FIRST AMENDMENT FREEDOM FORUM.ORG
Newseum First Amendment Newsroom Diversity
spacer
spacer
First Amendment Center
First Amendment Text
Columnists
Research Packages
First Amendment Publications

spacer
Today's News
Related links
Contact Us



spacer
spacer graphic

S.C. chief justice joins call for ban on secret lawsuit settlements

By The Associated Press

08.11.02

Printer-friendly page

COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina's top judge wants state courts to stop sealing the details of lawsuit settlements.

State Supreme Court Chief Justice Jean Toal says she agrees with a vote by South Carolina's federal judges to ban sealed settlements in their courts.

Toal had said earlier she didn't support an outright ban for all settlements, but concluded after talking with other state Supreme Court justices that such a ban would not clog courts with parties unwilling to settle suits.

"Our position has long been that secret settlements are not favored," Toal said. Now, she said, state and federal judges in South Carolina are "two hearts beating as one" on the issue.

At least nine states, including Georgia and North Carolina, have laws or court rules restricting secret settlements.

Toal said rule changes for South Carolina's courts would have to be made by the entire five-member Supreme Court. She plans to propose the change this month at a state judicial conference. If approved, the new rule would start next spring at the earliest.

If lawmakers don't like the rule change, they could override it with a two-thirds vote in each chamber of the General Assembly.

House Majority Leader Rep. Rick Quinn, R-Columbia, said on Aug. 6 that he doesn't support an outright ban.

"A hard-and-fast rule for every case — I wouldn't support it," he said. "But if there were some standards, I would support it."

Toal, who was a Democratic House member from Columbia before being elected a justice, said the General Assembly has voted "pretty strongly in favor of public disclosure."

The new federal court rule is set to start in the fall after a public comment period that ends Sept. 30. Proponents hope it will increase public awareness of faulty products and other potential dangers, such as Catholic priests accused of child molestation and cases of medical malpractice.

Richard Rosen, president of the South Carolina Bar, said insurance, medical and manufacturing groups — and their lawyers — might oppose a blanket ban. "That could be a very contentious debate," he said.

Opponents to the ban also say it could hurt patients who might want their medical conditions kept from public view.

Other reasons for secret settlements include protecting the identities of molested children, or preventing those who are not involved in wrongful death cases from going after large awards, Rosen said.

Toal said information such as trade secrets could remain confidential without sealing the entire file.

Related

S.C. federal judges to stop sealing lawsuit settlements
No other federal court district has adopted such a policy, legal consultant says.  08.01.02

Private justice: when secrecy undermines safety
By Ken Paulson Secret settlements keep allegations of unsafe products, harmful conduct away from the press and out of the public eye.  08.25.02

S.C. takes lead in opening lawsuit settlements to public view
Analysis Defense lawyers are fighting the change, saying it could lead more of their corporate clients to go to trial with cases that ordinarily would be settled.  09.23.02

graphic
spacer