Showing posts sorted by relevance for query diving into the wreck. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query diving into the wreck. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Diving into the wreck: BP & Kenneth Feinberg's Gulf Coast Gambit


Kenneth Feinberg

The imminent start of the first phase of the liability trial regarding the BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill is an appropriate occasion to post this abstract and a link to the text of my new article. - GWC


Diving into the wreck: BP and Kenneth Feinberg’s Gulf Coast Gambit
17 Roger Williams University Law Review 137 (2012)

by George W. Conk
Abstract
The 1990 Oil Pollution Act mandate - that a party “responsible” for an oil spill establish a “procedure” to  pay interim damages - has largely removed the courts from the process of determining scope of liability and turned it over to the private ordering of the claims bureau established by the responsible parties designated by the President under the OPA.

BP put its “procedure” in the hands of a lawyer of solomonic reputation - Kenneth Feinberg.  His broad settlement authority was designed to produce both prompt compensation for current losses (without prejudice to future claims) and early settlements of claims for  any future losses.  Through its  Gulf Coast Claims Facility  BP - making interim payments - has had a nearly free hand in determining the extent of its liability under the OPA. Though plaintiffs lawyers have moved to “supervise” the process through the MDL, neither a negotiated grid nor any court ruling has defined the scope of liability.

BP’s  private claims resolution process is almost entirely unregulated.  Only after months of jaw-boning by Gulf Coast Attorneys General and the U.S. Attorney General did BP  agree to be audited.  No regulations govern responsible parties who establish a “procedure”. The GCCF’s allocations are often impenetrable.  BP’s  GCCF can be described as the pseudo-fund model for mass tort claims resolution.  Though its name suggests an independent fund, the GCCF is in fact merely BP’s statutorily compelled mechanism for satisfying economic loss and clean-up claims.  In the absence of either regulatory guidance or court rulings on scope of liability the settlement parameters are indistinct to claimants.  Even BP is uneasy because Feinberg’s settlement offers under the OPA  go well  beyond the narrow parameters of maritime courts which in spill claims have historically denied compensation to all in the supply chain except fishermen and those who suffered property damage.

 The executive branch should examine the OPA’s regulatory gap.  No regulations govern the manner in which a solvent polluter meets its statutory clean-up and compensation responsibilities.  There is no liability guidance, no audit, no reporting, no monitoring of the company’s ability to meet its obligations, no review of its success in meeting its obligations.   If the executive branch does not take this up, Congress in its oversight capacity should do so.
***
Postscript:  my article does not discuss the August 26 ruling by Judge Barbier that touched on the scope of liability issue.  He ruled that liability under maritime law is limited to fishermen and those who suffered property damage or personal injury. However, he suggests that the scope of liability will be broader under the Oil Pollution Act.

The block quote below gives some of the flavor. - GWC
[The Court notes that OPA does not expressly require “proximate cause,” but rather only that the loss is “due to” or “resulting from” the oil spill. While the Court need not define the precise contours of OPA causation at this time, it is worth noting that during oral argument both counsel for BP and the P(laintiffs) S(teering) (Committee) conceded that OPA causation may lie somewhere between traditional “proximate cause” and simple “but for” causation. ]
(citing CSX v. McBride, U.S. 2011)]

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Adrienne Rich - feminist poet - dies at 82

Adrienne Rich, Influential Feminist Poet, Dies at 82 - NYTimes.com:
"I am here, the mermaid whose dark hair
streams black, the merman in his armored body
We circle silently about the wreck
we dive into the hold. ...
We are, I am, you are
by cowardice or courage
the one who find our way
back to the scene
carrying a knife, a camera
a book of myths
in which
our names do not appear."


I used the phrase Diving Into the Wreck as the lead in the title of my recent article about the BP Gulf Oil Spill.  Although the exploration of the law of compensation has nothing to do with the exploration of identity that made Adrienne Rich's 1974 title poem so powerful, I used the phrase to pay tribute to her, the author of one of the most evocative poems I have ever read. - GWC

Monday, July 7, 2014

Syllabus - Business Torts - archive

Business Torts - Syllabus     evolving Spring 2012  updated April 4, 2012
Mondays 2:00 - 3:50  Room 215    

Prof. George Conk
Adjunct Professor of Law & Senior Fellow
Stein Center for Law & Ethics
gconk@law.fordham.edu
Room 409 (by appointment)

Except for the assigned treatise - Restatement of Torts, 3rd, Unfair Competition - course materials will be posted on TWEN and/or on my Torts Today blog.

