In the Jan. 14 article entitled, “Time to Say Good-bye to the ‘Suit Within a Suit,’” the author posits, from the plaintiff’s perspective, that the courts should dispense with a suit-within-a-suit method of proving the proximate cause element of a legal malpractice action because “it has become a procedural and evidentiary morass during discovery and trial that frequently leads to bizarre and unjust results.” The author further advocates for the relaxing of burdens of proof and evidentiary rules that have been the fixture of civil litigation for decades:

And so, when discussing settlement, let’s not insist that an expert report adhere to the rigidities of the rules of evidence that govern the trial, or that, as a precondition of meaningful settlement efforts, the expert opinion first be tested so that it strictly complies with the increasingly demanding requirements of the net opinion rule. The net opinion rule is appropriate for trial and governs, as it should, admissibility of evidence at trial—but it throttles settlement.

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