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The Great Hartford Circus Fire : Creative Settlement of Mass Disasters

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On July 6, 1944, The Big Top suddenly caught fire at a Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus performance in Hartford, Connecticut.

The inferno killed 169 people, mostly women and children, and injured more than 550 others.

Faced with hundreds of liability suits, the Greatest Show on Earth was headed for bankruptcy and liquidation, and tort claimants were likely to receive nothing.

This dismal scenario was averted only when a small group of public-spirited Hartford attorneys fashioned a creative, successful solution to one of the nations earliest mass torts.

This nearly forgotten episode offers some valuable lessons for us today, when litigation involving asbestos, the Dalkon Shield and other mass torts is yielding a dubious brand of justice for all.

In this book Henry S. Cohn and David Bollier tell the story of this catastrophic circus fire and its remarkable legal aftermath.

They describe how, with little guidance from existing case law and many quarrels and uncertainties, three enterprising lawyers secured a court-supervised receivership that kept the circus in business, enabling it to generate profits that could pay off the claims brought against it. A novel arbitration plan then resolved the claims and avoided the expense, delays and uncertainties of conventional litigation.

The authors argue that this innovative solution - the first modern example of alternative dispute resolution of a mass tort - could, with adaptations, be successfully applied to other mass torts today.

Creative settlement techniques could improve our court system while dispensing an equivalent or superior form of justice.

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Product Details
Yale University Press
0300050127 / 9780300050127
Hardback
04/11/1991
United States
240 pages, 21 illustrations, notes, source materials, index
242 x 164 mm, 540 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More