PART ONE: LITIGATION AND ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE LITIGATION Click here to see the trailer for a 1992 movie entitled Class Action, starring Gene Hackman as a plaintiffs' personal injury attorney and Mary Elizabeth Mastriano as his adult daughter, who is (of course! ) a defense attorney. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1_EqTja4Pk Although the movie is the background for the following questions, you should be able to answer the questions without watching the movie. 1. The movie features a case where the father/ attorney represents the plaintiffs and the daughter/attorney represents the defendants. The family relationship between the two attorneys raises the probability of conflicting interests, leaks of confidential information, and emotionally charged decision making. The two related attorneys nonetheless manage to get the permission of judge to go forward with the case, on opposite sides. What must the attorneys obtain from their clients before they can move ahead in this way? (Please provide a short answer.) 2. For this question please choose the best option from the four choices listed. Early in the movie, the plaintiffs’ attorney requests the names, positions, current contact information and all of the stored documents or reports generated by each of the employees who worked on the Meridian: the car that is the subject of the litigation. The defendants initially object to that very broad discovery request, but are told by the judge to comply. Defendants learn that a damaging report about the Meridian (one written by a now retired engineer) is in their files. If the defendants wanted to comply with the ethical and procedural rules that apply in litigation, they will respond to the plaintiffs’ discovery request by: a. Destroying the damaging report, as part of their duty to provide their client with the best possible defense b. Specifically calling the damaging report to the attention of the plaintiffs’ attorney, so that the truth will come out during the case. c. Turning the report over to the plaintiffs’ attorneys along with all of the other documents the plaintiff has requested, and in their current form or order, making no attempt either to hide or to highlight it. d. Creating a confusing filing system that makes the report hard to find, misfiling the report within the confusing system, and sending the report to the plaintiff along with many irrelevant and misleading documents, in addition to all the of documents the plaintiff has requested. 3. Later in the movie, the defense attorney is called upon to cross examine the retired engineer who wrote the damaging report. The report has been destroyed by a rogue attorney, and was never given to the plaintiff. Plaintiff has thus been forced to rely solely on the testimony of the retired engineer to establish that the report existed, and that it clearly warned the car company of dangerous defects in the Meridian’s design. The defense position i.
PART ONE: LITIGATION AND ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE LITIGATION Click here to see the trailer for a 1992 movie entitled Class Action, starring Gene Hackman as a plaintiffs' personal injury attorney and Mary Elizabeth Mastriano as his adult daughter, who is (of course! ) a defense attorney. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1_EqTja4Pk Although the movie is the background for the following questions, you should be able to answer the questions without watching the movie. 1. The movie features a case where the father/ attorney represents the plaintiffs and the daughter/attorney represents the defendants. The family relationship between the two attorneys raises the probability of conflicting interests, leaks of confidential information, and emotionally charged decision making. The two related attorneys nonetheless manage to get the permission of judge to go forward with the case, on opposite sides. What must the attorneys obtain from their clients before they can move ahead in this way? (Please provide a short answer.) 2. For this question please choose the best option from the four choices listed. Early in the movie, the plaintiffs’ attorney requests the names, positions, current contact information and all of the stored documents or reports generated by each of the employees who worked on the Meridian: the car that is the subject of the litigation. The defendants initially object to that very broad discovery request, but are told by the judge to comply. Defendants learn that a damaging report about the Meridian (one written by a now retired engineer) is in their files. If the defendants wanted to comply with the ethical and procedural rules that apply in litigation, they will respond to the plaintiffs’ discovery request by: a. Destroying the damaging report, as part of their duty to provide their client with the best possible defense b. Specifically calling the damaging report to the attention of the plaintiffs’ attorney, so that the truth will come out during the case. c. Turning the report over to the plaintiffs’ attorneys along with all of the other documents the plaintiff has requested, and in their current form or order, making no attempt either to hide or to highlight it. d. Creating a confusing filing system that makes the report hard to find, misfiling the report within the confusing system, and sending the report to the plaintiff along with many irrelevant and misleading documents, in addition to all the of documents the plaintiff has requested. 3. Later in the movie, the defense attorney is called upon to cross examine the retired engineer who wrote the damaging report. The report has been destroyed by a rogue attorney, and was never given to the plaintiff. Plaintiff has thus been forced to rely solely on the testimony of the retired engineer to establish that the report existed, and that it clearly warned the car company of dangerous defects in the Meridian’s design. The defense position i.