The Rainmaker Free
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FREE THE RAINMAKER PDF John Grisham | 608 pages | 01 Feb 1996 | Random House USA Inc | 9780440221654 | English | New York, United States The Rainmaker - John Grisham - Google книги Based on the book by John Grisham. This is a well-done fairy tale of an incompetent rookie plaintiff's lawyer taking on and beating a corrupt insurance company in a bad-faith action for refusing to The Rainmaker for a kid's bone The Rainmaker transplant. Francis Ford Coppola directed and co-wrote the script. Bailiff: Do you solemnly swear the testimony you are about to give in this cause will be the truth the whole truth and nothing The Rainmaker the truth so help The Rainmaker God? Q: Now, Mrs. Q: Mrs. Black did you purchase this medical policy because you were concerned about medical care for your son Atty: Sorry, your honor. Laughter from the Great Benefit lawyers. Permission to approach the witness. In the background, a slide of the deceased with the words "Stupid, The Rainmaker, stupid" enlarged over it. Witness reading : Great Benefit, The Rainmaker 7, Re: Dear Mrs. On seven prior occasions this company has denied your claim in writing. We now deny it for the eighth and final time. The Rainmaker must be stupid stupid stupid. A: Yes sir, your client has about a billion dollars and your client killed my son. I wanted to sue for a whole lot more. Q: What would you do with the money if this jury awards you 10 million dollars? The Rainmaker you gonna do with the money? A: I'm going to give it to the American Leukemia Society, every cent. I don't want a dime of your stinking money. Black, I want you to read from the policy, Page 16, Section K, Paragraph 14, Item E, The Rainmaker which the insurance company has, in plain English wording, said that it will not pay for experimental procedures. Now, your lawsuit says that your son would have been saved if he had had a bone-marrow transplant. Isn't it a fact, Mrs. Black, that there are only bone-marrow transplants performed a year in the United States, less in in Tennessee Q: So it was not covered by the policy. Now, Mrs. Black, who was it first diagnosed your son's condition? Q: Is it not true, Mrs. Black, The Rainmaker this capable, truthful man told you repeatedly that a bone-marrow transplant would not do your son any good, because of the type of Leukemia he had? Black, is this not Dr. Page's letterhead, and at the bottom there, is that not his signature? Pl Atty: Objection, your Honor. A letter from the Black's family physician The Rainmaker Mr. Drummond is inadmissible. Def Atty: That is quite correct, your Honor, and I'm not asking for this letter to be admitted into evidence, I'm simply asking that this witness be allowed to read the letter The Rainmaker rule of the Tennessee rules of evidence, so her recollection can be refreshed, that's all. Pl Atty: Uh, I don't know your Honor, I just object to this--and also, we were not furnished this letter in pre-trial discovery. Def Atty: Your honor, I had no idea this letter would be needed. I expected this The Rainmaker to tell the truth The Rainmaker what her doctor told her. Black, does that letter refresh your recollection as to whether or not Donny Ray's Leukemia was The Rainmaker kind that could be helped by a bone-marrow transplant? Q: The Rainmaker he is a licensed, experienced, capable physician, who lovingly told you time and time again what you quite understandably did not want to accept: The Rainmaker your son was going to die of Leukemia despite the best efforts of medical science, is that not true? Q: Not only did you not believe him, ma'am, but you were less than truthful with me and with this jury moments ago when you told us, under oath, that Dr. Page never The Rainmaker that your son had the type of Leukemia that could not be treated by a bone marrow transplant. I believe your exact words were, "He never said that, not like that, to me. A: He wasn't a specialist. I just wanted Donny Ray to have the best medical treatment available. You'd do the same thing. A: Dear Mrs. Black--on seven prior occasions this company has denied your claim in writing. A: It was a difficult time for me personally. I was under a lot of stress. We had declined this claim seven times before. I was trying to be emphatic. The Rainmaker snapped. I regret having written the letter, and I apologize. DEF atty: It is a matter of fairness, your Honor. We have a right to be notified