On Apr 2, 12:46?am, I_am_the_best_breather_ev...@yahoo.com wrote:
> http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17899884/
Nobody needs to read that to know that the last thing the offending
company has to worry about is the pet owners. The biggest thing is the
dozens of companies who use their mixes and who are now being sued
themselves. These people have put a really bad blemish on the big pet
food company's reputations. Forget the pets, though.. They know that
no sane jury anywhere is going to award hundreds of millions of
dollars to a frigging pet owner. No matter how flagrant the offense
was. Their big concern now will be coming from their own customer's
corners. And in the end, few will get anything. Thanks mainly to the
fact that there are so damned many involved. I'd hate to be working
for the original source of the contamination, let me tell you.. Those
bastards have had it. Just my 3 cents.
IBen
>http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17899884/
Of course: the LAWYERS are the ones who are going make out like bandits
Even if your healthy pet died from the bad food, and you can PROVE it,
the courts typically assign a low value to a pet.
No matter that you raised them from a kitten/puppy, have had them for
years, spent thousands on food, litter, toys, vet bills, etc. etc.
The LAWYERS always are the big winners in cases like this,
Magic Mood Jeep - 03 Apr 2007 00:29 GMT
Actually, in some states, Illinois one of them (and I believe one of the
first lawsuits stemming from this debacle is from IL), do give monetary
value to an animals suffering, and the anguish that the "pet parent"
suffered as well. IL has what animal welfare advocates call a "model law" -
I printed it out from the website www.animallaw.info, which is hosted by
Michigan State University's College of Law - and it's about 26 pages on
8.5x11 inch (A4 for you Europeans) paper.
Has very good definitions of cruelty and torture, etc.... which this can all
fall into.
>>http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17899884/
>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
> The LAWYERS always are the big winners in cases like this,
jmcquown - 03 Apr 2007 01:42 GMT
> On 1 Apr 2007 21:46:34 -0700, > Of course: the LAWYERS are the ones who
are going make out like bandits
I don't know about this particular lawsuit or suits but as a rule class
action suits such as this, the plaintiffs participating don't get but
pennies on the dollar. Mass tort claims like this don't benefit anyone but
the lawyers banding together to file them.
Jill