You're Wrong About - The McDonald's Hot Coffee Case
Episode Date: September 13, 2021Mike tells Sarah how a tragic story became a national punchline and a decades-long moral panic. Digressions include a sympathetic psychic, a paternalistic principal and a manure mishap. Mike appears t...o be unaware of the difference between a cousin and a nephew. Support us:Hear bonus episodes on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy stickers, magnets, T-shirts and moreWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, You Are Good Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseLinks!Distorting the Law: Politics, Media, and the Litigation Crisis Java Jive: Genealogy of a Juridical IconNewsweek’s “Lawsuit Hell” storyRetro Report’s “The Misunderstood McDonald's Hot Coffee LawsuitAdam Ruins Everything’s “The Truth About the McDonald's Coffee Lawsuit”Swindled’s “The Lawsuit”Susan Saladoff's "Hot Coffee" documentaryMcTorts: The Social and Legal Impact of McDonald's Role in Tort SuitsLegal Urban Legends Hold SwayRevisiting The United States Application Of Punitive Damages: Separating Myth From RealitySix Myths of Capping Pain and Suffering DamagesThe Monster In The Television: The Media's Contribution To The Consumer Litigation BoogeymanThe Beginning And The Possible End Of The Rise Of Modern American Tort LawDebunking Medical Malpractice Myths: Unraveling the False Premises Behind "Tort Reform"Blocking the Courthouse Door: How the Republican Party and Its Corporate Allies Are Taking Away Your Right to SueSupport the show
Transcript
Discussion (0)
By the way, I have this idea for a companion show
for a million dollar listing.
It's for like half million dollar listings
in cities like Seattle and Portland
and it's called For That.
["For That"]
Welcome to You're Wrong About,
the show where we always end up back at McDonald's.
I feel like we've swung back to McDonald's
a few times in this show.
Yeah, this is our McRib episode.
I am Michael Hubs.
I am Sarah Marshall.
And today we are talking about, finally,
the McDonald's hot coffee case.
And why do you say finally, my friend?
I mean, this is our free bird.
This is the thing that we get requests for
probably three to five times a week.
I don't think this was literally the first topic suggestion
we ever got, but it had to be in the first five.
And it's also, we have talked about this,
that this is one of the cases that inspired us
to do this show.
That's true.
It is one of the cleanest examples of a huge
you're wrong about, like in our lifetimes.
And I think that I first heard about this.
I know it was a media sensation in like the late mid 90s.
I wanna say like 96.
The verdict came down in 94, yeah.
And I know that this was an event
that was directly parodied on Seinfeld,
which I think is kind of a litmus test
for cultural relevance.
And the Seinfeld version is that Kramer
is going to a movie theater.
And he's trying to smuggle in a cafe latte
and he gossels it somehow and it burns his leg.
And he's like, I'm gonna sue the coffee company
because the coffee was too hot.
And like, what a ridiculous thing to sue anyone
for making hot coffee hot.
It's supposed to be hot, her, her.
And all of this was based on a case
where there was this elderly woman named Florence Liebeck.
It's actually Stella Liebeck.
Stella, why do I think her name's Florence?
Is there a Florence Liebeck?
I think you're thinking of Florence and the coffee machine.
All right, Stella, that's great.
What a great name.
Who went to the McDonald's drive-thru
and she ordered a hot coffee and it spilled somehow.
And she got burns from the coffee and she sued McDonald's.
And the way the story went was that McDonald's
had given her like 30 trillion, trillion dollars.
And there was this sense of like, well, what next?
Like, why doesn't everyone sue every large corporation
for a lot of money for a product behaving
in a predictable way?
Yeah, I mean, the term that you heard a lot
at the time was jackpot justice.
Was this idea that people are doing
these like completely normal things
like we've all spilled coffee on ourselves
and blowing them up into these like,
oh, my life was never the same after I spilled
a lukewarm cup of coffee on myself.
It's the juxtaposition between this completely everyday
normal thing that happens to everybody
and the massive settlement that this woman got
by suing McDonald's.
And then also I feel like maybe this isn't true
but my understanding was that it was because of this
that like whenever you get a beverage from anywhere
still today, if it's hot, it'll say like caution,
content's hot.
That's actually kind of an urban legend
because the coffee that Stella Liebeck spilled on herself
actually said caution hot on it
but the letters were the same color as the cup.
Interesting, I guess my mom was not like going
to the library to fact check the explanatory things
she told me when she was in a hurry
in the morning in 1997.
So we're going to get to the debunking
of the McDonald's case eventually
but I think that a really important aspect of the case
and why it became such a big deal
and showed up on Seinfeld and everywhere else
was because there was already a cultural narrative
for that anecdote to fit into.
If it was just this story and there was no sort of
ongoing panic about frivolous lawsuits,
it would have sort of been a blip in the newspaper
and then it would have disappeared.
God, we had no problems in the 90s.
We were like, oh, what are we worried about today?
Exactly, it's too easy to sue corporations, sure.
I understand that this would be something
it was easier to be upset about when it was possible
in America to make money by working but even so.
Yeah, so we're going to rewind a little bit.
I want to start with, do you remember those like calendars
that would be like wacky story of the day calendars
or like Chef John's bathroom reader or whatever?
Oh yeah, and they were always on sale
in like the impulse by area of Barnes & Noble
and you know what I loved about those
was those gummy strips at the top.
We used to call them booger glue, yeah.
Boys are gross.
I know.
So if you're a youth, you probably don't know
about these things but there were these sort of daily
calendars that people had.
We had one on our kitchen table that was like
the wackiest laws in America.
Oh yeah.
And every day you'd rip off one
and it would be like it's illegal to bathe your ferret
on a Wednesday in Alabama or whatever.
The Oregonian had this little thing called the edge
on the living section.
It was like the like left hand quarter inch
of the front page of the living section
and then it had little facts.
One of the most popular genres of those
like you'll never believe what's happening in America
type of calendar, bathroom reader joke things
was crazy lawsuits.
That makes total sense.
And also do you remember also like stupid criminals
as a category that would be like a Robert in Switzerland
tried to hold up a bank using a sausage.
Exactly.
And looking back at the like most of them were really fake.
I was 11 and they all seemed very real.
At the time I was not remotely skeptical.
So we are going to start with an excerpt
from a wacky lawsuits calendar in 1986.
God, this is taking me back.
This is an example from a really good book
called distorting the law, politics, media
and the litigation crisis by William Hultem
and Michael McCann.
Here's the excerpt.
Judith Hames, a self-proclaimed psychic
was awarded close to $1 million
by a Philadelphia jury in March 1986
after she said that a CAT scan
at Temple University Hospital made her lose
her psychic abilities.
Yeah, that sounds like good living section fodder.
This is eight years before the McDonald's hot coffee case
but this kind of was the McDonald's hot coffee case
of the 1980s.
Are you gonna, you're wrong about me about this story?
Oh yeah.
Like this, this is not true.
And like we will debunk it.
Really?
But like, I mean this was like
there were numerous stories in the LA times.
There were numerous stories in the New York times.
This story shows up in a Ronald Reagan speech.
Wow.
This was like one of his laugh lines.
He's like, did you hear the one about the psychic
who lost her powers and then she sued?
Like this was just sort of floating
around the culture for ages.
Right, like a conservative urban legend.
Yes, exactly.
But it's worth noting that even in 1986,
there's already a narrative
that this anecdote can slot into.
All of this goes back to what was called the tort revolution.
Basically from the end of World War II until the 1970s
is this time of like very ambitious
progressive change in America.
You know, we get the National Traffic
and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966.
We get the Consumer Product Safety Act in 1972.
The Warren Court starts passing a bunch
of like very arcane and weird procedural things
that make it much easier to sue companies.
