Georgia’s Legislature and Limits on Juries’ Power
In 2005, the Georgia legislature placed "caps" on the amount of non-economic damages that an injured Georgia citizen could obtain from juries in medical malpractice cases. In some cases, that limit was as low as $350,000. This law had the effect of taking power away from jurors in Georgia and giving the power to the special interests that like nothing less than ordinary citizens getting a fair day in court at the hands of 12 jurors.
Mrs. Nestlehutt’s Injuries and Her Challenge of the Caps
Mrs. Betty Nestlehutt, age 71, worked in a real estate business with her husband, and she sought some help from a plastic surgeon, who recommended a facelift and a laser resurfacing. These procedures being performed together posed the risk of imparing the blood supply to the face. Nonetheless, the procedures were performed and Mrs. Nestlehutt suffered impaired blood supply to her face and was left with large gaping wounds on her face. The video below shows the damages to Mrs. Nestlehutt.
The video below shows these damages and illustrates why the legislature’s arbitrary "one-size-fits-all" approach is manifestly unfair to people like Mrs. Nestlehutt.
WE THE PEOPLE from Georgia Justice on Vimeo.