Note that some material will be on pages (right hand side) and some will be in blog posts.  As I refine and develop the syllabus or as there are new developments I will update the syllabus page or the topic page - or do a post on Torts Today.   I suggest you select the RSS feed so that you get notice of new posts.

Generally I will post on TWEN edited cases (some of them selected and excerpted by Prof. Jay Feinman, Rutgers-Camden whose course design I am loosely tracking and from whose excellent editing we will benefit).

The assignments for the first two weeks are on TWEN.  The edited versions of the introductory cases and the Bustamonte problem are by Prof. Feinman).

Weeks 3, 4 & 5  we will discuss the BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill.  Those materials are on Torts Today.

Week 6 we will discuss the SEC enforcement action against Citigroup - the settlement of which Judge Rakoff refused to approve.

Weeks 7 & 8 we will look at third party claims against auditors for negligence and against lawyers and auditors for aiding and abetting  fraud.  That material is on Torts Today.

The bulk of the rest of the semester we will focus on unfair competition - particularly trademark infringement.

If we stay on track the final class will look at malpractice claims against lawyers.
- GWC


Week 1
Introduction 
Bustamonte Problem (JF)
Channel Master v. Aluminum Limited Sales 4 NY 2d 403 (1958)
Imperial Ice Co. V. Rossier, 18 Cal. 2d 33 (1941)
Doliner v. Brown, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 692 (1986)
Ely-Norris Safe Co. V. Mosler Safe Co. 7 F. 2d 603 (2d Cir. 1925)
Mosler Safe Co. V. Ely Norris Safe Co., 273 U.S. 132 (1927)

Week II
The Economic Loss Rule
3rd Restatement - Liability for Economic Harm
Unintentional Infliction of Economic Loss - draft black letter, Council draft 1.1

Bustamonte Problem (JF)
The cases below are all excerpted on TWEN.
Alloway v. General Marine Industries, 149 N.J. 620 (1997)
People Express Airlines, Inc. V. Consolidated Rail Corp., 100 N.J. 246 (1985)
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. V. Eaton metal Products Co., 256 F.Supp. 329 (E.D. Pa. 2003)
Southwestern Bell Tel. V. Delanney, 809 S.W. 2d 493 (TX 1991)
DCR, Inc. V. Peak Alarm 663 P. 2d 433 (UT 1983)

Week III & IV
Limits of recovery of economic loss in tort: the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

see BP Deepwater Oil Spill page on Torts Today.

Read:
Oil Pollution Act of 1990 - (OPA) key provisions
Memorandum by Prof. John Goldberg to Kenneth Feinberg (BP page)

The current moment: Jurist

GCCF  - draft Final Rule - proposed methodology - November 10, 2010
Public comment by BP
Supplemental Comments by BP, July 7, 2011
GCCF - Modification to Final Claims Methodology August 16, 2011
GCCF - Second Modification to Final Claims Methodology - November 30, 2011
GCCF - Payment Options, Eligibility and Substantiation Criteria, and Final Payment Methodology February 18, 2012

Recommended: 
Mississippi College of Law symposium: Beyond the Horizon: The Gulf Oil Spill Crisis  The MCL symposium articles below can be found at the link above.
David W. Robertson,  THE OIL POLLUTION ACT'S PROVISIONS ON DAMAGES FOR ECONOMIC LOSS, 30 Miss. C.L. Rev. 157 (2011)
OPA AND ECONOMIC LOSS: A REPLY TO PROFESSOR ROBERTSON, John C.P. Goldberg, 30 Miss. C. L.Rev. 203 (1911)
David W. Robertson, OPA AND ECONOMIC LOSS: A RESPONSE TO PROFESSOR GOLDBERG, 30 Miss. C.L. Rev. 217 (2011)

Background: Federal Judicial Center - Reference Guide on Estimation of Economic Losses in Damages Awards, by Robert E. Hall and Victoria A. Lazear 

Week V
BP's liability , continued
Regulation, global settlement and judicial management
(see BP page)

Conk - Diving Into the Wreck (17 Roger Williams University L. Rev. 2012)
Sherman - BP Oil Spill and Evolving Supervision of Multidistrict litigation Judges, 35 Mississippi College Law Review 237 (2011)
Judge Carl Barbier - counsel fees holdback order December 28, 2011
from the GCCF website:



Week VI
Fraudulent Interstate Transactions - Investment Bankers


SEC - Citigroup proposed settlement of enforcement action
Fraudulent Interstate Transactions (Sections 17(a)(2) and (3) Securities Act of 1933) 15 U.S.C. 77q
SEC v. Citigroup Global Markets complaint and memorandum in support of proposed settlement
Judge Rakoff's 10/27/11 Order and questions posed for hearing on SEC-Citigroup proposed settlement

