Authors: William Wharton
“That's right.”
“Do you consider the administration of justice to be a function of God Almighty?”
I almost expect him to stand up and salute. I'm afraid to look over at Mitchell or Mona.
“I say this to my friends in the law all the time. As lawyers and judges, we are functionaries of God Almighty and should regard our responsibilities accordingly.”
I pause, a respectable imitation of a genuine lawyer's expectant pause.
“Judge Murphy, do you remember what Christ said to the tax collectors in the temple? I believe it's in Matthew, twenty-first chapter.”
I hurry on. I don't want to be interrupted.
“To refresh your memory, it was, âRender unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's.'
“Judge Murphy, I believe that out there”âI point over my shoulderâ”we are not living by the words of Jesus. Mammon is running riot, Judge Murphy. There's the smell of brimstone. No one speaks of justice or injustice, right or wrong, good or bad. Everything has been reduced to money, written out on those little yellow legal pads. The entire room reeks of corruption. Again, Matthew, chapter six, verse twenty-four: âYou cannot serve God and Mammon.'
“I want nothing to do with this sacrilege, Judge Murphy. I consider it blasphemy.”
I stop while I'm ahead. There's a long silence. I keep focused on Judge Murphy's pale eyes until he turns away.
“Well, I guess we know pretty well where you stand, Mr. Wharton. It's obvious you don't have much knowledge of the law, respect for it, or how it operates. Let's hear from Mr. Billings, now.”
Danny lifts his head but doesn't really look at Judge Murphy.
“I don't exactly agree with Mr. Wharton, but I think the figure you mention for settlement of this case is too low.”
“You mean, Mr. Billings, that you want this case to go to a jury?”
“Not exactly. But I think my son deserves more than a part of $600,000.”
There's a long silence. I'm wondering when a lawyer thinks he ought to give counsel.
“Think about it, Mr. Billings. Think about the possibility of your boy, Wills, hearing total strangers in a courtroom, talking about his mother, saying things he might remember all his life. Maybe some things he won't want to remember?”
It's right there that Danny starts to break down. At first I think he's kidding, but I should have seen it coming. He puts his head in his hands and begins to sob. I look at Ted Mitchell, then at Mona. They are like the statues at Abu Simbel, expressionless, immobile. We all watch as Judge Murphy plays the soap opera judge, sketching out a scenario with Wills on the witness stand, witnesses testifying to what nefarious acts we don't know. He goes on and on in his soft, lyrical voice.
Finally Danny gets it out.
“I don't want Wills in any courtroom. I don't want him to suffer like that. I'm willing to settle right now, your Honor.”
There it is. I look at Mitchell, at Mona. They still don't budge. The case is going down the drain, and they're not making a move. I can't take it.
“Mr. Mitchell, as our chief counsel, representing Steele, Cutler and Walsh, could you please tell Danny the realities of what can actually happen if we go to court?”
Mitchell clears his throat, looks at Mona, then at me. He aims his speech at Danny, avoiding the eyes of Judge Murphy.
“Danny, if we go to court, Wills doesn't even need to appear in the courtroom if you don't want him to. He was not a witness to the accident; he has testified already in the deposition concerning almost any question the defendants might have. I would not recommend that he appear.
“If for some reason, he does appear, I would be the one who would ask for his testimony. We would not allow cross-examination. He's below age for that.”
It's what I thought, but I wasn't quite sure. I chime in.
“You see, Dan, there's nothing to worry about here. Mr. Mitchell is our counselor. He would never allow the kind of thing Judge Murphy is talking about to happen.”
But I can see Dan isn't hearing. He's just holding his head in his hands, shaking it slowly and saying over and over how he'd never allow Wills to hear people talk against his mother in a court. I'm trying to think of alternatives. I'm hoping for some help from Ted Mitchell and Mona Flores. They don't look at me. I try once more.
“Danny, you're the daddy. You must decide this. There's nothing I can do. I think you're making a wrong decision, but it's your decision to make. If you think you're protecting Wills, despite what Mr. Mitchell has just said, that's your right.”