about your The Rainmaker. PL paralegal: She's listed in the pre-trial order, your Honor. Pursuant to rule Q: I am baffled, Miss Lemanczyk, because I have this letter here, and it says you quit for personal reasons. A: The letter was a lie. I was fired so that the The Rainmaker could claim that I no longer worked there. A: Jack Underhall. He told me that I was leaving immediately, and I had two choices. A: I took the cash and I also signed a letter saying I would never discuss any of my claims files with The Rainmaker. Q: And during that time was there ever an occasion when you were given instructions regarding how you should handle claims? A: Deny all claims for a year. Add up the money saved, deduct the amount spent on quick court settlements, The Rainmaker there's a pot of gold left. Q: Number six, please. This has heretofore been marked Defense Exhibit Number Six. Do you recognize this? PL atty: Thank you. And within it there is an executive memorandum entitled section U. I ask that I might approach the witness DEF atty: Your Honor, this document contains executive memoranda that are stolen workpapers, may not be admitted. DEF atty: Your Honor, I ask that you instruct my colleague here, not to read from The Rainmaker to make reference to any suspect workpaper until Judge: Assuming you cannot get this in at this time, do you have any more questions for the witness? Q: Is it true, Miss Lemanczyk, that you have recently been committed to an institution for various problems? A: I was not committed. I am suffering from alcoholism and depression, and I voluntarily checked into a facility. I was supposed to The Rainmaker covered by my group policy at Great Benefit, and they, of course, are denying my claim. Miss Lemanczyk? PL atty: Objection, your Honor. The Rainmaker might find this fun to talk about, but, uh, this is not relevant, at all. A: As long as I had sex with certain executives at Great Benefit my pay was increased and I was promoted. When I stopped, I was demoted. Q: Miss Lemanczyk, as an employee of Great Benefit, you promised not to disclose confidential private claims information, yes? Q: But you accepted it, didn't The Rainmaker You put it right in your pocketbook, even though, in your mind, you never intended to keep that promise. In fact, you were very angry at Great Benefit and Mr. Lufkin, weren't you? And that 10, that was just a piece of blackmail, wasn't it, a way to extort money from the The Rainmaker you hated, isn't that right? DEF atty: In fact, your testimony here today is just a lie. You stole company workpapers, confidential reports as blackmail for revenge. Hell hath no fury as what, Miss Lemanczyk? A woman scorned. Your honor, I move that all documents provided the The Rainmaker by Miss Jackie Lemanczyk be deemed stolen work papers and be struck from The Rainmaker proceedings. Rainmaker | Definition of Rainmaker by Merriam-Webster The Rainmaker is a American legal drama film written and directed by Francis Ford Coppola based on John Grisham 's novel of the same name. Unlike most of his fellow grads, he has no high-paying job lined up and is forced to apply for part-time positions while serving drinks at a Memphis bar. Desperate for a job, he is The Rainmaker to J. Lyman "Bruiser" Stone, a ruthless but successful ambulance chaserwho makes him an associate. To earn his fee, Rudy is required to hunt for potential clients at a local hospital. He meets Deck Shifflet, a less-than-ethical former insurance assessor-turned- paralegal who has failed the bar exam six times. However, Deck is resourceful in gathering information and is an expert on insurance lawsuits. Rudy has a case of insurance bad faith which could be worth several million dollars in The Rainmaker. They file suit on behalf of a middle-aged couple, Dot and Buddy Black, whose year-old son, Donny Ray, is dying of leukemiabut could have been saved with a bone marrow transplantdenied by their insurance carrier Great Benefit. Rudy passes the Tennessee bar exam but has never argued a The Rainmaker before a judge and jury. Now he finds himself up against a group of experienced lawyers from a large firm, headed by Leo F. Drummond, an attorney who uses unscrupulous tactics to win his cases. The original judge, Harvey Hale, is set to dismiss because he sees it as a The Rainmaker "lottery" case that slows down the judicial process. However, a more sympathetic judge, Tyrone Kipler, takes over when Hale suffers a The Rainmaker heart attack.