This whole field of consumer product safety,
the idea that companies are responsible
for the harms that they do,
this was reasonably new at the time.
And so as we started getting books like Silent Spring,
we get unsafe at any speed.
There's just this kind of cultural understanding bubbling
that like what if people aren't responsible
for things that corporations do to them?
I feel like there was a time when Americans
wanted the government to protect them from corporations
and now we want corporations to protect us
from the government.
Exactly, and like these damn sophomores
that keep shouting about stuff.
There's also sort of at this time,
I don't think anybody was really aware of it,
but it's also America ended up
sort of making this pact that this was how
we were going to regulate corporations.
In a lot of other developed countries,
they have regulators, they're very powerful regulators
that do inspections, they can buy law,
force companies to change their practices,
they can give payouts to people
that are damaged by corporations.
None of that really took in America,
like none of our regulatory agencies
ever had that much power.
So we basically decided like we're gonna do this by lawsuits.
So basically it's like have like a wide range of freedoms
and then if people violate those freedoms,
then we punish them rather than like have
a relatively narrow range of freedoms
to ensure that bad behavior won't flourish.
Exactly, and it's not the government's job
to sort of monitor companies.
If companies are doing something bad,
the idea is well the people who are harmed by that will sue
and then the punitive damages will be so large
that the companies will have to change their practices.
And it'll all be a swift process
and none of that will get complicated
and it'll be great, it'll all be great.
Exactly, and I don't think this was deliberate at the time
but there's lots of articles written now
about how America has far more lawsuits
than most other developed countries
and far more lawsuits against corporations.
So like there was infamously a lawsuit
a couple of years ago against Nutella
because Nutella was marketing its product as healthy
and people were saying like, no, it's not healthy.
There's this class action forms
and then the class action wins
and then it's like if you bought a jar of Nutella
between like August and December of 2008,
go to the store and you get your like four bucks back.
In other countries, that would be like a regulatory agency
who's just like, hey, your marketing is lying,
you can't do this, you have to stop.
But in America, it's like, ah, a bunch of people get together
all of whom have this like small level of harm
and directly get the company to pay out.
Like that's kind of how we decided to do it.
This makes me think of what we talked about
in our white color crime episode,
which is basically that it seems like we don't really
enforce this kind of thing unless we're making
an example of somebody.
Yes, exactly.
So as we have seen a million times on the show,
anytime we have these periods of progressive change,
we then have an equal and opposite period
of reactionary backlash.
So starting in the 1970s,
companies start complaining about
we're becoming an overly litigious society.
It's too easy to take companies to court for any old thing.
There's actually like ad campaigns on TV in the 1980s.
This is a excerpt from Distorting the Law.
Other paid ads featured staged photos
of empty swimming pools, defunded sports teams,
and children's organizations.
A bumper sticker read, go ahead, hit me, I need the money.
Rick Perlstein has a very good chapter
of his book, Reagan Land About This.
This was basically the period when corporations
realized they could start these fake NGOs
and make them seem like they're grassroots.
Citizens for consumer freedom or whatever.
And then you look at the funders
and it's all Halliburton and Monsanto and stuff.
I'm sure they do great work.
So during the 1970s, the corporations set up something
called the American Tort Reform Association.
And there's something called Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse.
And one of the most effective tactics for this
is they start cherry picking anecdotes.
At the time, this is pre-internet, right?
So you can't just sit down and read the Kansas City Star
if you live in Portland.
So what these quote unquote grassroots NGOs start doing
is they start combing all the national newspapers
looking for the silliest lawsuits, right?
And just plucking these random anecdotes out
and then they'll put together a digest at the end of the year.
They'll send them out as press releases,
just hammering home this idea that you'll never
believe what people are suing about.
Wow.
One of the things that Derby Nuts about researching
this episode is that a lot of the McDonald's hot coffee
stuff and other really, really bad cultural understandings
come from late night monologue jokes.
And there's no central repository to look them up.
You can't find what was Jay Leno saying
about the McDonald's hot coffee case.
We really need about someone somewhere, please.
And also of tabloids.
Seriously.
So one of the few Jay Leno jokes that I came across
was from 1997, I'm going to read it to you.
I'm not going to do the voice.
Here's another reason why Americans hate lawyers.
A man in suburban Seattle is suing the dairy industry
because he's become addicted to milk
and it has raised his cholesterol to dangerous levels.
The government should have warning labels on milk.
In fact, this is the proposed warning label.
Warning, too much milk can make you a frivolous lawsuit
filing moron.
OK, Jay Leno, great stuff.
The joke is that it's mean.
He's being mean.
So this is all later.
But what's interesting about this joke
and about it showing up on Jay Leno
is that this is one of the anecdotes that's
plucked out of obscurity by the American tort reform
association.
This is exactly why we started doing this show.
Because culture has, I guess, always been steered
by just this kind of a thing.
And it's just so frustrating.
So all of this is happening long before the McDonald's hot
coffee case and even before the story of this woman who
gets her CAT scan and loses her psychic powers.
Right.
It's basically like she does something
that's very useful to an ever churning
mill that means pebbles of her exact size.
So do you want to know what actually happened to her?
Yeah.
So the basic facts of that little factoid are roughly true.
Her name is Judith Haymes.
This happened at Temple University Hospital.
She came in for a CAT scan.
So before you get a CAT scan, one of the things they do
is they inject you with something called contrast material
that just makes it easier to see your body.
Like the rays, the cat rays bounce off of it or something.
And so the doctor is about to inject her with this dye.
And she says, hey, I'm a little uncomfortable.
I've actually had allergic reactions to iodine-based dyes
before.
So can you give me a dye that is made of something else
or not give me a dye, something like that?
The doctor basically says, LOL, there's
no such thing as an allergy to these dyes.
These dyes are fine.
And then eventually, the doctor talks her into giving her some.
So they inject it into her arm.
And all of a sudden, she just gets like searing pain.
She collapses to the floor, basically
has like some sort of a seizure.
She never gets the CAT scan.
For days afterwards, she's like puking
and just has these like continuous headaches.
What she says is that for years, basically
for the rest of her life, whenever she
does like deep concentration, like she
has to really think about something deeply,
she gets these splitting headaches.
That's terrifying.
I know, right?
Yeah.
It is true that she was working as a psychic.
She would give consultations to people.
And apparently, she did like police psychic work.
It's not that she loses her psychic powers.
It's that she can't concentrate.
As soon as she tries to concentrate
and do what she considers to be like hearing the psychic
spirits, she gets this awful headache.
Right, she's lost income.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like, I lost my income due to this very straightforward
medical error in the sort of the calendar wacky lawsuit
version, like she gets $1 million from a jury, which is true.
She got $986,000.
But it's immediately overturned on appeal.
The judge basically overturns it because he doesn't like it.
He calls it grossly excessive.
And then he orders a new trial.
And then at the new trial, her claim is denied.
So not only was the CAT scan making her lose her psychic
powers thing not true, but she didn't get any money for this.
Yeah, like she got to be a factoid.
It also falls into this thing of anyone
will sue each other over anything these days.
But she actually waited eight years to sue.
The only reason she eventually sued
was because her son died in a car accident.
And she was convinced that if she still
had her psychic powers, she could have foreseen it.
So it's just this really sad story
of a woman with a disability and a dead son.
I feel like we'd rather live in a world where people are
crafty and successfully self-interested
rather than just sad and desperate and still without any money.
Because that's going to be us, baby.
So essentially the only reason why poor Judith's story falls
out of these trash trend stories about frivolous lawsuits
is because of the McDonald's hot coffee case.
So he's like, thanks, Stella.
I know, it's like we have a better one now.
OK, so now we're going to talk about the actual McDonald's
hot coffee case.
