Back too soon? The Greater Kansas City Area's Decrease in Jury Verdicts in 2024
ABSTRACT: While jury trials in the Kansas City area have fallen back to pandemic-era levels, we did see an overall increase in the average jury award compared to prior years. Overall, 2024 saw a decline in jury trials but an increase in the average value of verdicts when compared to prior years. Even with the area’s decline in jury trials, Jackson County continues to be the most Plaintiff friendly venue in the Kansas City area.
Jury Trials Fall Back to Pandemic Era Levels
According to the data obtained from the Greater Kansas City Jury Verdict Service, the total number of jury trials in the Kansas City metropolitan area has broken the three-year rebound streak since the COVID-19 pandemic, with jury trials totaling less than in 2022.
2024 saw a total of 74 trials, compared to 101 trials in 2023 and 86 trials in 2022. This represents a decline of 27% from 2023.
While Jury Verdicts Are Steadily Declining, Defense Verdicts Are On The Rise
Like jury trials, jury verdicts are also down compared to the last two years. In 2024, the Kansas City area saw a total of 134 verdicts compared to 217 in 2023 and 161 in 2022. This is a decline of 38% compared to 2023 and a decline of 16.8% compared to 2022.
Of these 134 verdicts, only 54 (40%) were for the Plaintiff, compared to 48% in 2023 and 47% in 2022, putting a stop to the rise in plaintiff-friendly verdicts we have seen.
In contrast to prior years, 2024 saw a decrease in automobile related claims. Specifically, only 60% of automobile related claims saw some sort of verdict for the plaintiff(s). This is a noticeable decline compared to the 78% of plaintiff recovery on automobile related claims in 2023. Contrary to 2023, there were no automobile related wrongful death claims brought to verdict in 2024. Excluding one large outlier verdict ($33.4 million), the average plaintiff award for automobile related claims was $665,971.14.
Average Monetary Award for Plaintiffs Increased Again, Despite Fewer Trials
As was the case in 2023, the overall average of plaintiff friendly verdicts, without outliers, increased again in 2024. When compared to prior years, 2024 saw an increase in the average verdict award to $5,120,258, compared to $1,113,929 ($20,117,952 with the inclusion of outlier verdicts) in 2023 and $564,213 ($1,877,762 with the inclusion of outlier verdicts) in 2022.
When outlier verdicts are removed from the animus, the average Plaintiff’s award drops to $1,897,596. When including outlier verdicts, the total awards to Plaintiffs in 2024 were $276,493,945 compared to $2,092,266,978 in 2023 and $142,709,912 in 2022. Compared to prior years, 2024 also saw a reduction in overall verdicts above $1,000,000, with only fourteen verdicts reaching that threshold compared to the 31 verdicts in 2023 and 18 in 2022. Overall, 2024 saw fewer large verdicts compared to prior years with $34,000,000 being the largest verdict in 2024, compared to the $1.785 billion dollar verdict and $70,000,000 verdicts in 2023.
Jackson County, Missouri Saw A Decline In Plaintiff Friendly Verdicts
Historically, Jackson County, Missouri has seen more Plaintiff friendly verdicts than any of the other venues in the Greater Kansas City area. However, this changed in 2024 as Jackson County experienced a 10% drop in Plaintiff friendly verdicts, from 55% in 2023 to 45% in 2024. Of the 69 claims tried in Jackson County (combining the Kansas City and Independence locations), only 31 of those claims were for the Plaintiff. While 45% is significantly lower than the 55% we saw in 2023, 51% of the claims filed in the Greater Kansas City Area were filed in Jackson County. Of all plaintiff friendly verdicts reached in 2024, 51% of those were reached in Jackson County. While the percentage of plaintiff verdicts in 2024 may be down in Jackson County, it is still the most Plaintiff friendly venue in the Greater Kansas City Area.
About Missouri Law Blog
Baker Sterchi's Missouri Law Blog examines significant developments, trends and changes in Missouri law on a broad range of topics of interest to Missouri practitioners and attorneys and businesses with disputes subject to Missouri law. Learn more about the editor, David Eisenberg.
Subscribe via email
Subscribe to rss feeds
RSS FeedsABOUT baker sterchi blogs
Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC (Baker Sterchi) publishes this website as a service to our clients, colleagues and others, for informational purposes only. These materials are not intended to create an attorney-client relationship, and are not a substitute for sound legal advice. You should not base any action or lack of action on any information included in our website, without first seeking appropriate legal or other professional advice. If you contact us through our website or via email, no attorney-client relationship is created, and no confidential information should be transmitted. Communication with Baker Sterchi by e-mail or other transmissions over the Internet may not be secure, and you should not send confidential electronic messages that are not adequately encrypted.
The hiring of an attorney is an important decision, which should not be based solely on information appearing on our website. To the extent our website has provided links to other Internet resources, those links are not under our control, and we are not responsible for their content. We do our best to provide you current, accurate information; however, we cannot guarantee that this information is the most current, correct or complete. In addition, you should not take this information as a promise or indication of future results.
Disclaimer
The Missouri Law Blog is made available by Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. Your use of this blog site alone creates no attorney client relationship between you and the firm.
Confidential information
Do not include confidential information in comments or other feedback or messages related to the Missouri Law Blog, as these are neither confidential nor secure methods of communicating with attorneys. The Missouri Law Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.