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World's Stupidest Judge goes back to court

  • 11-09-2008 6:39pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 86,729 ✭✭✭✭


    I'll say it first: Only in America.

    Video Inside

    Ah yes, it's the fantastic-now-Urban Legend back again: The Lawsuit for the $54 Million Pants.

    If you recall, this guy took his suit in to a Dry Cleaners, and when they misplaced the bottoms, he went Nazi on their ass.
    When his hard work as a longtime legal
    aid lawyer in Washington, DC paid off with a probationary two-year
    appointment as an Administrative Law Judge in 2005, he brought all five
    of his suits to Custom Dry Cleaners in for alterations. But when he
    returned to pick them up, one pair of pants was missing.

    MISSING!!

    To add insult to injury, when Pearson returned later, the proprietors
    -- Jin and Soo Chung -- tried, he claims, to pass off a cheaper pair of
    pants as his. He demanded $1,150 for a replacement suit; Pearson wants to
    look his best, so he is very particular about his suits despite a limited
    budget, and always buys the same style of suit from Hickey Freeman. The
    Chungs did not respond.

    Custom Dry Cleaners brazenly displays signs claiming "Same Day Service" and "Satisfaction Guaranteed" in their store, despite Pearson's catastrophic
    experience to the contrary. So he sued the Chungs -- for
    $65,462,500. That's right, more than $65 million.

    Judge Pearson represented himself, casting himself as the victim of an
    enormous, malicious fraud, and telling the court with a straight face,
    "You will search the D.C. archives in vain for a case of more egregious
    or willful conduct." He even began to cry while testifying about the day
    he says the Chungs tried to substitute a cheaper pair of pants for his,
    then he asked for a break and dabbed away tears as he left the courtroom.


    But if it's sympathy he wants, perhaps Pearson should not have
    included the cost of renting a car every weekend for ten years in the
    amount of damages he's seeking. Why a car? Oh, that's for driving to
    another cleaner, since he doesn't have a car of his own. But that
    accounts for only $15,000 of the absurd total; the rest is to compensate
    him and the rest of the Chungs' customers for $1,500 per "violation" per
    day, times twelve violations, times 1,200 days, times three defendants,
    plus the over one thousand hours he claims to have devoted to prosecuting
    this case. If it makes you feel better, though, Pearson also indicated
    that $51 million of these theoretical damages would be used to help
    similarly aggrieved consumers sue other business in the District.

    By the time the case went to trial, the Chungs had offered to settle
    it for $3,000 -- then for $4,000 -- and finally for $12,000? Pearson
    could have bought ten new suits for that, but he rejected the offer.
    Cloaked in the CPPA, he styled himself a "private attorney general"
    fighting for the rights of the over 26,000 customers the Chungs had
    bamboozled over the years with their "false promises" of "satisfaction
    guaranteed".

    "This case shocks me on a daily basis," said the Chungs' attorney,
    Chris Manning, before the trial. "Pearson has a lot of time on his hands,
    and the Chungs have been abused in a ghastly way. It's going to cost them
    tens of thousands to defend this case."

    As to trying to bring in all of the Chungs 26,000 customers into the
    case, D.C. Superior Court Judge Neal Kravitz said that "the court has
    significant concerns that the plaintiff is acting in bad faith" due to
    "the breathtaking magnitude of the expansion he seeks."
    Among the
    questions Pearson demanded the Chungs answer: "Please identify by name,
    full address and telephone number, all cleaners known to you on May 1,
    2005 in the District of Columbia, the United States and the world that
    advertise 'SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.'" Got that? All the dry cleaners in
    the world. Since they didn't have personal knowledge of any, the Chungs
    were able to answer "None." before they went on to answer the rest of the
    interrogatories....

    The trial ended as you might expect (or at least hope) it would:
    Superior Court Judge Judith Barnoff ruled in favor of the Chungs, even
    awarding them court costs on the grounds that Pearson had "engaged in bad
    faith and vexatious litigation." But naturally, that wasn't the end of
    it: Pearson filed a motion for reconsideration, which claimed that Judge
    Barnoff had "committed a fundamental legal error" and failed to address
    his claims. He argued that the court had substituted its own
    interpretation of "satisfaction guaranteed" rather than accepting his
    argument that the signs were unconditional. The court disagreed and
    denied the motion.

    The Chungs later withdrew their motion for court costs, attorneys'
    fees, and sanctions, as supporters -- including the American Tort Reform
    Association, the Institute for Legal Reform of the United States Chamber
    of Commerce, and Washington Post newspaper readers -- had raised nearly
    $100,000 to help cover their defense. They said they also hoped that
    withdrawing the motion would persuade Pearson to stop litigating.

    But it didn't: a day before the deadline, Pearson filed a notice of
    appeal in the pants lawsuit -- so the Chungs are not yet completely off
    the hook.

    The loss wasn't the only blow to Pearson. In August, the Commission on
    Selection and Tenure of Administrative Law Judges was charged with
    deciding whether he should receive a full, 10-year term to continue his
    work as a judge. Reports from inside indicate that even after Chief
    Administrative Law Judge Tyrone Butler had submitted a letter
    recommending Pearson's reappointment, Pearson sent a number of e-mails
    within the ALJ staff calling Butler "evil" and "mean-spirited." Butler
    changed his recommendation. Based on that, and on questions about
    Pearson's judicial temperament and ethics arising from the lawsuit, the
    commission came back with a unanimous decision not to recommend his
    reappointment. After two months of foot dragging (it's unclear whether by
    Pearson or by the Commission -- but we can guess), this week the
    Commission hand-delivered a letter ordering Pearson to clean out his
    office and get out within 90 minutes. He was paid about $100,000 year as
    a judge.

    The Chungs sold the Custom Dry Cleaners shop in question in September,
    citing emotional strain and a loss of revenue. They still own one other
    dry cleaning shop, and have said they will be focusing on that one for
    the future. The infamous pants, meanwhile, have hung in their attorney's closet for well over a year -- turned over to him because Pearson wouldn't accept them. "We believe the pants are his," Manning said. "The tag matches his receipt."

    The True Stella Awards has often said that judges should work harder
    to keep frivolous, and especially vexatious, suits out of the courts. How
    shocking, then, to find a judge who not only brings such an action to
    court himself, but keeps it going even in the face of unanimous
    condemnation. The unanimous action by the Commission on Selection and
    Tenure of Administrative Law Judges is heartening, but now it's time for
    Judge Pearson to lose his license to practice law.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,081 ✭✭✭✭chopperbyrne


    I now have a new hero!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,094 ✭✭✭✭javaboy


    Has anyone made the "Take them to the cleaners" joke yet? :o


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 37,214 ✭✭✭✭Dudess


    I don't think I've heard it at all in relation to this case - bravo! :D


    Heh, he cried when testifying - legend!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,165 ✭✭✭✭brianthebard


    In before Overhe...aw crap


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