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This blog is intended for general information about Nevada law. Anyone who has a specific legal problem should always consult an attorney.
A man named Joe lost his wife in 1999 to brain cancer. The wife, Pam, had smoked for thirty years, starting in 1969, until she got lung cancer, which lead to her brain cancer. Back when Pam started smoking, cancer-stick companies only had to put general health warnings on the packages. It wasn’t until the 1980s that the warning labels had to include the threat of cancer.
Joe then did the American thing; he sued the manufacturer of Pam’s particular brand of coffin nails, Phillip Morris, in a Nevada federal court. He, or his attorney, told the court that Phillip Morris is strictly liable for Pam’s death. Strict liability is a lawsuit claim used when a business sells a dangerous product. If Joe can prove that Phillip Morris caused Pam’s death, Phillip Morris will have to pay. But Joe did not want to have to prove his case. Instead, he wanted the Court to make Phillip Morris prove that they did not cause her death. Usually a Plaintiff has to prove his case, but here, Joe figured the wicked Phillip Morris must disprove its case without Joe having to prove the normally required element of causation.
Joe basically wanted the court to tell the jury that the jury could presume that if the cigarette packages had the cancer warning when Pam started smoking, she would not have started smoking. In other words, Joe wanted the jury to assume from the beginning that Phillip Morris is in the wrong and Phillip Morris then had to prove that it was not in the wrong. Somehow, Phillip Morris would have to provide evidence that Pam would have smoked their cigarettes even if the cancer warning label had been on the packages--clear back in the 1960s. Come on now, that was the 1960s, dude. Do you really think a lot of the young people back then would have listened to warnings? I mean, gosh, wasn’t that the time of experimental drug use. Also, wasn’t the military actually handing out packs of cigarettes to the soldiers?
Anyway, Phillip Morris did not want to have to try to prove to a jury that Pam would have ignored the warning labels. They told the federal judge that this “heeding presumption” should not apply in this case. A heeding presumption is what I’ve been talking about--a jury may presume that a person would have heeded a warning if a warning had been given and the defendant then has to try to prove that the person would not have heeded the warning. It’s almost like a religious person asking an atheist to prove that God does not exist.
Well, since this is a federal case in Nevada and the federal judge did not know what to do, the judge decided to ask the Nevada Supreme Court what it thought. Does Nevada condone “heeding presumptions” like some other States do? The Nevada Supreme Court answered, “No!” Phillip Morris therefore won this little skirmish. Joe would have to prove causation.
You might ask why the Nevada Supreme Court would side with the manufacturers of death on this issue. Well, our scholars in black robes said that a heeding presumption is contrary to Nevada law and public policy. The Nevada Supreme Court is correct on the law issue. Nevada has never allowed heeding presumptions. And, I believe their point about public policy is sound too.
Joe said that other States have heeding presumptions because it forces companies to better label their products, and therefore heeding presumptions are good for the public, so they are good public policy. If companies knew they could be sued for not properly labeling their dangerous goods, then they would label them better.
Nevada is smarter than those other States, though, because we tell the companies that sell stuff here to make sure the stuff isn’t dangerous in the first place. If it’s not dangerous, then why would you have to warn? In other words, the public is safer when companies can be sued for strict liability. Warning labels do not make us safer, safer products do. I’ll end this with a Supreme Court Justice’s quote from the case:
[…] we strongly adhere to the principle that a manufacturer must make products that are not unreasonably dangerous, no matter what instructions are given in the warning. Therefore, we conclude that it is better public policy not to encourage a reliance on warnings because this will help ensure that manufacturers continue to strive to make safe products.
If you still want to read this long, boring Nevada Supreme Court decision after I have taken all the trouble of explaining it, you may. The decision is called Rivera v. Phillip Morris, and it was decided in June 2009.
Copyright: August 23, 2009
By: Anthony M. Wright, Juris Doctor
Whether you committed a crime or not, you have the right to remain silent when being questioned by an authority figure. The right against self-incrimination is a constitutionally protected fundamental right. This article will point out a few of the reasons you should keep your mouth shut.
Reason 1.
The police are not there to help you. They are there to gather evidence against you. Officers will play the good cop by acting like they want to understand you and will be on your side. Then, if you are less than forthcoming, the same cop or another one will become angry and attempt to threaten you into confessing. Do not fall into these traps.
The officers might act like they are just conversing with you. The fact is that they want to gather sufficient evidence so that they have probable cause to arrest you, at which point they will read you your rights-but it could be too late already if you confessed. The officers will say that you confessed voluntarily, even if they manipulated you long before they arrested you. Who are you to then stand up in court and call our fine peacekeepers liars?
Reason 2.
Officers can purposefully or negligently miss-write on their reports what you told them. Police reports are considered to be pretty good evidence in court. When you take the stand and recount under oath the events leading up to your arrest and what you say does not match up with the police report, the District Attorney can then ask you the damning rhetorical question of, "Were you lying then or are you lying now?"
Reason 3.
If you told the police anything, whether you are innocent or not, you have just made it much more difficult for your attorney later on to present a theory of the case that could show you are not guilty. By speaking to the officers, you are reducing your possible defenses.
Conclusion
A wise man once said something to the effect of "a person is not condemned by what is put in the mouth but by what comes out of." Therefore, when approached by an officer, be polite, courteous, and quiet.
Crimes in the United States are generally classified as misdemeanors, gross misdemeanors, and felonies. Misdemeanors generally are crimes that are not very serious such as speeding. Gross misdemeanors are crimes that we consider more dangerous or more serious, and felonies are the crimes that generally involve evil intent and victims.
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that police officers may arrest any person if there is probable cause of a crime. It is within the cops' discretion to arrest you if you were speeding in your car, throwing a cigarette on the ground, loitering, and riding your bicycle without using proper hand signals. The probable cause comes from the officer witnessing you committing the crime.
Some cops will arrest you and justify the arrest in the police report by claiming you were belligerent and they did not believe you would sign the citation in which you promise that you will show up in court. This could be a lie on the part of the officer, but without video footage of the arrest, it is your word against the police.
Law-abiding citizens are often arrested on minor offenses because they are shocked by the attitude they are given by police who stop them. Surprised at being stopped and at the condescension of the officer, the misdemeanant will say something to the effect of "I know my rights."
If you argue with the cop or offer an excuse for you behavior, you could be doing yourself a grave disservice. I can tell you of a cop who stopped this fellow for speeding. The fellow said that he had not seen the speed limit sign, hoping the cop would understand and let him go with a warning. Instead, the cop wrote him the citation for speeding and added another citation for inattentive driving.
Cops do not like to hear any lip and can arrest you. Cops do not care that you already feel humiliated that you are being charged with a crime when you believed you were adhering to the law. They do not care that you are a law-abiding taxpayer and you pay for their salary.
Some of the slickest criminals are ex-felons. They understand the cop psychology and act with the utmost respect toward the officer, saying "Yes sir" and "No sir" and "thank you for informing sir". Even though these ex-felons probably do not pay much by way of taxes and are not responsible for contributing to police salaries, police treat them much nicer sometimes.
If you act like the boot-kissing sycophant with a cop, the Cop may think you are a convicted criminal, however generally the cop will treat you better than if you act like a law-abiding citizen who knows his rights.
Conclusion
Be calm, courteous, and quiet with police officers when stopped. If they harass you, keep your cool or you will fuel their adrenaline and make them more apt to treat you worse.