who could be sued by an injured worker.

It eliminated the practice that was too common under the old workers compensation system where an injured employee could sue everyone and anyone, regardless of the level of responsibility, if any, for an accident.

The reforms have worked, resulting in five consecutive rate decreases.

The 2003 reforms are one of the reasons Florida has seen reductions in workers compensation insurance rates in recent years, according to a study released in July by the Workers Compensation Research Institute analyzing the impacts of the reforms.

Horizontal immunity is just one of the many reforms that have helped ensure that injured workers are duly compensated when there is an accident.

It also helps prevent the system from being unaffordable and overrun by excessive lawsuits.

WILLIAM LARGE,

President,

Florida Justice Reform Institute

Tallahassee

See Full Article 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2007-12-17 15:58:552024-12-11 18:00:54Reforms Have Been Successful
Florida Justice Reform Institute

2003_0727_Senators Get New Take on Insurance

July 27, 2003/in The Florida Times-Union

Florida Times Union

Senators Get New Take on Insurance; Agreement Hinges on Governor’s Role

TALLAHASSEE — Byline: Sarah Skidmore, Times-Union staff writer

July 27, 2003

TALLAHASSEE — On the day a Florida Senate committee concluded its work for the second special session on the malpractice quandary, a key Senate negotiator said the debate could have been concluded as well if the governor would bend on his position.

The session, held to find a resolution to the malpractice problem of rising insurance costs, is scheduled to end tonight. But it’s unclear when lawmakers will meet again as action relies almost solely on negotiators and the governor now.

The only remaining lawmakers in Tallahassee yesterday were Senate Judiciary Committee members and chamber negotiators. The committee members heard the last of sworn testimony from stakeholders to clarify conflicting information from special interest groups.

With the hurdle of possible misinformation cleared, lead Senate negotiator Tom Lee, R-Brandon, said the House and Senate have reached an understanding on what could be agreeable. But the House is unwilling to sign on if it feels Gov. Jeb Bush wouldn’t do so as well.

“In essence the legislative process is stalled until the governor moves off his stance,” Lee said.

The Republican Senate has taken a political beating from the governor for not supporting his position on a $250,000 cap, but Senate President Jim King, R-Jacksonville, said this has solidified the Senate’s position as a chamber.

“Right now I’m trying to be as innovative as I can be,” King said. “I hope he’s trying to do the same thing.”

The only comment from the governor came through his spokeswoman, Alia Faraj.

“Gov. Bush agrees with the 80 percent of Floridians who understand that the state is in an access-to-health-care crisis,” Faraj said in an e-mail response to the media. “The House has offered a compromise that includes meaningful reform to address this serious issue. With doctors leaving the state every day, the stakes couldn’t be higher, and the governor remains hopeful that the Senate will act in the interest of all Floridians.”

The sticking point among the parties has been limiting awards for non-economic damages. The governor has proposed a cap at $250,000, which the House stood by until this session when it increased the limit to up to $1 million. The Senate has recommended $1.5 million for most cases but allowing an exception for up to $6 million in severe cases.

The discussion of caps was addressed in the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. But more attention was received by testimony that was different from what senators had been told. For example, speakers could not factually support the idea that frivolous lawsuits are on the rise or that there are fewer doctors in Florida.

“We are not going to put legislative findings in print that are based on rhetoric that can’t be substantiated by facts,” said Sen. Alex Villalobos, R-Miami, Judiciary Committee chairman.

Some presenters disputed the logic used by the committee, such as saying the number of licensed physicians does not indicate the presence and activity of doctors in the state. There were no numbers presented that indicated the breadth or location of specialists or whether a physician has limited service, said William Large, who oversaw the Governor’s Select Task Force on medical malpractice.

Some senators said they were surprised to find that First Professionals Insurance Group, the state’s largest malpractice insurer, was performing well in Florida and better than it is in other states and legislative changes weren’t needed to ensure this success.

Others said it was strange that the state relies heavily on insurance company actuaries to verify information used in rate setting. King said there will be further need to work on insurance regulation and rate setting procedures.

Although this information disputes some of the long-held perceptions of some in Tallahassee, Villalobos and King said there is still a need for reform.

Lee said yesterday it was too soon to tell if the agreement can be solidified by the end of session today.

Staff writer Sarah Skidmore can be reached at (904) 359-4268 or via e-mail at [email protected]

http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/071603/met_13036612.shtml 

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