Still no reaction. I look at Judge Murphy. He's got the worst shit-eating grin on his face I've seen in years.
“Mr. Wharton, I guess you're from the âtough guy' school, aren't you? Let the young people find out about the realities of life so they can handle themselves. Is that it?”
“Judge Murphy, you couldn't be more wrong. I love my children dearly and I'm here because one of the âtough guys' in your state ran a semi-trailer truck over our beloved daughter, her husband, and her two lovely children, our grandchildren. Be careful what you say, it's on the verge of slander.”
I turn to Ted Mitchell.
“Mr. Mitchell, although you and Ms. Flores have been treating our cases as one, in reality, it's two cases, isn't it? I am your client only because Dan's wife, who is a legal secretary, found you as a reputable legal firm in the state of Oregon and recommended you to my wife and me. She was concerned we might be sued. We did not intend to sue. It turns out her concerns were valid. There are several parties who have instituted suits against us.”
They look at each other. They whisper back and forth. Mitchell turns to me.
“Technically, probably that position has some validity.”
He looks at Judge Murphy. The judge nods his head. I go on.
“Well, if Dan insists on settling Wills's case this way, at any settlement figure, regardless of its insufficiency, I, as representative for my wife, Rosemary, and myself, wish to dissociate our case from his.”
There's a long silence. Judge Murphy stands.
“Mr. Wharton, I think you and Ms. Flores may leave now. I'll stay here and discuss the situation with Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Billings.”
We stand and leave, Mona working her way past Mitchell's knees. I'm still half hoping Danny will change his mind. This money belongs to our grandson, his son.
Outside, Mona goes up the aisle ahead of me. I follow. I think she's mad at me, but mostly she's rushing into that corridor to light a cigarette. First things first.
We stand, not speaking, while she takes that important long drag.
“Jesus, Will! Why couldn't you have told us what you were going to do?”
“You were there, Mona. I had no idea what was going to happen. Danny succumbed to the overwhelming badgering by Murphy. You two didn't help at all. What should I have done? I'm not a lawyer and I needed help. Did you want the entire case settled at Murphy's price? âMurphy's law,' Murphy's kind of law? That's what was going to happen and you know it. Tell me what else I could have done.”
She takes another drag, looks at me through the smoke.
“We could have asked for a recess to talk it over.”
“Could I have done that? It seems that's what lawyers are for, or at least you could have told me then and there that I could have done it, and I would have. Everybody was doing nothing.”
“You're impossible.”
“All right. You're the professional lawyer. Tell me what I should have done, what I can still do.”
“Oh, shit! It's all such a mess now. I'm not even sure we can divide this case. I've never heard of it happening before. Sure, Judge Murphy nodded his head as if it were OK, but do you trust him?”
“Of course not. Why should I?”
“Let's go have a beer until Ted and Danny come out from this conference.”
By the time we return to the courtroom, Ted Mitchell is already there, waiting. He waves us over. I don't see Danny.
“Well, Judge Murphy made an offer to settle the case with Danny.”
He pauses, looks at Mona and then at me.
“He's offering $550,000 for a settlement on Wills. Danny's accepted.”
I try to read his face. My sense is that he isn't put out. I do some calculations in my head. Steele, Cutler and Walsh comes in for $137,750, for their twenty-five percent. That leaves $372,000, less all the other expenses. I'm sure $200,000 or $300,000 less than Wills would have gotten with a jury trial.
I'm frustrated.
“Where did the money come from? How much of it was Sampson money and what part of it came from the pot?”
It's the first time I see Mitchell look confused.
“I mean, did Murphy include my part of the pot along with what he gave Wills? I'm not settling, you know. I'm not settling with Sampson nor with Oregon nor with Thompkins. I'm convinced there have been some questionable decisions made by Judge Murphy in this conference. Murphy can't include money from the pot which was meant for Rosemary and me since we've never said we'd settle. In fact, I've said publicly and privately that I have no interest in an out-of-court settlement.”