Judge Rakoff's rejection of SEC settlement with Citigroup 1:11-cv-07387-JSR 
SEC response to Rakoff rejection of settlement
Kevin LaCroix (D&O) Diary) -  commentary on Rakoff's ruling10/28/2011SEC v. Brian H. Stoker complaint
SEC settlement announcement - and related documents
SEC statement and Notice of Appeal, 12/15/11
Rakoff Order denying request for a stay.
Prof. Peter Henning (Dealbook) commentary on SEC - Citigroup settlement rejection


for background information and further developments, see TortsToday SEC v. Citigroup page


Week VII

Third Party Liability - Auditors

Restatement Torts, 2d Sec. 552 Information Negligently Supplied for the Guidance of Others
Restatement Torts, 2d,  Sec. 874, Breach of fiduciary duty
Restatement, 3rd - Agency - excerpts 
Restatement 3rd - Law Governing Lawyers § 51 duty to certain nonclients

Ultramares Corp. v. Touche, 255 NY 170, 182-3 (1931)
Accountant  Liability Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-25
Cast-Art Industries v. KPMG  NJ Supreme Court(read the opinion)


Week VIII

Third party liability: Aiding & Abetting/Imputation of Liability for Fraud
Restatement 2d, Torts § 875, 876

N.J.S.A.  49:3-71(a) - Action for Deceit in sale of securities

Cases: 

Oster v. Kirschner, 905 N.Y.S.2d 69 (1st Dept. July 6, 2010) (or see Receiver's webpage)
Kirschner/Trustee of Refco Litigation Trust v. KPMG, LLC (15 N.Y.3d 446  2010) (See  Receiver's webpage  for background)
NCP Litigation Trust v. KPMG, 187 NJ 353 (2006) (TWEN)


In re Refco Securities, 503 F. Supp. 2d 611 (2007)  (excerpt from opinion allowing action against Grant Thornton, LLP to proceed) (optional)

Slides/lecture: the 10(b)(5) Securites Fraud Action

March 26

Legal Malpractice

NY Pattern Jury Instructions 2:152
Conklin v. Hannoch Weissman, 145 N.J. 395(1996)
Viner v. Sweet, 30 Cal. 4th 1232 (2003)
Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers, - Lawyers' Civil Liability (excerpts)
Saffer v. Willoughby, 143 N.J. 256 (1996) 


April 2
Trademark
Introduction to subject matter

Lanham Act - Statutory Excerpts (See Trademark page)

Restatement of Unfair Competition (ALI, 1995)
black letter rules - subject matter of trademark sections 9 - 17
black letter rules on acquisition and priority, infringement, defenses, remedies §§ 18 - 37
Discussion problem: Weber (JF)

April 11
Trademark, cont’d

Acquisition, Registration Infringement

The Lanham Act (1946, as amended) 15 USC 1051, et seq.

Registrable marks
15 U.S.C. 1051

False designation of origin - Dilution
15 U.S.C. 1125

Remedies for infringement
15 U.S.C. 1114 - 1127 

Remedies - Profits, damages and costs
15 U.S.C. 1117

9th Circuit Jury Charge Manual Sections 15.0 - 15.27 - Trademark
(read the instructions - comments optional)

Likelihood of Confusion Factors (Sleekcraft test) 15.16
Strength (Distinctiveness of Mark) 15.17
Zazu Designs v. L'Oreal, USA, 979 F. 2d 499 (7th Cir. 1992)

The App Store Controversy - read blog post and Microsoft objection

April 16
Trademark, cont’d

Restatement: Defenses and Remedies

Damages and Attorneys Fees

Skydive Arizona v. Quattrocchi, 9th Circuit (2012)


Problem: Alumet Supply v. Alumet Mfg. (Attorneys fees) (TWEN)

April 23
Misappropriation of Trade Values

International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215 (1918)

Restatement, 3rd, Unfair Competition §§ 38 - 45
Problem: MC (JF)
California Trade Secrets Act

Saturday, March 10, 2012

The Phony Settlement - Joe Nocera - NYTimes.com

New York Times columnist Joe Nocera engages in the popular sport of lawyer bashing. His target is the BP oil spill settlement process. He thinks...oh, never mind, read it and think.  BTW you might take a look at my article Diving Into the Wreck  - GWC
The Phony Settlement - NYTimes.com
by Joe Nocera
"Forgive me for repeating myself, but I’m going to start this column with an anecdote about Ken Feinberg that I’ve told before..."

'via Blog this'