Exxon Valdez case - Punitive damages allowed under maritime law

The United States Supreme Court issued its long-awaited decision in the Exxon Valdez oil spill case.
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You can read the Court's opinion by clicking here.

Once again siding with big business over the rights of individuals and families, the Court sliced down the punitive damage award from $2.5 billion dollars to $500 million dollars.

Setting aside the fact that $500 million represents less than one day of profit for Exxon Mobil, and the fact that the Court basically just made up a number out of thin air, and the fact that the punitive damage award, while large, is a drop in the bucket for Exxon, the Court once again shows a disturbing lack of confidence in the ability of American citizens to serve on juries, listen to evidence, and reach decisions.

Essentially, 8 lawyers from Washington D.C., most of whom have never actually tried a lawsuit themselves, and none of whom has any real idea what the Valdez spill did to thousands of Alaskan families and citizens, have once again substituted their judgment for the jurors and judges who actually heard the evidence in the case and reached a decision. 

The silver lining

The silver lining in the case is that the justices, perhaps unwittingly, seem to have recognized that punitive damages are recoverable in maritime law. 

For decades, most lawyers who represent Jones Act seaman and injured maritime workers have been under the impression that punitive damages were most likely not available in these types of cases.

What this has meant, as a practical matter, is that maritime defendants could treat the injured workers as poorly as they wanted, be as unsafe as they wanted, and avoid any sort of responsibility or threat of punitive damages.

The Exxon Valdez case seems to take away that defense.  Which is very helpful for injured workers, and, suprisingly from this Court, not quite as helpful to big business and insurance companies.

What do you think about the Exxon Valdez case?  Did the Court get it right?  Or should the Court defer to the jurors who actually heard the evidence and rendered a verdict?

Want to know more about maritime injury cases? 

We strive to provide the best, most professional, and most effective representation to workers in the offshore industry.  We are based in Houston, Texas.  We represent offshore workers all over the world.

To learn more about our law firm and what we can do for you, please visit the following websites:

www.vbattorneys.com

www.maritimeaccidentattorney.com

www.houstoninjuryaccidentlaw.com

If you want to know more about offshore injury claims, please take a moment to read the following articles:

1.  How to hire the best lawyer for your Jones Act or offshore injury case

2.  What is the Jones Act?

3.  What is a Longshoreman and What Are Their Legal Rights When Injured?

4.  The difference between the Jones Act and the Longshore & Harbor Worker's Compensation Act

5.  The Truth About Offshore Injury Claims.

6.  What Should You Do If You Are Injured Offshore

7.  What you should know if you were hurt offshore and your employer is giving you a hard time

8.  Should I give my employer or the insurance company a "recorded statement?"

9.  Do I need to hire a lawyer for my Jones Act or offshore injury claim?

10.  What happens when you file a Jones Act lawsuit.

11.  6 Critical Things you must know if you are injured at sea

12. The Secrets Your Employer May Not Want You To Know If You Are Injured Offshore.

Jones Act employer may be liable to injured seaman for injury that occurs off the ship

Injured offshore workers often ask whether they are entitled to bring a claim against their employer if they are injured onshore.

The answer is "Yes," Jones Act seaman may bring a claim against their Jones Act employer even if they weren't injured on the water, or on the boat, as long as they were injured "in the service of the ship."

This has been true at least since 1966, when the United State Supreme Court decided the Hopson v. Texaco case.  (You can find that case at 383 U.S. 262).  In the Hopson case, a seaman was traveling to the U.S. Consul in a taxicab in a foreign country.  The tax crashed, the seaman was hurt, and he sued his Jones Act employer.

The seaman was going to the U.S. Consul as part of his job duties (he was going to get papers so he could get medical care in the United States).

The Supreme Court held that the Jones Act employer was responsible to the injured employee and liable for the negligence of the taxi driver since the taxi driver was acting as an agent of the Jones Act employer.

So, if you qualify as a Jones Act seaman, you may recover damages even if you are not injured on a vessel.

For more information, please contact Brian Beckcom at 713.224.7800, or toll free at 877.724.7800, or visit one of the firm's websites:

www.vbattorneys.com
www.themaritimelawyer.com
www.maritimeaccidentattorney.com

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About the firm

Brian Beckcom is a Board Certified Personal Injury Attorney at Vujasinovic & Beckcom, P.L.L.C., a Houston, Texas-based law firm with a national practice.  All the attorneys at the firm are board certified in personal injury law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. 

The firm handles serious injury and death cases, as well as business and insurance cases, on a contingency fee basis.  The firm has a substantial docket of Jones Act and maritime injury cases.

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Injured Galleyhand Files Jones Act Case Against Universal Sodexho and Rowan Drilling Company

The Southeast Texas Record, a propaganda "newspaper" for the Chamber of Commerce, reports on one of our Jones Act cases, Paul Perronne v. Universal Sodexho.

You can read about the story by clicking the link below:

Click here to read about one of our firm's Beaumont Jones Act cases.

For more information, please contact Brian Beckcom at 713.224.7800, or toll free at 877.724.7800, or visit one of the firm's websites:

www.vbattorneys.com
www.themaritimelawyer.com
www.maritimeaccidentattorney.com

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About the firm

Vujasinovic & Beckcom, P.L.L.C. is a firm of board certified personal injury trial lawyers who handle serious injury and death cases, as well as business and insurance cases, on a contingency fee basis.  The firm has a substantial docket of Jones Act and maritime injury cases.

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