We're actually not going to spend that much time on this
because I feel like most people kind of know what happened
at this point.
We've lured you in, as if with a fraudulent anecdote.
That's the thing, there's the hot coffee documentary.
Swindled has a really good episode about it.
Adam ruins everything, has a really good episode.
There's various YouTube videos debunking it.
It's one of the only stories we've covered
where the you're wrong about version
is sort of almost as commonly known as the fake version
at this point.
So do you want to just walk me through what actually happened,
like the debunked version of the McDonald's hot coffee case?
My understanding is that Stella Liebeck
was living independently and doing quite well
for a woman of whatever her age was before this happened.
And then she was giving coffee that was extremely hot
and that it scalded a kind of significant percentage
of her lower body.
And then she was awarded this money.
And then as happens, I think typically in these cases,
it was immediately reduced to something much less.
And also it's like, well, when you just suffered
this debilitating injury, then you do need money for medical
care.
And you're probably not seeing any of it as profit.
And even if you are, pain and suffering is a real thing.
And I feel like a lot of this comes from Americans
just absolute staunch refusal to believe
in the concept of trauma.
Yeah, oh yeah.
And also just the reality that when something like this
happens, somebody has to pay.
And the question is, well, should Stella Liebeck
pay for her medical bills?
Or should the corporation pay for her medical bills?
Oh, and also I remember that what she was awarded originally
was the amount of profit that McDonald's
derived from a day of hot coffee sales.
Yeah, two days.
Two days, OK.
Oh my god, two days.
Oh no.
I mean, when you put it that way, like so much of statistics
and numbers has to do with the context that you put it in,
I think, we often react how we're being encouraged to react.
And if you put it that way, it's like, well, come on.
It's really hard to see the grave injustice that
was done in this case.
Yes.
So the basic facts of the case, Stella Liebeck
is 79 years old at the time of the accident.
She is a retired department store clerk.
This is one of the first details to go when
this hits the national media.
She's a lifelong Republican.
She's like a pull yourself up by your bootstraps person.
She's not a like, I filed a lawsuit against this.
And I'm a lib who wants to change society.
She's a pretty conservative lady.
Conservative ladies need skin grafts too, it turns out.
So it is February 27th, 1992.
It is Albuquerque, New Mexico.
She is in a Ford probe with her grandson, Chris.
The Albreville Olympics have just concluded.
What a time.
They pull into the drive-thru.
They order a cup of coffee, egg McMuffin.
They pull directly into the parking lot.
This is a time before cup holders in cars.
What?
Right?
We didn't have cup holder, what?
There's some good galaxy brain articles
that are talking about how many third-degree burns
have been prevented by cup holders versus lawsuits.
People have been drinking coffee in cars
since the 1920s at least.
I mean, that is stunning.
So she has her hands full of egg McMuffin.
She doesn't have any cup holders.
She puts this cup of coffee that she bought 30 seconds ago
in between her legs and she's wrestling with the lid
to get it off because she wants to put milk and sugar in it.
She yanks a little too hard.
The lid comes off, but the coffee cup also flips over.
The coffee at the time is 190 degrees.
It's basically boiling.
And also, very importantly, she's wearing sweatpants.
So the coffee immediately soaks into the sweatpants
and then the sweatpants hold it against her skin.
Oh, cotton.
Yeah.
And so she starts screaming like her grandson
has never heard before.
The first of millions of people to do this,
he thinks that she's overreacting at first.
Oh, my God.
But then she starts to get nauseous
and she passes out from the pain.
Oh, bad.
And that's what he realizes that it's really bad.
So he gets her out of the car.
He gets her sweatpants off.
They have towels or something in the trunk.
He wraps her lower body in towels and they go to the hospital.
I mean, it's the entire contents.
That's the thing.
I once spilled some tea on myself out of a mug
that was pretty well insulated and it soaked through some layers.
And I remember being shocked at like,
I had this like tiny little patch that got like the full strength
of the hot tea on it that I had just made.
And I had a scar from that for a couple of years, I think.
Have you seen the photos of Stella's injuries?
Oh, yeah.
Can you describe them?
You just like see basically an injury that has the power
to basically like rob you of health for the rest of your life.
No one who's ever seen these photos
would ever make a like McDonald's lawsuit joke ever again.
Like they look like shark attack photos.
Truly.
And her doctor, when she gets to the hospital,
he later says that it's the worst burn case he's ever seen.
Oh, God.
And like, this is one of the things that really turned me around
on the hot coffee case because like, of course,
I believed the mythic version that I heard as a teenager.
Yeah.
She spends a week in the hospital.
Like they're so severe.
I'm shocked that it was only a week, honestly,
based on everything you've said.
Well, this is the thing.
It actually should have been longer,
but she couldn't afford to stay in the hospital.
So she basically went home.
And then her daughter has to take all this time off work
to drive her to and from the hospital for skin grafts, which
apparently are like very painful.
And it's so funny because like in America,
well, the three categories of people,
I would say who we profess to love the most are like babies, moms,
and grandmas.
And then when we have to really like put our money
where our mouths are, we're like, fuck that grandma.
Yeah.
Oh, totally.
She deserves to live the rest of her life in pain.
How dare she sue McDonald's?
So she goes home.
She's never sued anybody in her life.
She's not like thinking of this as like a legal case.
She writes a letter to McDonald's,
which says, it seems to me that no person would
find it reasonable to have been given coffee so hot
that it would do severe damage to my skin.
It seems that the reasonable expectation
for a spilling accident would be a mess
and a reddening of the skin at worst.
Although I did the spilling, I had no warning
that the coffee was that hot.
It should never have been given to a customer
at that temperature, which is pretty reasonable.
Yeah, I agree.
It doesn't need to be that hot.
That's too hot.
I feel like a lot of the jokes were like,
she was suing because the coffee was hot,
but she should have known that.
And it's like, listen, there are different kinds of hot,
aren't there?
Yes.
And so she tells the company in this letter
that all she wants is she wants them to like check
their coffee machine and like what's
going on at that specific location,
like what the hell was going on that morning.
Yeah.
And then like, hey, maybe you should
look at your policies generally.
Like is this every McDonald's?
Like you probably shouldn't be serving coffee this hot.
And then she asked them to cover her medical bills
and the time that her daughter had to take off of work.
So there's various accounts of like what she actually
put in this letter, but somewhere between $2,000
and $10,000 because that was roughly her like out-of-pocket
costs.
Yeah, and I bet like McDonald's made that money
during the time it took her to write that sentence.
Exactly.
So McDonald's writes back and offers her $800.
What?
Yeah.
That's insulting.
That's like a story I heard from a friend who
was working at a hotel and a guy tipped a quarter
by throwing it at someone.
Jail.
Yeah.
She finds an attorney in Houston named
Esrede Morgan, who had just worked
on a case of a woman who was severely burned
by McDonald's coffee.
Nice.
So this was already like a known enough issue
that there's been other lawsuits.
Right.
And at McDonald's, they're like, hey,
should we stop serving our coffee at the same temperature
as lava?
And they're like, why on earth would we do that?
Exactly.
I'm sure that it's like, does it make sense to like for coffee
longevity to keep it incredibly hot or something
ridiculous like that?
There's various theories.
One theory is that it lasts longer if it's hotter.
So you don't have to make it.
You don't have to turn it over as much.
It's more profitable, basically.
The company doesn't actually say that.
The company says most people buy the coffee
and then they sort of walk to work or they drive to work
and then they drink it 20, 25 minutes later.
No, they don't.
People drink coffee in their car as you imbeciles.
I don't know if there's like any basis to this whatsoever.
And they also say to extract the flavor,
the coffee has to be really hot.
It's like, well, yeah, but the coffee doesn't have to stay hot.
