News
July 3, 2008
Manchin seeks review of appeal in DuPont lawsuit

Gov. Joe Manchin wants the state Supreme Court to clarify whether DuPont has the right to be heard as it appeals $196.2 million in punitive damages, about half the amount a jury awarded in a case involving health threats from a former zinc smelting plant.

The lead attorney for the plaintiffs on Wednesday called the governor's action unprecedented.

"I've never seen anything like this," said Florida lawyer Michael Papantonio. "This just further delineates how badly the deck is stacked in West Virginia against people trying to recover when they're taking on DuPont. It's stacked against people who have been wronged by corporate America."

The Harrison Circuit Court jury last fall awarded damages totaling nearly $400 million to residents living near the former plant in Spelter. The plaintiffs argued the chemical giant spent decades downplaying and lying about health threats from arsenic, cadmium and lead that contaminated air, soil and water.

Punitive damages are designed to deter future misconduct, and the jury ruled that DuPont had engaged in wanton, willful and reckless conduct in its operation of the smelter. Non-punitive damages included $130 million to fund a 40-year health screening plan to monitor plaintiffs for any ailments related to exposure to chemicals.

Last week, DuPont appealed the entire verdict, arguing it has been unfairly punished for doing the right thing at the site and for the community. The state Supreme Court, which is in summer recess, has not yet indicated whether the appeal will be heard.

In a "friend of the court" brief filed last week, Manchin urged the justices to clarify what sort of appellate review is to be afforded DuPont under its constitutional right to due process. His lawyers cited a 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision to argue that the 14th Amendment guarantees appeals of punitive damages.

The brief essentially questions whether consideration of a written appeal alone is adequate.

"Ensuring that West Virginia courts provide the appropriate level of appellate review to [DuPont], as well as all other parties seeking review of punitive damages awards, is an issue of vital public importance," the brief argued.

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Posted By: Not a Friend (3:48pm 07-05-2008)
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I see he filed his request as a friend of the court. After the "Manchin Degree Scandal" I didn't think he had any friends left.

Posted By: Marsha (8:29am 07-05-2008)
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Gov. Manchin again is showing a slap in the face to WV citizens, he has his hands in everything, his motives are always self-serving, the people of WV did sent a message in the primary, 2or3 candidates without opponents received more votes than he did, the general election should reflect even more dissatisfaction for the Gov.

Posted By: Unhappy w/Governor (8:12pm 07-03-2008)
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G. Jones: I'm with you. The governor needs to keep his nose out of things, unless it's part of his job.
P.S. G. Jones, maybe you should rethink that support for the governor.

Posted By: WV Citizen (2:32pm 07-03-2008)
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The Governor should be as concerned about WV citizens as he is about big companies. This is ridiculous he needs to keep his nose out of this didn't he learn anything from the WVU scandals (coach and his daughter).

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