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National Press Releases
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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: John Kartch (
jkartch@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click
here for a copy of this file in
Adobe Acrobat
10/01/02
Trial
Lawyers v. American Business, Again:
The Case of Sealed Air Inc.
Plaintiffs' attorneys, seeking cash, go after a successful business
three degrees separated from asbestos problem.
WASHINGTON -
Trial lawyers strike again: A court case between plaintiffs' attorneys
and a highly successful and innovative Fortune 500 company, Sealed Air
Inc., is set to begin in Newark, New Jersey. At issue is Saddle Brook,
N.J.-based Sealed Air's acquisition of Cryovac Inc., which was bought
from another company that filed for bankruptcy due to asbestos claims.
Sealed Air,
which is listed in Fortune Magazine's Platinum list of best American
companies, manufactures Bubble wrap cushioning, Jiffy protective mailers,
and Cryovac food packaging. Sealed Air acquired Cryovac from W.R. Grace
in 1998, when expert reviews showed that Grace was solvent by a wide
margin. On April 2, 2001 Grace filed for bankruptcy to handle asbestos-related
claims against it.
Neither Sealed
Air nor Cryovac deal now, nor have ever dealt, with asbestos. In a bizarre
attempt to transfer wealth, attorneys seeking damages from the bankrupted
Grace are now going after Sealed Air's Cryovac, which has weakened Sealed
Air's value.
"This is
another example of tort law run amok," said taxpayer advocate Grover
Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax Reform and who has been a longtime
proponent of tort reform. "This case is like suing someone for
buying a used car that had problems even Consumer Reports didn't know
about."
U.S. District
Judge Alfred Wolin ruled on July 30 that he would not accept the good
faith estimates of Grace's liabilities that a team of experts calculated
at the time of the 1998 acquisition. Estimates as such are common and
accepted in all kinds of business transactions, but the judge's ruling
will set a precedent that unforeseen liabilities, that cannot be accounted
for at the time of any acquisition, will be the responsibility of the
new company - even decades down the line. It is important to note that
the Cryovac division of Grace had no dealings in asbestos.
"Every
time trial lawyers lash out at American businesses, entrepreneurs, consumers,
workers, and the entire American economy suffer," continued Norquist.
"To sue a company for the liability of another company after an
acquisition has been made is not only confusing - it is an avaricious
display of the seediest side of the legal profession, and one that signals
an immediate need for comprehensive tort reform at the local, state
and federal levels."
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Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose any and all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information, or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact John Kartch at (202)785-0266 or by email at
jkartch@atr.org.
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