Right.
The coffee, it becomes coffee and then it remains coffee.
So they don't file a lawsuit immediately.
Her lawyer reaches out to McDonald's and says like,
look, let's settle this whole thing for $90,000.
That's going to cover the medical bills,
pain and suffering.
The whole shebang, let's do $90,000.
McDonald's ignores them.
So then they file a lawsuit.
On the eve of the lawsuit, he reaches out to McDonald's
again and says, if you guys want this lawsuit to go away,
give us $300,000, settle out of court, done.
He says later that he would have settled for like 150.
That was like his opening bid.
McDonald's ignores him.
So in August of 1994, they go to trial.
And it's a weird trial in that there's no debate over the facts.
So Stella is like, McDonald's, your coffee is way too hot to drink.
And McDonald's is like, yes.
And then McDonald's is like, Stella, you spilled the coffee on yourself.
And Stella is like, yes.
So the legal question is basically, is this coffee defective?
Like, are they selling a harmful product?
I feel like there's a basic kind of ideological question here too, maybe,
of like, do corporations have the right to give boiling hot liquid to seniors?
Right.
And if they can, should they?
And I assume McDonald's was represented by Pennywise, the dancing clown,
because he was Ronald's friend.
I mean, this is the thing that was that one of the things that comes out at trial
is that McDonald's has settled 700 cases of severe burns.
Why not just crank down the temperature?
Just like even 10, 20 degrees, I feel like would help a lot.
And then one of their sort of corporate executive people says like,
they're saying like, why do you keep the coffee this hot?
Like, why do you have this grave danger in all your restaurants?
And he's like, that's far from the biggest danger in a restaurant.
You're like, well, I know.
You don't pour like a cup of like boiling grease in hand
to someone who's driving.
And also like, yeah, there's probably other ways in which it's harming its
customers and employees too.
But like, that's not what we're talking about here today.
There's something really annoying about like companies willfully
misunderstanding how people use their product, which I realize they have to do
all the time for liability.
But like the thing where a corporation in order to have a sound legal strategy
has to act like none of them have any idea what human beings are like.
And also have no experience being a human being themselves.
There's also this comes out later, but there's a Newsweek article about this
and they interview one of McDonald's lawyers who says, brace yourself.
First person accounts of sundry women whose nether regions have been
scorched by McDonald's coffee might well be worthy of Oprah,
but they have no place in a court of law.
People burning themselves actually super duper does have a place in a court of law.
Like that's why we have courts of law.
And then he added, we all float down here.
Jesus Christ.
And also the fact that he's trying to.
I mean, this is such a classic like nineties, let's call someone a bimbo
to ignore the fact that she's alleging something legitimate thing where it's
like, well, why are we to believe the Stella Liebeck when it appears that she
has nether regions?
If anything, that makes it worse.
That seems indecent.
Like they also say that one of the reasons her burns were so severe is
because like her skin is old and like if she wasn't so old and if she hadn't
like worn sweatpants that day, then it wouldn't have been a severe McDonald's.
If you're going to claim that old people wearing sweatpants aren't like
one of your key demographics, then like, what do you even think you do?
Oh, my God, it's literally what was she wearing?
Yes. Do you realize? Jesus.
So the jury deliberates for four hours.
They come back with a two point nine million dollar settlement.
It's $200,000 for compensatory medical expenses, pain and suffering, which they
actually reduce by 20% because she spilled the coffee on herself.
So they're like, yeah, she she retains some culpability for this.
So that's $160,000.
And then they give McDonald's two point seven million impugnative damages,
which is based on this two days of coffee sales standard.
I feel like it's like we would just all love to believe that like this could never
happen to any of us and that every day isn't just a crapshoot.
We're like your favorite McMuffin place is going to like take away
your skin and then insult you about it.
So of course, this happens.
There's a wave of headlines, which we're going to talk about.
And then about a month later, a judge on appeal reduces the punitive damages
to 640,000, which are triple the compensatory damages.
This is like something that's happening at the time.
This idea that like punitive damages are out of control.
So they've chosen this like completely arbitrary standard that like they
shouldn't exceed three times the compensatory damages, which is like
that's not how punishment works.
Oh, but we love arbitrary three time standards in the law.
I'm sure it's in the Constitution somewhere.
It's like celebrity death.
This is the thing that like drives me nuts is it's like the point of a punitive
damage is to be as big as possible to punish the company.
Like if it was a mom and pop coffee place, then like, yeah, two point seven million
is too much because they don't have that much money.
But if it's a giant corporation, the only language a corporation
understands is money.
So it has to be really large.
The entire purpose of the system that we set up in the 1960s and the 1970s,
this sort of packed between regulators and corporations was that punitive
damages and these kinds of lawsuits are how we're going to enforce good
corporate behavior.
And you can't then turn around and be like, oh, it's unfair that we're
having to pay these large fines, basically, when it's like, no, that's
this is how we've decided to do this.
You're just proposing impunity for corporations by reducing these damages.
Right, because like we would because we hate fellow citizens, like getting
some kind of a settlement, like getting money that we see is unearned.
We're more scared of that than we are scared of living in a world where
corporations have no checks on them at all.
Exactly.
We're putting the terrifying fear that somebody would get something they
don't deserve above our need to like have corporations that don't harm
people widely.
Right.
Okay, so that's that's kind of the case.
But what interests me about this case is how it happened.
How did this become this perfect totemic example of a legal system run
amok?
Like how did it become the myth that shows up in a Seinfeld episode?
Right.
The lawsuit that launched a thousand late night jokes.
Exactly.
So I am going to send you the original AP story.
This is the first America learned of this case.
Oh, boy.
So this is published in August 1994, just after the verdict comes out.
Headline, woman burned by a hot McDonald's coffee gets 2.9 million.
X-tree, X-tree.
Right.
A woman who was scolded when her McDonald's coffee spilled was awarded nearly
$2.9 million or about two days coffee sales for the fast food cane.
Lawyers for Stella Liebeck, who suffered third degree burns in the 1992 incident,
contended that McDonald's coffee was too hot.
A state district court jury imposed $2.9 million in punitive damages on $160,000
in compensatory damages Wednesday.
Testimony indicated McDonald's coffee has served at 180 to 190 degrees based
on advice from a coffee consultant who has said it tastes best that hot.
Who is this coffee consultant?
I know.
Who is like tongue is made of asbestos, apparently.
So what do you think?
I feel like it makes sense to me that this is the kind of thing that you would
read or if you were doing like drive time radio and you're constantly scouring
the AP or whatever for this kind of a thing, you're like, OK, let's talk about
that. That's kind of interesting.
And I feel like if I were in the headline aggregating business and any
capacity, I would recognize this as an anger causing headline and something
that would just get people who are probably driving to work drinking coffee
because that's what human beings do in their cars would be like, ah, that's
ridiculous. Congratulations to me.
I've created another 30 seconds worth of content for whatever job I have.
Right.
What I think is so interesting about this, it's like a long article and it's
one of those boring things I've ever read because it's written in this what
they call inverted pyramid style, right?
Which is like the first thing they teach you in journalism school is that
when you write a news story, you order the information in order of importance.
So you're not trying to like craft a narrative like Stella Liebeck was born
on a Wednesday, so it's basically a series of sentences that don't really
like run into each other at all, like each one of them is just like a little
fact. It's very technical and really difficult to read.
You don't get a sort of front to back chronological narrative of what actually
happened. So this is the final paragraph of the story is where you learn
about Stella Liebeck being burned by the coffee.
This is those passive fucking sense.
Like you would have to try to write a sentence more passive than this.
It says, according to testimony, Liebeck was a passenger in a car driven
by her grandson outside of McDonald's in Southeast Albuquerque when she was
burned by a cup of coffee purchased at a drive-thru window.