He doesn't move. Mona has that “I need a cigarette” look. She leans forward.
“But you want Wills to have the best settlement he can get, don't you? Considering what happened in our conference with Judge Murphy, with Danny surrendering his right to a jury trial, it would be hard to get more. It is quite a bit of money, you know.”
“Yep, about $350,000 after all the nibbles have been taken out of it. It could be half again more, you know that.”
There's silence again.
It's clear Rosemary and I are going to court on our own, at great disadvantage. I don't really want to make a big deal out of the money Murphy awarded Wills from our share of the “pot.” I don't even accept the “pot” as valid.
T
HE NEXT DAY,
early, Judge Murphy tells all the plaintiffs and defendants they may leave. Only their legal representatives need stay for the final summary of the settlement conference. I check out of the hotel. I put my bags in Mona's car. She has volunteered to drive me back up to Portland.
For the final summary, I dress in my “lawyer costume,” including briefcase, but without the tape recorder. I'm about out of tape anyway. When we take our places, I smuggle myself between Mitchell and Mona as we go down the aisle. Mitchell looks surprised and unhappy to see me. I don't see Danny or any of the other plaintiffs. I turn toward Mona.
“This isn't exclusively for legal representatives, is it? Judge Murphy said defendants and plaintiffs may go home, but he didn't say they
must
go home. If he doesn't want me in here for the summary, he can just tell me. I promise not to make a scene.”
“Why do you do things like this, Will? It just makes things more difficult.”
“I've come a long way for this conference, Mona, and I still don't understand what's been going on. I feel like the blind man in a game of blind man's buff. I just want to know. What's so bad about that?”
She shakes her head and I tag along. They take a place about halfway toward the front. I sit beside Mona. A few lawyers turn their heads but keep their expressionless lawyer masks in place.
Judge Murphy strides into the room, still not wearing robes. Behind him is a court reporter.
Judge Murphy seems very nervous. He crosses and uncrosses his legs, sometimes tucking his hands between them at the knees. It's obvious he's been through some hard times, although I can't feel sorry for him. I hope he doesn't spot me.
He briefly summarizes what has happened over the past few days. He's tired and he doesn't elaborate much.
He congratulates all who have participated in the settlement conference and is pleased to announce that as he had hoped, every suit has been settled to everyone's satisfaction.
I look over at Mona and Mitchell. Mitchell has reluctantly put up his hand.
“Your Honor, Judge Murphy, there is one exception. The suit involving my clients, Mr. and Mrs. Wharton, and Sampson National Carriers, Inc. has not been settled.”
There's a long silence. Judge Murphy puts his hands over his mouth, joined together like a sign of prayer.
“Thank you for correcting me, Mr. Mitchell. But I think we can go through the rest of the roll to put this conference on the court record.” He signals to the court reporter and announces that from this point on, all will be on record.
He then starts with another count-off. He's asked for representatives of each of the clients to stand and tell what the situation is in relation to their suits. Each stands and says basically the same thing, their names, the organization for which they work, the names of their clients, and a brief statement that a settlement for their suit has been agreed upon, no numbers. I'm waiting to see what Mitchell is going to say. If he says that all suits have been settled in our case, I'm going to break cover and deny it. Only the Sampson suit has been settled for Danny; it hasn't been settled for me and Rosemary. And there are also the two other suits, against the state of Oregon and against Thompkins. I do not consider those settled; in fact those weren't even discussed.
Finally, the Judge reaches our group. It isn't Mitchell who stands, but Mona. I lean forward, listening carefully. She says that all the suits, with the exception of the cases of Mr. and Mrs. Wharton, have been satisfactorily resolved. It was that word “cases” I was listening for. It's in the court record now. It's more than one case, it's not just Sampson.
After this count-off is finished, Judge Murphy scrunches down in his chair, hands still in front of his face. He checks to confirm that the court reporter is still taking down what he says.