Keith Levenberg
Keith Levenberg
If you're going to play that game, you may as well say that legitimate claims related to lost and mishandled property (even if such property is a luxury good) should have a higher-priority claim on the court system than, say, the tens of thousands of victimless drug crimes it finds the resources to adjudicate. But we don't play that game, and while courts like to remark that there are scarce judicial resources, there's really nothing scarce about them.originally posted by David Gissen:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
This sums it up exactly right. I suppose that there is somebody, somewhere in the world who is the least fortunate, most miserable person in existence. That doesn't mean that nobody else is entitled to vindicate their rights, or, for that matter, complain about anything, until that person is happy.originally posted by Jay Miller:
And another thing, how is the fact that the initial cause was Sandy even relevant? The lawsuit is not about Sandy but about the company's behavior post-Sandy. It has no effect one way or another on anyone who lost homes, etc.
It's as though I'm listening to the following conversation:
Person 1: My wallet was stolen, I'm going to the police.
Person 2: How dare you go to the police about a stolen wallet, my car was stolen!
Person 3: How dare you go to the police about something as petty as a stolen car, my house was burned down!
Person 4: You insensitive bastard, how dare you complain about arson when my family was murdered!
IMO, Person 1 has every right to go to the police about his or her wallet. Especially if the crimes experienced by Persons 2, 3 and 4 happened 7 months ago.
I find myself disagreeing with the conclusions from these analogies. If my neighbor's apartment building was on fire and my wine cellar was on fire, I would certainly hope the fire dept would put out the apartment building fire first! From my understanding the courts, et al have limited resources and time in handling all of the various claims related to Sandy (there are still people without access to homes due to the floods). A wine cellar is low on the list for them. I'm fine with that. I'd rather someone get back home sooner. Tell the cellar-dudes to go to Chambers Street and buy some Morgon or Muscadet. It just might tide them over and change their life.
Incidentally, though, nobody is actually arguing that the court shouldn't pay attention to these claims because they're not high enough on the priority list. The only arguments I've heard were (1) the Loesberg argument that the claims might be legitimate but he still can't muster up very much personal sympathy for the affected parties, and (2) the court's apparent view that it is going to let the perceived lesser importance of these claims relative to those who lost their houses determine its rulings on the merits. Neither one of these arguments has anything to do with whether limited court resources can or should be used to deal with this issue. The court IS dealing with this issue. The only question is what kind of relief it decides to issue, if any. If you want to be apathetic about that on the "someone, somewhere has it worse" theory, that's your right, but I should hope all of us would agree that that doesn't have anything to do with the legal merits of anyone's claims.
But it is a little disappointing to see the subtext in some of these posts that all these people who stored at WineCare had it coming because they're probably storing shitty wine. FYI, there was plenty of Morgon and Muscadet in the stash that I was lucky enough to have moved out of there in the nick of time.