It should be like the old days were at fault party had to pay through wage garnishment or liens the amounts owed for damage caused from an accident.
I was facetiously going to ask you if you wanted to revert back to the Stone Age.
Insurance (the concept of spreading risk) has been around for thousands of years. Primitive man hunted in groups so that if one or two got gored by the prey, the rest of the group would survive to bring home the food.
Property insurance has been around for centuries becoming prevalent with the advent of ocean-going trade between European empires and their colonies. Google Lloyds of London to learn more about that.
Liability insurance is a relatively recent development with the advent of Employers Liability insurance during the 1800s. Later known as Workers Compensation insurance, it was developed so that injured workers did not have to experience the burden and cost of suing the employer for negligence when the worker was unemployed and broke due to his injury.
Liability insurance to protect a person from the consequences of his own negligence was a product of the late 19th century and exploded (no surprise) with the development of the automobile.
You're right, before that a "tort feasor" had to pay for his negligence out of his own pocket. But that's not a viable solution as most liability judgments can be discharged in bankruptcy.
Whether you argue for or against caps and/or no-fault, they are often necessary to avoid the chaos of lawsuits that take years and are accompanied by prohibitive costs of litigation.
9/11/2001 - 4 planes hijacked. The World Trade Center and part of the Pentagon destroyed. Thousands killed. Tens of thousands injured, many developing life-long disabilities of varying extents.
Faced with the prospect of a myriad of lawsuits putting airlines out of business or requiring a monumental bailout, the airlines and the federal government developed the Victims Compensation Fund allowing victims and/or their families to be compensated without having to incur the costs and time involved in litigation.
For the VCF to be successful, there had to be caps on the pay-outs. Naturally, many objected to caps, especially those who believed that their lives were worth more than the lives of others.
Guess what, more than 80% of the victims agreed to be bound by the VCF's settlement caps. For the last 20 years or so, the VCF has been compensating victims.
To learn more about the VCF watch the movie Worth on Netflix. It's a docudrama.
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