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mobiblu
06-15-2007, 10:12 PM
linky (http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3119381&page=1)

The $67 Million Pants
Washington, D.C., Lawyer Sues Dry Cleaners for Lost Trousers

A Washington, D.C., dry cleaners says its their business a long-time customer is taking to the cleaners. A $10 dry cleaning bill for a pair of lost trousers has ballooned into a $67 million civil lawsuit.

Plaintiff Roy Pearson -- himself a local judge in Washington D.C -- says in court papers that he's been through the ringer over a lost pair of prized pants he wanted to wear on his first day on the bench. He says in court papers that he has endured "mental suffering, inconvenience and discomfort.''

He says he was unable to wear that favorite suit of his first day of work.

He's suing for ten years of weekend car rentals so he can transport his dry cleaning to another store.

The lawsuit is based in large part on Pearson's seemingly pained admission that he was taken in by the oldest and most insidious marketing tool in the dry cleaning industry arsenal.

"Satisfaction Guaranteed."

Pearson did not return numerous calls from ABC News for comment.

It's the kind of lawsuit that makes liability reform advocates' temples throb.

"People in America are now scared of each other,'' legal expert Philip Howard told ABC News' Law & Justice Unit. "That's why teachers won't put an arm around a crying child, and doctors order unnecessary tests, and ministers won't meet with parishioners. It's a distrust of justice and it's changing our culture.

The civil trial, set for June, has the scope of a John Grisham courtroom thriller and the societal importance of a traffic ticket. Pearson plans to call 63 witnesses. Defending themselves against the suit -- for two years running -- are Korean immigrants Jin and Soo Chung and their son, who own Custom Cleaners and two other dry cleaning shops in the Fort Lincoln section of Washington D.C.

The ABC News Law & Justice Unit has calculated that for $67 million dollars Pearson could buy 84,115 new pairs of pants at the $800 value he placed on the missing trousers in court documents. If you stacked those pants up they would be taller than eight Mount Everests. If you laid them side by side they would stretch for 48 miles.
"The whole city is aware of this lawsuit,'' said Bob King, who representing Fort Lincoln on the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions. "Everybody's laughing about it.''

Everybody except the Chungs, who have spent thousands of dollars defending themselves against Pearson's lawsuit.

"It's not humorous, not funny and nobody would have thought that something like this would have happened,'' Soo Chung told ABC News through an interpreter.

Her husband agreed.

"It's affecting us first of all financially, because of all the lawyers' fees,'' Jin Chung said. "For two years, we've been paying lawyer fees... we've gotten bad credit as well, and secondly, it's been difficult mentally and physically because of the level of stress.''

Later, Soo Chung broke down in tears.

"I would have never thought it would have dragged on this long,'' she told ABC News. "I don't want to live here anymore. It's been so difficult. I just want to go home, go back to Korea."

"I've been in the dry cleaning business for 14 years, but this has never ever happened before – if anything happened to our customers' clothing we would always compensate them accordingly and fairly,'' Jin Chung said through a translator.

The problems date back to 2002.

Pearson says in court papers that he took a pair of pants in to Custom Cleaners in the Fort Lincoln section of D.C. that year, and the pants were lost. So Jin and Soo Chung, the Korean immigrant couple who own Custom Cleaners and two other dry cleaning shops, gave Pearson a $150 check for a new pair of pants.

Three years later, Pearson says he returned to Custom Cleaners and - like some real life "Groundhog Day'' nightmare - his trousers went missing.

Again.

It was May, 2005 and Pearson was about to begin his new job as an administrative judge. Naturally, he wanted to wear a nice outfit to his first day of work. He said in court papers that he tried on five Hickey Freeman suits from his closet, but found them all to be 'too tight,' according to the Washington Post.

He brought one pair in for alterations and they went missing -- gray trousers with what Pearson has described in court papers as having blue and red stripes on them.

First, Pearson demanded $1,150 for a new suit. Lawyers were hired, legal wrangling ensured, and eventually the Chungs offered Pearson $3000 in compensation.

No dice.

Then they offered him $4,600.

No dice.

Finally, they offered $12,000 for the missing gray trousers with the red and blue stripes.

Pearson said no.

With neither satisfaction nor his prized gray pants, Pearson upped the ante considerably.

The judge went to the lawbooks. Citing the District of Columbia's consumer protection laws, he claims he was entitled to $1,500 per violation.