That cup of coffee.
I guess it's not marched right up to jump over with a hot poker in its hand.
That's the final paragraph of the story.
The inverted pyramid, this way of delivering information makes sense.
If it's like an ongoing story, you know, a improvised bomb went off today in Baghdad.
You don't need to tell the whole story of like the Iraq war and like why we're
there and like 2003, like there's enough sort of shared knowledge about that
situation that you really can give people like, hey, here's a new development
of this ongoing story, right?
But this story is the first national news coverage of this case.
There was never a story of like women receive severe burns at McDonald's.
Women asks McDonald's for money and is refused.
None of the previous beats in the story were ever reported.
And this story doesn't give you just a chronological telling of like
Stella Liebeck ordered some coffee, it burned her really severely.
She's been a week in the hospital, etc.
It's telling a backward story about something no one has heard of before.
Right, because we're not interested in the accident or the suffering.
Like that doesn't make it newsworthy.
It's the amount of money that makes it newsworthy.
So this story comes out the way that AP Wire copy works is that other newspapers
print it and then they oftentimes will sort of shorten it to their own needs
or like to fit into the space or whatever.
Right. So in discerning the law, they trace all of the newspapers
that publish this story and it usually appears at sort of like two thirds
the length of the original missive.
And usually what they cut out is like how severe her burns are.
And like what actually happened because oftentimes you cut from the bottom
if you're cutting one of these inverted pyramid stories.
I feel like the unfortunate thing about nuance is that it often makes things
like it doesn't make them less interesting, but it makes it so that you have to
expand more energy right to experience, you know, the interesting aspect of it as
opposed to it like ruins it being something that's like this little nugget
that gets extreme reactions out of people.
Exactly. It ruins the nugget.
Yes. One thing that I find so interesting about this period, too, is that on
September 1st, so relatively soon after the verdict, there is a front page
Wall Street Journal story that debunks the myth.
Oh, wow.
It does the thing that like we are doing now and like Adam ruins everything is
doing. It's like we interviewed all the jurors and the jurors basically
universally say like, yeah, we went into this case thinking like, why are we talking
about a woman who spilled coffee on herself?
Like obviously this is unbelievably frivolous, but then we saw the photos
and we heard about McDonald's behavior and we heard about their policies on
coffee and we changed our minds.
One juror saw the photos of Stella Lee Beck's injuries and then went home
that night and told his wife and daughter never to drink coffee again.
Oh, God.
I actually think it's amazing that it's often just taken for granted that the
judges and juries in these cases are just like insufferable SJWs who find no
critical context.
There's like, haha, this crazy woman spilled coffee.
Here's your money.
God knows that there's too many liberal judges running around and that's one
of our main problems in this country.
Famously liberal American legal culture.
And also this is why I think the overall decades old by this point narrative
about frivolous lawsuits is so important is because without that context of
already being convinced that lawsuits in America are out of control, you might
think like, well, this sounds really silly at first.
But like, I wonder why the jury made that decision.
Like I wonder why the judge was okay with that.
Like there's probably something here that I'm missing and I should look into
it more.
Yeah.
But other than this Wall Street Journal story, nobody showed any curiosity.
It's just crazy to me for journalists to behave this way.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's a business.
I found other articles that critique the, you know, initial news coverage.
But like 99% of Americans did not hear about this story from news coverage.
I think it's very similar to when we talked about Kitty Genovese, where it's
like this story of a woman is stabbed to death, gets no interest at all.
It's just like a pretty routine crime.
They're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, it happens every day.
Exactly.
And then it's only once it becomes this reinforcement of this broader narrative
that people get interested in it.
Yeah.
It wasn't the hard news coverage that spread the myth.
It was this second, third wave of coverage when Stella Lebeck's case becomes
fodder for editorials.
Oh, God, you're going to read me some awful quotes.
I can feel them incoming.
Dude, this one made me want to fucking cry.
This is from the San Diego Union Tribune.
This is the entire, entire editorial.
It's one paragraph long.
It says, when Stella Lebeck fumbled her coffee as she rode in the car with her
grandson, she might as well have bought a winning lottery ticket.
The spilled coffee netted her 2.9 million in the form of a jury award.
Lebeck sued McDonald's for serving takeout coffee that her lawyer claimed was
too hot.
This absurd judgment is a stunning illustration of what is wrong with
America's civil justice system.
Our guess is that other greedy copycats in restaurants throughout America will
soon be happily dumping coffee into their laps in a bid to make a similar
killing in the courtroom.
I just find it incredibly dark that we were and are in this mindset of like,
if someone gets some significant amount of money, we become completely
tunnel visioned away from thinking about the circumstances of how they got it.
Or even whether they got it for that matter.
Like just setting that aside.
Exactly.
Yeah.
We're just like, I wish I had 2.9 million dollars.
And it's like, do you wish you lost the use of your lower body?
Seriously.
You're just like so focused on the money.
And just this idea, I think this is a sickness we have, but I also think it's
a response to a real thing, which is like in America, we are trained to be like
the only thing that's going to make me feel safe is having a gigantic lump sum
of money.
And it's like, you know what?
That is the only thing that's going to make you safe.
So you're not wrong.
I mean, the other thing that makes me incandescent is nobody seemed to reach
out to Stella Liebeck.
Yeah.
I'm sure she was busy having her skin replaced.
That's the thing.
She she has trouble like standing up straight for the rest of her life.
Like this is a debilitating injury.
That's terrible.
She's basically permanently disabled by this and like a five minute phone call.
Yeah.
With Stella Liebeck just like described to me what happened.
Holy shit.
And like, there's your story and like, why isn't anyone picking up on this
opportunity for a story about McDonald's abusing this old woman?
Like, so another thing that happens in these editorials is like the details
start to fudge.
So the Cincinnati Enquirer says personal responsibility has been scrapped for
the notion that someone can be made to pay for any mistake, including opening
a cup of hot coffee between your legs while driving.
Okay.
Yeah.
And I remember when I gave you the summary a little while ago, I think I
said that she was driving and we all do this when we tell anecdotes is
because that we hold you to a higher standard if you're writing for a newspaper.
San Francisco Chronicle refers to it as a surreal case like the woman who
recently won $2.7 million after spilling coffee on her leg in a McDonald's restaurant.
I always love in this sort of like folk headline mythology, like as stuff
changes, you get to look at what remains consistent and it's like lots of money
spilled coffee on herself.
The authors of Distorting the Law talk about it as a folktale.
It becomes like these urban legends of like, you know, the razor blades
and the Halloween candy.
Right.
It just is like a thing that sort of bounces around the culture.
And and we saw this with Kitty Genovese, too.
The real danger of a story like this isn't stories about it, like stories
that actually investigate what happened.
The danger is when it becomes something that you just say in like a one
sentence aside about something.
Yeah, I feel like at that point, that's when it's a meme.
Exactly. It's become a meme.
Yeah. Yeah.
And this is the final stage of the story when it starts showing up in late
night jokes and joke calendars and bathroom readers and everywhere.
This case, it shows up in like Anne Lander's columns.
Oh, God.
The people will write in and be like, what about this lady in Anne Lander's
like, that's ridiculous.
And I feel like you should be like, this is an advice column.
Please ask me for advice.
Exactly. Talk to me about problems.
Apparently, Jay Leno made so many jokes about this case that Stella's
lawyer contacted him and was like, I am begging you.
Let me tell you what actually happened and didn't do anything.
There's also last example of this.
There's a Toby Keith song.
What? This is the line.
This is a fucking rich text.
He says, plasma getting bigger, Jesus getting smaller, spill a cup of coffee,
make a million dollars.
OK, I really feel like Jesus.
Not that I know a ton about the guy, but I feel like he was like pro medical care
for old women. Exactly.
What would Jesus think about this case, Toby?
I guess in a way, I find it reassuring that Americans have always been
horrible and mean and ignorant because I've been really upset by how much of
that I'm seeing lately.
And I just feel like in retrospect, my expectations were somehow too high.
OK, so here is the point of the episode where like we talk about what I really
want to talk about, which is one of the worst periods of American journalism
in our lifetimes.
This demented moral panic about frivolous lawsuits that had sort of been
bubbling before Stella and then just explodes after 1995.
So I am going to send you a New York Times article that is published
about a year after Stella's verdict happens.
Oh, boy. OK, this does have a great title.
Right. Hey, waiter, now there's a lawyer in my soup.
How about a tort with that tort?
Well, joke was begging to be made.
Take the case of the young couple celebrating their honeymoon at the
Rainbow Room last year, seated near the smoking section they were from time
to time, subjected to drifting smoke during the evening.
They finished their meal and left without incident.
A few weeks later, they sued the restaurant for one million dollars,
maintaining that they were so upset by the smoke at dinner that it, quote,
upset their expected right to conjugal happiness.
The restaurant ignored the case and it never went to court.
But what if it had?
And what if the couple had won?
America's restaurateurs argue that such a scenario is possible.
I feel like this is like the crawl in a 50s sci-fi movie.
No.
This is like a genre of journalism that we will get over and over again
over the next decade, a story that like lawsuits are out of control.
And then here's this anecdote that isn't a lawsuit.
This opening anecdote is the legal system working as intended.
These people filed a frivolous lawsuit and it didn't go anywhere.
Yeah, it's like Alan Dershowitz's classic book where even if like someone
isn't acquitted, like the fact that they even attempted to defense his proof
that America is going to hell in a hand basket.
And it's like, do you think this is true?
Or did you just have to write a book this year?
Exactly. What's amazing is this article, it lists, of course,
it uses the McDonald's hot coffee case like this.
This could happen to anybody.
And then the reporter interviews what he says is a dozen restauranters in New York City.
None of them have ever actually had a lawsuit filed against them.
The closest thing to a lawsuit in the entire story is one guy who owns a restaurant
has a customer who like fell down the stairs and knocked out a tooth.
And they asked the restaurant to pay for his medical bills.
And it went through the insurance company and the guy got his medical bills paid.
The fact that we're upset about these stories suggests that we want to be living
in just this frontier where even if you do injure yourself in a way that,
you know, an entity with more money than you could ever possibly dream of
could easily take care of, like, why would they?
Because you're both comparable individuals.
You know, there was some question about like the handrail or whatever.
But like, it's not a lawsuit and it's not clear that any injustice actually took place.
Like, this is why businesses have insurance is to deal with things like this.
I haven't heard any of these articles mentioning insurance because that also
fells up the story that they're trying to tell here.
Exactly. And then the story ends with the case of this couple who like went out
of a fancy restaurant and the valet like brought the wrong car.
There was some concern about the car or something, something and these people
complained and they demanded for their $700 check to be refunded by the restaurant.
What? Not a lawsuit.
I feel like it's like this is because people love to gossip about other human beings
and it's like, that's fine.
Right. But like, that doesn't make it news.
But this is what's so amazing to me is that like the actual story here
is debunking the panic that you're feeding.
Yeah. If somebody says like Seattle is bowing under an epidemic of snakebites.
And I talked to like park rangers, they've never seen a snakebite.
I look at like poison control, no records of any snakebites.
The story then is like, well, the people saying their snakebites are lying.
But like, I'm not just going to write a story like Seattle's snakebite epidemic
and like John almost saw a snake once.
No, you have to at least include one example of the thing that you are saying is happening.
Once again, we had nothing better to do, you know, we weren't yet freaking out about Y2K.
We were just like, what are we going to freak out about?
We have to freak out about something.
Exactly. There's a time magazine cover story called Busy Bodies and Cry Babies.
What's happening to the American character?
Embarrassing.
There's a newsweek story called Lawsuit Hell.
There's a bunch more of these like conservative books come out.
Like one of them is called like The Death of Common Sense.
It's like a mass hysteria event.
Most of the stories you read in these articles and these books are exactly
like the one we've got here where it's like someone thought about filing a lawsuit.
This is really awful.
This is a case that gets called the Humping Hobos.
Oh, God.
I know.
I'm not excited at all for where this is going.
It's bad.
It's two homeless people who are in the New York subway system.
There's a track that is like disused.
They pull out a mattress.
They put it on the tracks.
They start having sex and then a train comes.
Oh, no.
It turns out this is like some maintenance tunnel, something, something.
It's only used like once every couple of months or something.
And this is why they get hit by the train, but they don't have like severe injuries.
Really?
It loses like a part of a toe.
And I think the woman has like her pelvis dislocated or something, but like not sort
of super duper severe injuries.
Yeah.
I was expecting this to be much sadder.
They find a lawyer and a lawyer puts out a press release saying we're suing the New
York subway for $10 million.
But then nothing.
They never filed the lawsuit.
Oh, okay.
There's also in this infamous Newsweek story called lawsuit hell.
They again, with like no details, we're not given the time or the date or any specifics
about this case.
But apparently there's a convicted sex offender.
That's all the information we get about this person who is running from police in Maine.
And he hides in the woods for three days and he loses three toes to frost bites.
This is the sentence from the Newsweek story.
Incredibly, police say, the man threatened to sue the police for not catching him sooner.
Period space.
He couldn't find a lawyer, comma, but his sheer Hootspah did not surprise the county
sheriff.
Headline.
People have Hootspah somewhere in America.
So it's like the thesis of the story is that lawsuits are out of control and we have a case
of like the legal system working exactly as intended, right?
That this is very clearly a frivolous case.
Lawyers look at it and they're like, eh, that's fine.
I know we say this all the time, but like it must be said again and again, the point
of the story and stories like it is not that it's true or even that the people writing
it necessarily are doing so in good faith, but that they know people will read it.
Yes.
There's a story of a Boston University professor who gets hired and then within his first year
sexually harasses students.
He sexually assaults a colleague.
He gives students alcohol.
Like the guy's just a mess.
The university fires him and then he sues under the Americans with Disabilities Act
because he says he has a mental illness that causes disinhibition and he can't control
his behavior.
And of course this bounces around as like you'll never guess what the disabled people
want now.
This is the law being used for frivolousness.
And then I found the case.
You can read it.
The judge looks at this and is like, yeah, this is frivolous and the judge tosses it out.
The judge says he's clearly unfit for this role regardless of any reasonable accommodation.
This also feels like a story, you know, or a series of stories where legal literacy is
an issue.
Yes.
Because like if people had more of an understanding of just like, well, you know, like there's
filing a lawsuit and then there's like all the other things that have to happen before
you have a snowball's chance of getting any money.
And then after you get money, they can still take it all back, actually.
Exactly.
So it's like there's no distinction between like things that people tried to do and things
that happened.
Right.
Other category of lawsuits are quote unquote frivolous lawsuits that show up in these stories
that aren't frivolous.
So this is in the Newsweek story.
It says school boards now fear that parents will sue for anything.
In Kentucky, a mother sued her daughter's school after the girl had performed oral sex
on a boy during a school bus ride returning from a marching band contest.
The woman blamed adult supervision saying her daughter had been forced.
If the case goes badly for the school system, such trips could be jeopardized.
I what what was happening in the country that you could just say that and have people be
like, oh, it sounds sounds good.
It sounds like solid reporting there.
Yeah.
Because like the story itself is saying that like the mother is alleging that this wasn't
a consensual sexual experience.
Yes.
So blaming a lack of supervision from the school.
I know.
What?
Again, like isn't it a core American value that like the proxy parental unit that you're
giving your child to during the daytime should protect them from sexual assault?
Another thing that really bugs me about this is like this is a real case.
I could only find one actual story about what happened and there's no follow up.
So another one of the problems with plucking these random anecdotes out of obscurity is
that it requires journalistic resources to actually investigate them.
But we know that like she gave oral sex to this boy on the school bus on this field
trip.
The principal quote unquote investigated, I have no idea what that means.
The principal decided that it was consensual and suspended her for 10 days.
Nice.
We don't know what happened to the boy.
The boy might have been suspended, might not have.
We don't know.
Her mother then complains and says like, no, she was forced to give him oral sex.
The school board investigates and finds, yes, he forced her to have oral sex.
Then the principal suspends her for two more days for not reporting it earlier.
What?
Uh, okay.
She's still the bad guy out of this somehow.
And then the mother files a lawsuit like this is fucking ridiculous.
And the mother in the lawsuit like very clearly, she's not asking for any money.
She is suing the school to demand sexual harassment training for higher level staff.
How dare she?
How dare she give a damn?
This poor woman shows up in fucking Newsweek as like, you'll never guess.
And again, it's like, it's so fucking dark that the only motive we can ascribe to anyone
in these stories is financial gain.
Like not protecting your child, not healing from an injury, not trying to enforce some
kind of limitations on corporate power.
It has to be greed.
I mean, this is the same thing, you know, with the classic 90s maligned women stories
that were, for me, a lot of the impetus of starting to do the show again, there's like
such a theme of like, well, she's on TV and made money in some capacity after we dragged
her entire life through the mud and traumatized her horribly.
So in the end, didn't she gain and you're like, no, like what?
Who can say?
Yeah.
Another one that goes around is a guy who was working on a construction site and he put
up a ladder and he didn't know that the ground that he put the ladder was like frozen manure,
like frozen poo.
Oh, God.
And then he like went for lunch or something and came back and the poo had melted and he
climbed the ladder again and the ladder fell over and he sued the ladder company and got
rich.
But then people investigate this and there was no manure.
It was a guy who climbed a ladder.
The ladder was rated for a thousand pounds.
It said that like this can safely hold a thousand pounds.
The guy weighs 250 and the ladder, one of the rungs of the ladder that the guy is standing
on breaks and he falls down and injures himself.
So where did this phantom manure come from?
This one originated on 60 minutes.
What?
Yeah.
So like not, not like a fly by night, like random calendar.
Come on, 60 minutes.
I expected more of you.
I expected morally of you.
But then it's also a lot of these cases are, you know, they seem sort of weird at a glance,
but they're actually just product liability cases.
So somebody suing for falling off a ladder sounds kind of silly, but again, this is how
we enforce things like being honest on your label about how many pounds your ladder can
hold.
Right.
Because otherwise you can just kind of say anything and it turns out a lot of companies
do that.
Did you hear about the hugging cousin case?
No.
What?
I mean, but I'm including it just because it's a wild story.
There's this woman who goes to her 12-year-old nephew's birthday party.
He sees her like auntie runs into her arms to give her a hug.
He accidentally knocks her over and she breaks her wrist in the fall.
And this shows up in the sort of New York Post circuit as aunt sues nephew for hugging
her.
I do know this story.
I think I've heard of it.
Oh, do you?
And it's like she had to sue him because that was the only way to get like his family
insurance to pay her insurance for medical costs, I assume.
So much of the stories about like the dastardliness of insurance companies, her insurance would
not cover her injuries and offered her $1.
The only way for her to get her medical bills paid was to sue the family and get their homeowner
liability insurance to cover it because it covers injuries that take place on the property.
And you have to name somebody in the lawsuit.
So she had to name her nephew and like her nephew was fine with this, her sister was fine
with this.
And I knew exactly what was going on.
It was just like this legal formality and it didn't work.
The case was thrown out.
No.
So again, yeah, it's like we're recycling cases that are legally unusable and turning
them into news.
Yes.
So the last category of cases that show up in these stories, and I really could not
believe this, is like straight up fake cases.
I heard this one in high school and I didn't realize until I was researching this that it
was fake.
Did you hear the one about the guy who was driving an RV and put on the cruise control
and sort of like took his hands off the wheel and was like, oh, this is fine.
He's driving through Idaho or something.
And he's like, okay, this is safe.
And then he goes to the back to go to the bathroom.
And then the RV veers off the road and either he dies or he's injured, like depending on
the version of the story.
Did you hear this?
No, I never heard that one.
So I didn't hear it with this addition, but apparently the epilogue to the story or one
of the other versions of the story was that he then sues Winnebago and they give him $1.75
million and a new Winnebago.
So he's probably not dead.
So this, this is from a fucking email forward.
Oh my God, email forwards.
Make your news source.
It's not clear who wrote these originally, but in 2002, this is fucked.
Somebody writes something called the Stella Awards.
Oh no.
What are the most frivolous lawsuits in America?
I know.
I want to like fight somebody on Stella's behalf.
I know man, Jesus.
This Stella Awards thing goes around this Winnebago story is on there.
There's these other like ridiculous stories of like one of them is like a woman who sued
a department store for tripping over her own toddler in the store.
There's one of like a guy who's trying to steal a hubcap and the driver doesn't know
and he backs over the dude's hand and then he sues and he gets $74,000.
So I guess this entire email runs verbatim in the New York Daily News.
There's even this thing.
I think this is so typical of the time USA Today runs one of these like standard lawsuits
are out of control like generic stories and they include most of these stories.
And then Howard Kurtz at the Washington Post writes a debunking article.
He's like, uh, USA Today just printed like a bunch of fake stories from an email forward
that I got to and USA Today doesn't take any responsibility.
They basically say just like, ah, but still like, yeah, those ones might be fake, but
we all know the frivolous lawsuits panic like we all know Americans are suing each other.
It's like there's this unspoken acknowledgement that this isn't news news.
This is like entertainment news.
Yes.
They even say in their sort of public letter, few Americans would disagree with the proposition
that there are far too many frivolous lawsuits filed in America.
Well, few Americans just means that something is widely believed.
That doesn't mean it's true.
Also, like you can say anything in the opening sentence of something of a trend piece and
someone who has never thought of that thing in their life will be like, oh yeah, I guess
that's true.
It really is remarkable the extent to which it's all anecdotes all the way down.
So in distorting the law, they do a content analysis of one of these books that comes
out in the 90s called the litigation explosion.
And they find the book consists of 272 short anecdotes, one case study, and six statistics.
Six statistics?
Six?
What?
No.
That's like you having me over for dinner.
You're going to make me chicken and then I come over and you serve me like a big bowl
of spices.
And you're like, here you go.
And then you bring out like one nugget, one chicken nugget, and I'm supposed to like
eat that whole bowl of seasoning in front of you.
And what drives me nuts is all of the statistics that we're running around, like you come
across the same statistics in all of these articles and they're all fake.
One of the numbers that goes around is that like Americans pay out $130 billion in like
punitive damages or like civil tort damages, $130 billion, like you see this number everywhere.
And the $130 billion, it includes every insurance claim paid out to everyone in America.
If your bike gets stolen and your insurance gives you $800, that's included.
These aren't even lawsuits.
They're certainly not frivolous lawsuits.
It's just like a big number.
Yeah.
And this feels like a reinscription of like all American attempts for financial justice,
I guess, or using insurance for what it is for.
It's like rebranding all of that under the label of scamming, which is really insidious.
Another number that goes around is that like Americans file 18 million lawsuits a year,
which is technically true, but that also includes like custody claims.
It's funny how like the legal problems of divorcing parents are often used to beef up
unrelated statistics because we talked about this too in terms of kidnapping.
It also includes like minor contractual disputes, landlord-tenant disputes like most cases filed
in the US are like really boring contract stuff.
Right.
Like 10% of lawsuits are really about torts at all or like, you know, you damaged me and
I want compensation.
Like that's a very small percentage and that percentage was not particularly changing at
the time.
And also I cannot get over this.
It's true that the number of lawsuits was roughly 18 million in the 1990s.
It's now 15 million.
So like as we have this panic about like lawsuits are out of control, lawsuits were falling.
Right.
Well, we do the same thing with murder.
The less murder there is, the more we like to freak out about it.
It's the same with punitive damages that if you look at the actual numbers, it's only
3% of cases actually result in punitive damages.
And in 1996, at the height of this panic over frivolous lawsuits, the median punitive damage
was $38,000.
It's actually, I mean, again, it's like we create a system where Americans have to use
the legal system in order to get kind of basic compensation and then we stigmatize them using
a system that is really their only option.
That's the thing.
It's like the frivolous lawsuits moral panic was this weird like work around of like genuine
problems in the legal system.
Right.
There's a lot of articles written about the judicialization of the United States because
so many standard government processes have essentially broken down at this point.
So if you want to get environmental relief, you sort of have to sue.
It's not fair to blame the people that are using the remedies that are available.
Right.
And I think when we feel kind of hopelessly enmeshed in a system and like there's no way
out, we rationalize that by attacking people who show us how awful that actually is for
us or could be.
What we want as a society is we want victims to be made whole again and we want corporations
to behave differently.
I want McDonald's to not serve its coffee that hot again and I want Stella to be fine.
Reasonable.
We don't get these two things, but you can also imagine a situation where just like the
government steps in and does both of those things separately.
Yeah.
We don't need Stella and McDonald's to have a fight with each other.
It's also weird how we're acting like Stella is taking that money away from us somehow
or like that normal people would otherwise have it and it's like, do you think that that
money was going to trickle down to you?
This is the thing.
One of the main, another bogus statistic that goes around is the quote unquote torque tax
that like companies are spending 10% of their profits on lawsuits.
That's actually true, but they were spending it on like other corporations suing them.
It's like we're like Samsung suing Apple for like some patent thing and it spends years
in the courts and they have to compensate each other.
Movie studios famously sue each other over like basically every movie that gets released.
Oh, how cool of them.
The only form of lawsuit that was actually increasing during this time was corporate
lawsuits.
Corporate law has expanded significantly.
It's so funny that we don't like to have histrionic stories about that.
Listen, look at what Samsung is doing.
That jerk.
The last thing to say about this is this resulted in like a wave of legislation as well.
The Republicans took this up, the tort reform thing.
This becomes a big part of the contract for America, Newt Gingrich's thing.
God.
45 states have passed some sort of tort reform measures.
A lot of them limit medical malpractice lawsuits.
Florida has a cap on damages for a wrongful death of 500,000.
And they have a lot of theme parks there, so you do the math.
This is a reaction to a problem that didn't exist and we've created a much worse problem.
So can I end with the only actual frivolous lawsuit that I came across?
Oh my gosh.
Yes.
So whenever you come across these little one sentence descriptions of cases in these abysmal
articles, you're like two seconds of Googling and you're like, oh yeah, like there never
was a CAT scan or whatever, right?
This is the only one that I looked into and it was like exactly as described.
So there's a high school in Queens where there's two students.
One is named Paige and one is named Lisa.
So after six semesters of high school, Lisa has the highest grades and a school administrator
tells her, Lisa, you're going to be the valedictorian, you're going to give the speech, you know,
you can start putting that on your college applications.
That's after six semesters.
After one more semester, Lisa's grades falter a little bit and Paige, her grades are 0.05
points higher than Lisa's.
So all of a sudden Paige should actually rightfully be the valedictorian like by a hair, but because
the school has already told Lisa that she's going to be the valedictorian and she's put
it on her college transcripts, the school goes to Paige and is like, do you mind sharing
this?
We're just going to have co-valedictorians.
You can both put this on your applications.
Both girls get into good schools, like they're sort of on their way.
Paige's parents appeal this decision to the school board and basically say like our daughter
should be the only valedictorian.
There's never been two valedictorians before.
The person with the higher grades gets to be valedictorian, like that's really straightforward.
School board comes back and says, no, we looked into it, you're going to share.
There basically, there's some debate over like rounding, like we're rounding one up and
one down and they're the same something, something.
Wow.
Paige's parents sue the school board over like, why isn't our daughter the valedictorian?
And this like winds its way, it ends up eventually at the state supreme court and they eventually
agree with the school board that like, guys, shut up.
You're just both going to be valedictorians, you've both got into college, this ultimately
doesn't matter.
And also it makes total sense that the one actual frivolous lawsuit is parents acting
on behalf of what they perceive as the welfare of their children, but which is really their
own ego.
And also the light bulb that went off in my head as I was looking into this was that
like the threats of the legal system to people are from rich people.
Like rich people have the power to use the legal system to get what they want, right?
And to like throw a tantrum.
And one of the things you find in so many of these, you know, Newsweek-ish stories of
frivolous lawsuits are out of control is it's almost always like a poor person.
The slip and fall lawsuits in grocery stores, which are basically an urban legend.
Those effectively never go through.
It's almost always like poor people.
They are swimming in the same intellectual waters as everybody else.
So they probably think that it's like an easy ticket to get money if they do one of these
slip and fall things.
Yeah.
And also maybe if you threaten somebody, maybe they'll settle with you and give you
like a few hundred dollars or something like that.
There's a woman who tries to sue McCormick and Schmicks for finding a condom in her clam
chowder allegedly.
She becomes one of these people that sort of shows up in the local news.
Like she kind of does this over and over again.
And it seems, at least in my estimation, that like she's probably faking this.
And she does a hot coffee thing with Taco Bell.
She says like, Taco Bell's hot coffee burned me.
And there's a very brief local media report about it that says that she entered into
negotiations with Taco Bell and they gave her two thousand dollars.
I think the only reason that they did that was because it was getting media attention.
Right.
I don't think this is happening all that often.
Even when we have cases of somebody making what appears to be a straightforwardly frivolous
claim, it's like, these are not huge payouts.
Like this is not the problem with the legal system.
So many of these moral panics fall into the category of things that are true, but who cares?
Yeah, yes.
That's one of your your themes for sure.
It's like some number of people probably get a couple thousand bucks from companies.
I mean, more accurately from their insurance companies.
These companies are built to have a margin of error that can afford that scale of stuff happening.
I think that it's so telling that this entire panic, if you step away from the anecdotes
and you think, OK, 1990s America, is it too easy to sue corporations?
Think about that for two seconds.
What are corporations doing at this time?
Are they acting really like unable to do what they want to because the public is controlling
them so much?
Exactly.
Suing a company is a years long humiliating ordeal.
The success rate is minuscule.
It is wildly disruptive to your entire life to try to sue an entity like McDonald's, right?
You can like drag you down into like arcane technical appeals until you die of old age.
Like, this is what happened in Exxon case, right?
It took like 14 years.
Great.
The whole the entire panic was based on a lie.
Think of the energy companies in Houston destroyed by excessive oversight.
And also like not to sound too much like a conspiracy theorist, but apparently that works for people.
If someone is seeking to anger you and get you into a state of frustration, such that
your logical faculties are compromised and you want to side with whoever is against, you
know, this person who you're mad at, ask yourself, like, who is seeking to anger me?
And how might it benefit them?
Because like it is going to profit somebody for you to be buying that story.
So like, who, who, where is the money going?
That's my question for you.
And if the money is going to joke calendars or J.
Leno, maybe Google it first.