by Richard Alderman
Tort reformers would have us believe that our judicial system is broken, clogged down with frivolous tort suits. In fact, a recent study shows that the number of state court tort suits that make it to trial declined steadily over a 10-year period ending in 2005, dropping to about 4 percent. The figures, collected from the 2005 Civil Justice Survey of State Courts and released this month, found that the number of state court tort trials declined by about a third between 1996 and 2005 in the country’s most populous counties.
Of the cases that went to trial in 2005 - the year for which the latest state-level data is available - 60 percent were automobile accident cases. About 15 percent involved medical malpractice claims. Plaintiffs were victorious about half the time. Of those wining plaintiffs, about half were awarded $24,000 or less in damages. Punitive damages were sought in about 9 percent of cases won by plaintiffs, and awarded in less than 3 percent of winning cases, the data shows. The highest percentage of punitive damages awards came in cases involving libel and slander. The medium punitive damage award was $55,000.