Per day.

What follows was the beginning of thousands of pages of legal documents and correspondence that -- two years later -- has led to a massive civil lawsuit in the amount of $67 million dollars.

According to court papers, here's how Pearson calculates the damages and legal fees:

He believes he is entitled to $1,500 for each violation, each day during which the "Satisfaction Guaranteed'' sign, and another sign promising "Same Day Service'' was up in the store -- more than 1200 days.

And he's multiplying each violation by three because he's suing Jin and Soo Chung and their son.

He also wants $500,000 in 'emotional damages' and another $542, 500 in legal fees, even though he is representing himself in court.

He wants $15,000 for ten years worth of weekend car rentals as well.

After enlisting neighbors and fellow customers, he sought to expand the case into a class action suit, but was denied, angrily, by District of Columbia civil judge Neal Kravitz.

"The Court has significant concerns that the plaintiff is acting in bad faith and with an intent to delay the proceedings,'' the judge wrote in court papers. "Indeed, it is difficult to draw any other conclusion, given the plaintiff's lengthy delay in seeking to expand the scope of the case, the breathtaking magnitude of the expansion he seeks, his failure to present any evidence in support of the thousands of claims he says he wishes to add, and his misrepresentation concerning the scope of his first amended complaint."

The case will now be heard by another judge in June. Both Kravitz and the new judge declined to comment on the case to ABC News.

Ironically, less than a week after he dropped off the missing trousers in 2005, Soo Chung says she found them. She tried to return them to Pearson but he said they were the wrong pants.

The Chungs say they are certain they have located the missing trousers.

"So these are the missing pants, huh,'' Avila asked the Chungs' attorney Chris Manning.

"These are,'' Manning said, holding up a flimsy pair of gray trousers. Manning's argument is based on both the receipt and the telltale "three belt loop situation,'' as he explains it.

"When the pants were brought in, Mrs. Chung noticed the three belt loop situation and in finding them realized that they were Mr. Pearson's pants based on that." He also said the receipt tag on the pants "exactly matches the receipt that Mr. Pearson has.''

Manning himself is angry with Pearson, claiming the judge has terrorized the Chungs for spite.

"They came to the United States hoping for the American dream,'' Manning said. "And Roy Pearson has made it a nightmare.''
____________________________________________________

I hope karma get this guy really soon for what he is doing. It sad to see the American justice system sink this low.

hk.daijobu
06-15-2007, 11:36 PM
I read 54 mil but who knows.. it could have gone up..:evillaugh:

Hummingbird
06-16-2007, 12:18 AM
You know, America would be a much better place if judges could just bitch slap people who bring cases like this to their courtrooms...

OldiesLover
06-16-2007, 12:31 AM
I hope the Judge finds for the Defendants, makes Judge Pearson pay the Chung's Legal Bills, plus $$$ for stress...

And then makes Pearson go one full year where he is not allowed to wear pants of any kind, just his dirty ass underwear.

Oh yes, take his Law Degree away!

fylth
06-16-2007, 05:22 AM
I hope the Judge finds for the Defendants, makes Judge Pearson pay the Chung's Legal Bills, plus $$$ for stress...

And then makes Pearson go one full year where he is not allowed to wear pants of any kind, just his dirty ass underwear.

Oh yes, take his Law Degree away!
But that's just the scenario that's got going in the US of A ain't it?
It is a land where you can basically sue anyone for literally anything as ludicrous as that may sound.
I don't mean any offence to the judgment system that's implemented there but you gotta question the facts when a thief slips and fall on your driveway/pathway (can't remember which) after breaking into your house, sues you for not shovelling the snow out of it.
Ridiculous? You tell me.

mrblue
06-16-2007, 07:43 AM
Roy Pearson is suing because he claims to have endured "mental suffering, inconvenience and discomfort'' as he was unable to wear his favorite suit on his first day at work. But who could the Korean immigrants and their son complain to for the injustice that they have suffered? And to think that Pearson himself is a local judge in Washington D.C. What happen to his education and upbringing? I am very curious as to what the outcome of this lawsuit will be.

haishin
06-16-2007, 11:31 AM
That is just crazy...hope the family will be ok after this and the judge gets shot by some random guy on the street for being such a jerk.

OldiesLover
06-16-2007, 01:14 PM
You are right fylth, this story is at the moment, only the tip of the iceburg of a major problem here in the States.

