Attempted Robbery By Lawsuit

Woody Guthrie said: “Some rob you with a six-gun, some with a fountain pen.” But, you do not usually find
someone trying to do both.

On Dec. 21, 1998, Mark A. Merrill robbed a bank in Peotone, Illinois. A month later, he held up the First
National Bank of Illinois in Mokena. He managed to make off with almost $22,000. But he did not get far.

Merrill pleaded guilty to the two bank robberies in March 1999. In August, he was sentenced to serve
63 months in prison.

Now, if you are sitting in federal prison for more than five years, you have a lot of free time to think
about how you got there. Whose fault is it anyway?

The answer is obvious: Donald Trump!

In February, 2000 Merrill filed suit against Trump, the Trump Casino in Gary, Indiana, and its manager,
for $2.1 million. Merrill alleges that if it were not for that darned casino encouraging his compulsive
gambling, he never would have robbed those two banks.

Talk about being in denial!

Frivolous lawsuits are fun to read about, but they are a nuisance to the already overburdened judicial
system and to the companies that have to pay the bills. Unfortunately, in the coming years, nuisance
suits against casinos are only going to grow more numerous.

Potential plaintiffs often see casinos as the ultimate deep pocket. Not only do casinos have lots of cash,
but they do not get a lot of sympathy from juries.

In the U.S., anyone can file a lawsuit against anyone else for any reason, or for no reason at all, with
virtually no risk. Most other countries follow the “English Rule,” which allows a judge to make a party
pay dearly for bringing a worthless suit. Under the “American Rule,” the losing party does not have to
pay the winner’s attorneys fees.

A plaintiff on his own or with a lawyer on a contingency fee can roll the dice with the legal system and
maybe get a jackpot verdict. At the very least he can force a company to spend time and money getting the
case thrown out.

The law has made a little progress in containing the worst misuses of the courts. Anyone on California’s
“Vexatious Litigant List” cannot file a lawsuit without first clearing it with a judge. But to make the
list, you have to be pretty outrageous: Like the convict who sued his prison cafeteria for serving him a
broken cookie.

Prisoners are a major source of lawsuits and appeals. They have plenty of time on their hands and easy
access to law libraries.

What does a casino lawyer do with a case like Merrill v. Trump?

The first step is checking to see if the plaintiff has made any procedural mistakes. Defense attorneys
look for these first, because if they do not object immediately, they may have accidentally waived away
their defense.

A common mistake made by non-lawyers is filing suit against entities that do not actually exist. For example,
a government official who felt he had been libeled by an article in FortuneĀ® magazine, sued the magazine
and sent the papers to the Time-Life Building in New York. The case ended up in the U.S. Supreme Court,
because although the address was correct, the defendant technically did not exist. There was no FortuneĀ®
magazine, only a company known as Time-Life, Inc., doing business as “Fortune” magazine.

If Merrill’s suit survives to the point where it will be judged on the merits, the casino’s lawyers will
attempt to have the case quickly dismissed. Even though the lawyers may be getting paid by the hour, no one
likes to spend years on a case that will eventually be thrown out.

The casino fears not only the cost and trouble, but also the remote possibility that the case may actually
get to a jury. Jurors almost always try and do their best, but there are occasional travesties, like the
O.J. Simpson criminal verdict.

Trump’s lawyers will file a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Their job is to analyze the
plaintiff’s complaint and point out its weaknesses to the judge. Merrill’s suit boils down to the claim
that he discovered he was a compulsive gambler, that he asked the Trump Casino to bar him and that the
casino instead encouraged him to gamble by offering incentives, including trips to Las Vegas.

I expect their arguments will go as follows:

There is no statute, regulation or prior case in Indiana requiring casinos to bar compulsive gamblers.

Even if the judge finds the casino should have put Merrill’s name on a “Keep Out” list, this does not give
him the right to sue. A few other states do require lists of self-excluded players and have fined casinos for
failing to put someone on the list. But even these states have not said that a person can sue a casino for
being left off the list.

Even if the casino had a duty to keep Merrill out and he has the right to sue for breach of that duty, the
casino did not cause him to rob any banks.

The last is the killer argument. Merrill claims he told the casino he was a compulsive gambler. Even
if true, there was no way the casino could foresee that allowing him to gamble would result in bank robberies.

Further, the law still treats human beings as having free will. It was Merrill’s choice to hold up two
banks. In the language of the law, his criminal act broke the chain of causation.

If Merrill’s case makes it all the way to trial, he will still have a tough time proving the facts he
is alleging. After all, who is going to believe that Donald Trump’s Indiana floating casino would comp
a player to a trip to Las Vegas? The last thing Trump would want is his patrons going there — Trump owns
no casinos in Nevada.

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