Doctor Pays Settlement With 600,000 Quarters


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Dr. Roger Herrin, a retired surgeon from Illinois who lost his son in a car accident, smoldered with rage. An appellate court had ruled that his family had over-collected insurance benefits. He was left with no choice but to pay back $500,000 to other passengers who survived the accident.

So the doctor exacted his revenge ? in quarters.

On Wednesday, he delivered the money to the other parties, complying with a court-ordered settlement. But to their astonishment, he paid $150,000 of it in quarters.

An armored Brink?s truck drove 150 bags of loose quarters from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis to a Marion, Ill., bank. The bags were then piled on flatbed trucks that the doctor had borrowed from a friend.

The trucks then rumbled through a busy downtown square, parked outside of two law firms, where the bags were dumped in the lobbies.

The 76-year-old doctor told Law Blog that his coin trick ? reported by the Southern Illinoisan newspaper ? was a ?protest against the ruling.?

The coins weighed close to four tons or about as much as 70 regular-sized couches. If you lined up the quarters, they?d stretch across more than 11 football fields, or more than a kilometer.

?They were not happy. They didn?t know what they were going to do with it. And I wasn?t real congenial,? Dr. Herrin told Law Blog. ?We have cash and checks. Which part don?t you want?? his attorney told the nonplussed lawyers and receptionists who gathered around the bags, according to Dr. Herrin.

?They decided they wanted it all,? said the doctor.

?If he wants to pay in quarters, that?s his business,? said Mark Prince, a lawyer representing two of the other passengers.

In 2001, Dr. Herrin?s son, Michael, and two teenage friends were riding in a Jeep Cherokee driven by one of the boys? mothers when a farm truck failed to stop at an intersection and rammed the vehicle. Michael was killed and the other passengers suffered injuries. One of the kids, the worst of the injured, had to undergo several knee surgeries.

Dr. Herrin, who had purchased his own family insurance policies through nursing homes he owns, settled a wrongful-death claim with two insurance companies, which paid his family $1.65 million, according to court documents. The other passengers had no claim on that money.

There was also a pool of $800,000 in aggregated under-insured-motorist coverage from the crash vehicle for claims by all the passengers, but a trial court came up with a formula that gave the son?s estate most of that money.

Many years and lawsuits later, an appellate court ruled that the lion?s share of the common pool should go to the other passengers. ?Frankly, I don?t need the money,? said the doctor. Most of it, he said, had gone to his ex-wife. He said he just didn?t think it was fair to have to return the cash when the only life lost was that of his son.

The doctor, who lives on a 20-acre estate in Harrisburg, had one of his grounds workers help with the hauling Wednesday. ?He said he?s very sore from lifting the bags,? said the doctor. :huh:

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What an ar*ehole.

 

Why? For protesting that the survivors ended up getting re-awarded cash even though he's the one who's son died?

 

He doesn't need the money sure, but it's the principal of the thing.  He's the one that's lost the most here, and now he's lost even more... All because some jerk killed his son in a careless accident.

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He lost his son.  He followed legal protocol, it was awarded to him.  Now they want to say "no, we want some of that back."  I'd probably be irritated too.  But I'd probably simply stew instead of doing something about it.

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Why? For protesting that the survivors ended up getting re-awarded cash even though he's the one who's son died?

 

He doesn't need the money sure, but it's the principal of the thing.  He's the one that's lost the most here, and now he's lost even more... All because some jerk killed his son in a careless accident.

Because it's a mean, nasty and petty thing to do.  He got more than enough money out of his son's death (why did he get any?) and the court found that the other passengers were entitled to compensation too - fairly and squarely. 

 

If I believed in karma I'd say that he got what he deserved.

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Incidentally I think this is illegal and he could be fined for this as well.

 

 

Not at all. It's legal currency and he had the option to use whatever form of currency he wanted.  Your knowledge of US law leaves a lot to be desired. 

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Because it's a mean, nasty and petty thing to do.  He got more than enough money out of his son's death (why did he get any?) and the court found that the other passengers were entitled to compensation too - fairly and squarely. 

 

If I believed in karma I'd say that he got what he deserved.

 

the passengers were compensated ... with not being killed

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Not at all. It's legal currency and he had the option to use whatever form of currency he wanted.  Your knowledge of US law leaves a lot to be desired. 

 

I'm pretty sure it's been mentioned before when someone else did this that you're not allowed to do this. there was a sensible reason, except for it just being retarded as well. 