It's a combination of a culture pushing for the easy way to make it, attorneys who can't spend advertising money fast enough looking for customers, case history of giving dumbshits millions of dollars because their McDonald's coffee was too hot... and so on and so on.

Again, make him wear only his underwear for 1 year. Besides, this fuckwad has a history of doing this shit to other people. He is a Cultural Leech!
:angry: :angry: :angry:

Takaya
06-16-2007, 08:29 PM
That's got to be the most ridiculous thing that I've ever heard. I am no lawyer but is there a law that prevents cases like this one from getting into courthouses?? Hopefully, this a**hole loses and gets his license suspended forever. Then, the Chungs should receive compensation for THEIR "mental suffering, inconvenience and discomfort''.

BTW, I found this funny video about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_mYbFQVVqU
"Judges wear robes, they don't even need pants." XD

redeux
06-16-2007, 08:37 PM
he should be slit from crotch to breastbone , packed full of salt , then stapled shut so we can all watch him shrivel up like a garden slug...
(or am i being too kind and restrained in my response ?):evillaugh:

OldiesLover
06-17-2007, 12:58 AM
That's got to be the most ridiculous thing that I've ever heard. I am no lawyer but is there a law that prevents cases like this one from getting into courthouses?? Hopefully, this a**hole loses and gets his license suspended forever. Then, the Chungs should receive compensation for THEIR "mental suffering, inconvenience and discomfort''.

BTW, I found this funny video about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_mYbFQVVqU
"Judges wear robes, they don't even need pants." XD

Believe it or not, case history opposing frivilous law suits has been toothless for years and years. Why? Because attorneys run most of this stupidity, including attorneys who become judges and attorneys who become politicians, who pass the stupid laws that protects themselves and their lame asses.

The cases where attorneys turn on attorneys, such as the current Duke lacrosse team case, are very few and far in-between, and is usually only embarked upon when media and public interest gets involved.

And you are right, didn't he need his pants to report to his first day as a Judge? So why did he even need the pants?
:evillaugh:

he should be slit from crotch to breastbone , packed full of salt , then stapled shut so we can all watch him shrivel up like a garden slug...
(or am i being too kind and restrained in my response ?):evillaugh:


What? this is way too kind... redeux... cum'on... I know you can cum'up with better techniques of attorney torture.
:cry:

fylth
06-17-2007, 03:02 AM
You are right fylth, this story is at the moment, only the tip of the iceburg of a major problem here in the States.

It's a combination of a culture pushing for the easy way to make it, attorneys who can't spend advertising money fast enough looking for customers, case history of giving dumbshits millions of dollars because their McDonald's coffee was too hot... and so on and so on.

Again, make him wear only his underwear for 1 year. Besides, this fuckwad has a history of doing this shit to other people. He is a Cultural Leech!
:angry: :angry: :angry:
I downloaded this show Top Gear (produced by the BBC), don't know whether you guys hear of it in the US or not.

One of the presenters on the show bought a Chevrolet Camaro in Miami, Florida; drove it all the way to New Orleans and then decides to give it away for free after witnessing the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The presenter was threatened with a lawsuit for misrepresentation when he accidentally or purposely (don't know which for sure) misrepresented the car as a 1991 model but it was in fact a 1989 model. On the sly side, the lawyer agreed to drop the suit on an out-of-court settlement fee of quick & easy 20 US grand.

I mean for crying out loud, presenter of a motoring show or not, misrepresentation or not, it was for charity's sake and you get a lawsuit shoved up your behind?

How would you like being sued for having a kind heart and being a human being unto other human beings?

OldiesLover
06-17-2007, 03:14 AM
The real damage with all of this craziness, the vast majority of these dumb ass law suits, the defendents usually just pay off the plaintiff as opposed to working up large attorney fees. In reality, only the attorneys from both sides, win.

Humm... We're havin' such a discussion here... Maybe I should move this Thread to Idle Chatter or Concave?
:cry:

fylth
06-17-2007, 03:21 AM
That is just crazy...hope the family will be ok after this and the judge gets shot by some random guy on the street for being such a jerk.

he should be slit from crotch to breastbone , packed full of salt , then stapled shut so we can all watch him shrivel up like a garden slug...
(or am i being too kind and restrained in my response ?)

Oh i dunno... I much prefer psychological torturing for this sick puppy over physical torture.

Then again, physical torture can be fun as well.

