LegalNewsLine Logo  
Saturday, March 20 2010     Subscribe in NewsGator Online
News | Contact LegalNewsline | About Us | Advertise | RSS
Enter search keyword
 
NEWSLETTER
Receive our FREE weekly newsletter
click here
LNL MOST POPULAR ARTICLES
+ Whitman leads Brown in latest poll
+ AG Tom Miller lands in GOP crosshairs
+ Settlement reached over nutritional supplement enrollment plan‏
+ Brown gets polluting hair products taken off store shelves
+ Texas medical malpractice law survives challenge
LNL HOT TOPICS
+ Asbestos
+ Bankruptcy
+ Big Pharma
+ Class Action
+ Dickie Scruggs
+ Financial Crisis
+ Gasoline Prices
+ Global Warming
+ Hurricane Katrina
+ Lead Paint
+ Personal Injury
+ Sub-Prime Mortgages
News 
 
Colossus attorney's group already generated $73 million in fees
TEXARKANA, Ark. - When John C. Goodson stands before Miller County District Judge Kirk Johnson to advance America's biggest lawsuit, Goodson stands where Johnson used to stand and Johnson sits where Goodson's father used to sit.

Johnson prosecuted crimes prior to donning a judicial robe and the late District Judge John W. Goodson presided over many of Johnson's cases.

For Judge Goodson's obituary in the Arkansas Gazette, Johnson said, "He was extremely helpful to me and helped me be a better trial attorney."

Johnson told the newspaper, Goodson "caused you to see the human side rather than just the legal side of issues and that was major for me."

Now Johnson and Judge Goodson's son hold most of the automobile insurance industry in the palms of their four hands.

A class action that Goodson proposed in 2005 has generated $73 million in fees, according to an insurer's brief, and the litigation has hardly begun.

When their local connection draws national attention, they shut the doors.

In May, Johnson sealed a Goodson motion in the insurance case and excluded a reporter for a national news service from a hearing on the motion.

Goodson filed suit in 2005 for Georgia Hensley of Fowke, Ark., against Computer Sciences Corporation and 581 insurers.

Goodson claimed insurers used Computer Sciences software, Colossus, to cheat victims of crashes involving uninsured and underinsured motorists.

Goodson moved to certify Hensley as representative of a plaintiff class.

Most defendants had never sold insurance in Arkansas, but Goodson argued that Miller County could exercise jurisdiction under a conspiracy theory.

The roster of defendants included the top ten auto insurers, except State Farm. It also included many insurers who didn't belong there.

Texas-based American National Lloyd's Insurance Company got scooped into the massive suit and has been waiting two years for Johnson in to rule on its motion for summary judgment: it does not sell auto insurance and does not have a license to use any of the software programs named in the litigation.

Defendant American National County Mutual Insurance Company only sells insurance in Texas, ANPAC Louisiana Insurance Company only sells insurance in Louisiana and Pacific Property and Casualty Company only sells insurance in California.

Goodson voluntarily dropped a few accidental targets, but he has resisted challenges of other insurers to Arkansas jurisdiction.

Johnson has neither ruled on those challenges nor has he ruled on motions to dismiss from insurers who claim they never received proper notice of the lawsuit.

He hasn't reached a decision on class certification either, and in Arkansas that works in Goodson's favor.

According to the Arkansas Supreme Court, no one can argue the merits of a proposed class action until a judge has ruled on class certification.

The Supreme Court regularly declares that class action is fair to both sides. In such a climate, one doesn't need an admirer of one's father to succeed.

In 2006, Miller County District Judge Joe Griffin awarded $30 million to a group Goodson led when Google Inc. settled a claim that it cheated advertisers.

Last year, Miller County District Judge Jim Hudson granted preliminary approval to settlement of a claim that Sunbeam made faulty heaters, with a $7.5 million fee for Goodson's group.

In Arkadelphia, Ark., 73 miles northwest of Texarkana on Interstate 30, a Clark County court allowed Goodson's group to split a $29.2 million fee after settling a claim against manufacturers of steel utility tubes that might attract lightning to homes.

Before Goodson specialized in class actions, he practiced criminal law.

In 1998, the Arkansas Supreme Court rejected an appeal from Goodson client Kenneth Stuart of a conviction for illegal purchase of a firearm.

In 1999, the Court rejected an appeal from Goodwin client Karriem Muhammad of a conviction for cocaine possession.

Goodson suffered another setback at the Court in 2000, in a civil case.

He argued for tax purposes that Ed and Jane Warmack didn't live in their home in Texarkana, but the Court declared they did because they spent most of their time there, drove with that address on their licenses, and voted in Texarkana.

In 2003, the Court's committee on professional conduct reprimanded Goodson for keeping $4,404 that he owed to a doctor.

The doctor, David W. Fisher, filed a complaint after Goodson told him he wouldn't pay because he didn't have the money.

Fisher had treated accident victims that Goodson represented.

The committee found that Goodson failed to tell Fisher he settled the claim and failed to honor a letter of protection and a lien in the doctor's favor.

The committee assessed Goodson $50 in costs.

Filed Under: none


COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

No comments have been posted in the last 15 days!

SEND US YOUR COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:


* - Required fields

Subject: *
Message: *
Contact Name: *
Contact URL:
Contact Email: *
This Is CAPTCHA Image
Write the characters in the image above: 

E-mail this article to a friend | Printer friendly format

MORE NEWS HEADLINES:
+ AIG settles Oregon's securities lawsuit - 2/26  
+ Col. AG files lawsuit against credit repair company - 2/22  
+ Bill would allow Oregon AG to prosecute lenders - 2/17  
+ Calif. AG hopeful Lieu takes swipe at Toyota - 2/5  
+ Nevada AG reaches settlement with loan modification company - 2/5  
+ Springfield contractor faces lawsuit from Madigan - 12/10  
+ Trial lawyer eschews Arizona AG run - 12/8  
+ Krauthammer: Scrap Senate health care bill, enact tort reform - 11/30  
+ Pa. AG files suit against mortgage rescue firms - 11/24  
+ VONAGE agrees to $3 million multistate settlement - 11/16  


IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Most of the judges on the New Mexico Court of Appeals get a failing grade when it comes to the "expansion of liability," according to a judicial evaluation report.
Read more...


+ 'Land of Enchantment' in 'Hellhole': Tort reform group calls New Mexico's appeals court 'pro-liability' - 3/2
+ Group puts the brakes on Honda class action settlement - 2/23
+ AG Brown, feds sitting out whisteblower suit against pipemaker - 2/18
+ Calif. AG hopeful vows to target public employee pension increases - 2/12
+ Nebraska AG Bruning's political star rising - 2/5
BROWSE BY STATE:
 
BROWSE BY AG:
 
BROWSE BY DATE:
 
LATEST LNL BLOG ENTRIES:
+ Abbott: Beware Dietary Supplement Scams and 'Miracle' Health Claims
+ Abbott's signs of a scam
+ AG McCollum on convicts in the mortgage industry
NEWS WIDGET:
Attention bloggers:
Add Record Headlines to your site!


fast + free- click here

NEWS | CONTACT LEGALNEWSLINE | ABOUT US | ADVERTISE | RSS © 2008 LegalNewsLine.com. All Rights Reserved.