Fairer CT civil justice system can drop costs, raise confidence
Our courts must always remain open to people who have been genuinely harmed -- that's non-negotiable. But when parts of the system reward volume over merit or secrecy over transparency, everyone pays the price through higher costs and fewer opportunities. The good news is we can fix this without closing courthouse doors to anyone who truly deserves their day in court.
Let's start with a basic fact:
The next step is modernizing the system so legitimate claims move forward while discouraging tactics that drive up costs for everyone else. One area that needs attention is transparency in third-party litigation funding. Increasingly, outside investors are financing lawsuits in exchange for a share of settlements.
These funding agreements should be disclosed to the court, under reasonable protections. Judges already require disclosure when relationships could affect a case or settlement -- this fits squarely within that principle.
We also need to strengthen attorney advertising rules.
Procedurally, we can improve fairness and predictability by tightening venue rules and refining our offer-of-compromise statute. Venue should reflect where cases belong -- where the facts and witnesses are -- not where one side thinks they might get a better outcome. And while offers of compromise can encourage timely settlements, they sometimes create pressure to settle regardless of merit. Adjusting timelines or interest rates could help reward reasonableness over brinkmanship.
Why does this matter? Because these costs ripple through our economy. Take auto insurance:
Ensuring that only well-founded claims proceed, that expert opinions are sound, and that settlements aren't distorted by undisclosed funders helps bring long-term stability.
Some critics say reform tilts the playing field against injured people. That's not what this is about. I will oppose any measure that limits a jury's ability to make someone whole for proven harm. But we should make sure the system's incentives align with fairness, not gamesmanship.
Require disclosure of litigation funders. Enforce honest advertising. Keep venue choices fair. Adjust settlement rules so both sides are motivated by fairness, not fear. That's common sense.
If we focus on reforms that reward honesty and discourage gamesmanship, we'll lower costs where it matters most -- and rebuild public confidence in the rule of law. That's a win for patients, a win for small businesses, and a win for every
State Rep.



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