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Because it's a mean, nasty and petty thing to do.  He got more than enough money out of his son's death (why did he get any?) and the court found that the other passengers were entitled to compensation too - fairly and squarely.

He had life insurance on his family and why he was payed for his sons death. The life insurance is where most of the money came from. Not sure I agree most of the other 800k should of gone to him. The others should of at least gotten enough to cover the medical bills and then some.

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He said he just didn?t think it was fair to have to return the cash when the only life lost was that of his son.

 

And how does the money give him his son back ? meanwhile the people that was injured actually NEED the money for rehab and lifelong lowered quality of life and potentially not being able to work due to injuries. 

They have machines to do that ...

 

They don't have to use machines, they can chose to count every little coin by hand, in shifts, and he has to stay there until they're done.

 

and no they don't, they're insurance companies, not banks, why would they have coin counters. 

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And how does the money give him his son back ? meanwhile the people that was injured actually NEED the money for rehab and lifelong lowered quality of life and potentially not being able to work due to injuries.

Why should the others get money from the insurance he had on his family? His son was the only one under that policy and he payed for the policy.

The under insured motorist money is a different story.

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Why should the others get money from the insurance he had on his family? His son was the only one under that policy and he payed for the policy.

The under insured motorist money is a different story.

 

 

 

There was also a pool of $800,000 in aggregated under-insured-motorist coverage from the crash vehicle for claims by all the passengers, but a trial court came up with a formula that gave the son?s estate most of that money.

 

 

They didn't get any of the money from the insurance he had on his family. the was a separate much larger sum. But for some weird arbitrary reason due to some formula he was given the maority of the money from the pool. 

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Because it's a mean, nasty and petty thing to do.  He got more than enough money out of his son's death (why did he get any?) and the court found that the other passengers were entitled to compensation too - fairly and squarely. 

 

If I believed in karma I'd say that he got what he deserved.

He shouldn't get any money when his own son was killed by someone else's negligence?

And he gave the money back, sure in quarters, to the LAWYERS office. The very same people that will probably just truck it off to the nearest bank, keep a large amount for themselves and then give the other families what's left. He didn't go to the victims and say here's 500k in coins deal with it yourself.

If a courts gave me money 10 years ago and then suddenly just decided that oh you know what, we were wrong we need 500k of that back I'd be ****ed too. What if I had spent that money? Now do I have to declare bankruptcy / take out loans because the courts screwed up a decade ago?

 

They don't have to use machines, they can chose to count every little coin by hand, in shifts, and he has to stay there until they're done.

and no they don't, they're insurance companies, not banks, why would they have coin counters.

...

What do you think the company is going to do? They're going to take it straight to a bank and then deal with it. Guess what the bank has? Oh they have coin counters. They aren't going to sit there and use their workers to count all the coins hand by hand, it would cost them an absolute fortune in labor alone.

And if they don't want to do that, coin counting machines aren't exactly expensive...

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You shouldn't spend money that's being contested, that would have been your own dumb fault then. he was well aware that the other victims and their families had appealed the rahter idiotic decision to give him a single person witht he least need for the money the majority of the shared pool. 

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You shouldn't spend money that's being contested, that would have been your own dumb fault then. he was well aware that the other victims and their families had appealed the rahter idiotic decision to give him a single person witht he least need for the money the majority of the shared pool.

Did I say he spent it? No. I'm saying what if someone else, in a similar situation, had?

It's not HIS fault that the courts gave him the money, so calling him mean and nasty is rather pathetic (to jakem that is, not you). The courts screwed up.

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Did I say he spent it? No. I'm saying what if someone else, in a similar situation, had?

It's not HIS fault that the courts gave him the money, so calling him mean and nasty is rather pathetic (to jakem that is, not you). The courts screwed up.

you said, "what if 'I' had spent it". 

 

and as I said, anyone who spend money that's being contested is an idiot. 

What do you think the company is going to do? They're going to take it straight to a bank and then deal with it. Guess what the bank has? Oh they have coin counters. They aren't going to sit there and use their workers to count all the coins hand by hand, it would cost them an absolute fortune in labor alone.

And if they don't want to do that, coin counting machines aren't exactly expensive...

 

yeah, but their companies has a lot of money, he was being an idiot and an a-hole, they could very well count the money manually in shifts while he was to wait just to be a-holes back to him. 

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