We could have him leeched e.g. putting a leech to his balls or eyeballs every other day.

In fact I'll share with you some of the more 'unethical' practices of police around these parts used in interrogation. They pour the glue-sniffers' glue into their hair, clothes and shoes while strapped nicely to a non-movable chair. Worse, they pluck that nicely padded crotch you've got there, not being too gentle bout it neither.

And these are just for petty criminals, i wonder what kind of "services" they offer for those hardcore ones?

Anyways... I don't really care what kind of treatment he gets for being such a retard. As long as it hurts (really bad) and drags on for as long as possible (preferably eternity).


Humm... We're havin' such a discussion here... Maybe I should move this Thread to Idle Chatter or Concave?
:cry:

I second that, but only the chatter part as the news part is still news.

redeux
06-17-2007, 03:41 AM
:evillaugh:What? this is way too kind... redeux... cum'on... I know you can cum'up with better techniques of attorney torture.
:cry:

ok , how about a double date with oinkfrah and hitlery , or maybe having his guts cut out , cooked and fed back to him with 357 sauce ?
or being forced to watch endless reruns of 'the view' with his eyelids cut off ?
don't worry , :evillaugh:i'll think of something dastardly and unique...

Darth Demon
06-25-2007, 07:47 PM
Well the Judge ruled today that the lawsuit ends w/ Dry Cleaner winning the case.

A judge ruled Monday that no pair of pants is worth $54 million, rejecting a lawsuit that took a dry cleaner's promise of "Satisfaction Guaranteed" to its most litigious extreme.

redeux
06-25-2007, 08:31 PM
the judge told this pos he is paying all court costs for both sides...
i hope he catches ebola from a rabid chimpanzee while sticking his dick in a pencil sharpener ...
(ok , is that better ?):evillaugh:

OldiesLover
06-25-2007, 11:10 PM
Here is one of the Official Releases:

By LUBNA TAKRURI, Associated Press Writer 3 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - A judge on Monday ruled in favor of a dry cleaner that was sued for $54 million over a missing pair of pants in a case that garnered international attention and renewed calls for litigation reform.

"Plaintiff Roy L. Pearson, Jr. takes nothing from the defendants, and defendants Soo Chung, Jin Nam Chung and Ki Y. Chung are awarded the costs of this action against the plaintiff Roy L. Pearson, Jr.," the ruling read.

Chris Manning, the Chungs‘ attorney, countered that no reasonable person would interpret the signs to be an unconditional promise of satisfaction.

The Chungs also said the trial had taken an enormous financial and emotional toll on them and exposed them to widespread ridicule.



Damn... I was hopin' they would make him go a year without being able to wear any pants.
:evillaugh:

the judge told this pos he is paying all court costs for both sides...
i hope he catches ebola from a rabid chimpanzee while sticking his dick in a pencil sharpener ...
(ok , is that better ?):evillaugh:

Yeah... You're slowly gettin' there...
:cry:

In all seriousness... I hope Judge Pearson claims that he can't pay the Chung's Attorney Bill, so they make him work off the judgement by cleaning clothes at the Chung's Cleaning Shop, at minimum wage. Make him sweat over an ironin' board for a few years.

OldiesLover
06-26-2007, 03:47 PM
Here's an Update:

From my understanding at this point, assuming some of the so-called experts appearing on news shows here, are correct:

1. Roy Pearson is presently on Administrative leave.

2. His appointment as a Judge was not 100% complete when this story hit, and most legal experts believe he'll never see the bench again. That all cases he would preside over would be appealed... given his background of no common sense.

3. Paying of the Chung's legal fees and possibly damages, will be held in a few days at a seperate hearing. At that hearing, Roy will have to come with hat in hand and beg for forgiveness, and at best, walk away owning the Chung's legal bills. Possibly, much more.

4. He will probably get some sort of disbarment process lodged against him. This depends upon the final results.

5. The prospect of him making any money as an Attorney, is very remote. Who would hire him?

Of course, he can always write a book... "The Man With The 54 Millon Dollar Pants."

OldiesLover
08-03-2007, 01:01 PM
Here is another update on this lil story:


Roy "Fancy Pants" Pearson is fighting, or let's say, stalling off... the $83,000 he owes the Chungs for their Legal Fees.

Of course this shows how flawed our system can be at times. How many people have $83,000 to spend to get their day in court?
:giveup: