Friday, September 26, 2008
Wriggins on Race, Remedies and Damages in Tort Litigation, 1865-2007
Damages in Tort Litigation: Thoughts on Race and Remedies, 1865-2007 is a recent article by Jennifer Wriggins, University of Maine School of Law. It appeared in Review of Litigation (2007). Wriggins is expanding this work in a forthcoming book with Martha Chamallas, THE MEASURE OF INJURY: RACE, GENDER, AND THE LAW OF TORTS (forthcoming 2008). To read more now, see related articles by Wriggins and Chamallas, cited in the first footnote of this article. Here's the abstract: The relationship between remedies and race in U.S. tort law merits attention. This essay first challenges the boundary between civil rights and tort remedies by highlighting a stunning but previously overlooked 1959 Fifth Circuit case where an individual tort remedy served as a significant civil rights remedy in the integration of public transportation throughout the South. Second, the essay focuses on the relationship between race and damages from 1865 to the present. It argues that the torts system provided access to indigent plaintiffs of all races during periods when poor people were otherwise denied legal representation in every other context. Yet, the classic tort remedy, money, was less readily dispensed to black plaintiffs than to other tort plaintiffs. Recent information suggests that tort remedies are still affected by race in ways that merit more attention.