 |
|
If one lives down here, one is prepared to not like anything written by
outsiders about our little world. Why, you landlubbers may ask?
Because they never get it right, that’s why. It’s like
Hollywood trying to make a movie about the working class.
The world of the working stiff is either over-romanticized
or downright insulting. Lawrence Schiller does not make that
mistake in his recently published book, Cape May Court
House - A Death In The Night.
The book details events surrounding the death of the wife of a prominent
Cape May Court House dentist, Dr. Eric Thomas, in a car accident
late one winter night in 1997. Thomas, who was also in the
car along with their young daughter, sues the Ford
Motor Co. for the wrongful death of his pregnant wife
Tracy who was driving the Ford Explorer at the time. Ford turns the
tables on Thomas alleging Tracy Thomas did not die from a defective air bag
but rather from strangulation.
|
|
|
|
The town itself is really not a focal point in the book, except to portray
how small a community Cape May Court House is and how important
one’s stature in that community can be when one’s
reputation is disparaged. One reason the town is
basically AWOL is because no one who lives in Cape May
Court House would talk on the record and very few spoke at all about the man
or his family.
Just how small a town Cape May Court House is becomes an issue as the case
proceeds. At one point according to the book, attorneys for the
dentist plead with the judge to seal the records regarding
Ford’s accusations of “wrongdoing, misdeeds, or foul
deeds” against their client. In making his case, Tom
Mellon of Mellon, Webster & Mellon, Doylestown, Pa. asserts that Cape
May Court House “is a very small community. It’s a very tight-knit community.
Everybody knows everybody. This man is a minority in a very small community.
If you don’t seal those expert documents for those who are in and
out of this courtroom ... somebody is going to get them.” The motion is
denied.
What is most fascinating about the book is the intimate look it provides the
reader inside the heads of Ford’s legal team, who were obviously
far more forthcoming than attorneys for the plaintiff,
therefore making the book list a bit. But Ford won, so
naturally they would be a bit more “chatty.” Bill Conroy, at
that time representing the Philadelphia firm of White & Williams,
led Ford’s legal battle. The games begin when Conroy notices certain
inconsistencies with Thomas’ original deposition. When he calls on experts
regarding airbag deployment, he receives an opinion from one particular
expert that he is not expecting — Tracy’s death was caused not by airbag
deployment but by strangulation. As a result, Conroy decides to take on
criminal lawyer Glen Zeitz to assist him in investigating the Thomas suit.
Among Zeitz’s clients: Philadelphia mob boss Ralph Natale; a high school
principal convicted of murdering a teacher and her two children; and Robert
Marshall, convicted of murdering his wife in an insurance scam — the subject
of the book Blind Faith.
In answer to their move, Mellon comes back with a criminal attorney of their
own, Carl Poplar, with 30 years of experience in the
criminal defense area.
The most likable character and the one the reader most likely to identify
with is Judge Joel B. Rosen, a federal magistrate in Camden
County who heard all motions and pretrial matters in the
case. The poor man starts out thinking he’s dealing with
just another Fortune 500 company liability case and is
anxious to get matters dispatched as efficiently and expeditiously as possible
without too many courtroom ploys. Boy, is he in for a surprise!
No criminal charges were ever brought against Dr. Thomas. He dropped his
suit against Ford in July of 2001.
The back and forth between attorneys, as well the
doggedly determined work of investigation are well detailed making Cape May
Court House a good read — especially on a chilly winter evening.
|
|
- Susan Tischler |
|