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Wikipedia

Class action

A class action lawsuit, also known as a class suit, class-action, representative action, or representative action, is a type of lawsuit where one of the parties is a group of people who are represented collectively by a member or members of that group. The class action originated in the United States and is still predominantly an American phenomenon, but Canada, as well as several European countries with civil law, have made changes in recent years to allow consumer organizations to bring claims on behalf of consumers.

Description edit

In a typical class action, a plaintiff sues a defendant or a number of defendants on behalf of a group, or class, of absent parties.[1] This differs from a traditional lawsuit, where one party sues another party, and all of the parties are present in court. Although standards differ between states and countries, class actions are most common where the allegations usually involve at least 40 people who the same defendant has injured in the same way.[1] Instead of each damaged person bringing one's own lawsuit, the class action allows all the claims of all class members—whether they know they have been damaged or not—to be resolved in a single proceeding through the efforts of the representative plaintiff(s) and appointed class counsel.[1]

History edit

England and the United Kingdom edit

The antecedent of the class action was what modern observers call "group litigation," which appears to have been quite common in medieval England from about 1200 onward.[2]: 38  These lawsuits involved groups of people either suing or being sued in actions at common law. These groups were usually based on existing societal structures like villages, towns, parishes, and guilds. Unlike modern courts, the medieval English courts did not question the right of the actual plaintiffs to sue on behalf of a group or a few representatives to defend an entire group.[2]: 38–40 

 
Engraving of the Star Chamber, published in "Old and new London" in 1873, taken from a drawing made in 1836

From 1400 to 1700, group litigation gradually switched from being the norm in England to the exception.[2]: 100  The development of the concept of the corporation led to the wealthy supporters of the corporate form becoming suspicious of all unincorporated legal entities, which in turn led to the modern concept of the unincorporated or voluntary association.[2]: 124–25  The tumultuous history of the Wars of the Roses and then the Star Chamber resulted in periods during which the common law courts were frequently paralyzed, and out of the confusion the Court of Chancery emerged with exclusive jurisdiction over group litigation.[2]: 125–32 

By 1850, Parliament had enacted several statutes on a case-by-case basis to deal with issues regularly faced by certain types of organizations, like joint-stock companies, and with the impetus for most types of group litigation removed, it went into a steep decline in English jurisprudence from which it never recovered.[2]: 210–12  It was further weakened by the fact that equity pleading, in general, was falling into disfavor, which culminated in the Judicature Acts of 1874 and 1875.[2]: 210–12  Group litigation was essentially dead in the United Kingdom after 1850.

United States edit

 
Associate Justice Joseph Story

Class actions survived in the United States thanks to the influence of Supreme Court Associate Justice Joseph Story, who imported it into US law through summary discussions in his two equity treatises as well as his opinion in West v. Randall (1820).[2]: 219–20  However, Story did not necessarily endorse class actions, because he "could not conceive of a modern function or a coherent theory for representative litigation."[2]: 219–20 

The oldest predecessor to the class-action rule in the United States was in the Federal Equity Rules, specifically Equity Rule 48, promulgated in 1842.

Where the parties on either side are very numerous, and cannot, without manifest inconvenience and oppressive delays in the suit, be all brought before it, the court in its discretion may dispense with making all of them parties, and may proceed in the suit, having sufficient parties before it to represent all the adverse interests of the plaintiffs and the defendants in the suit properly before it. But in such cases, the decree shall be without prejudice to the rights and claims of all the absent parties.[3]

This allowed for representative suits in situations where there were too many individual parties (which now forms the first requirement for class-action litigation – numerosity).[4] However, this rule did not allow such suits to bind similarly situated absent parties, which rendered the rule ineffective.[2]: 221  Within ten years, the Supreme Court interpreted Rule 48 in such a way so that it could apply to absent parties under certain circumstances, but only by ignoring the plain meaning of the rule.[2]: 221–222  In the rules published in 1912, Equity Rule 48 was replaced with Equity Rule 38 as part of a major restructuring of the Equity Rules, and when federal courts merged their legal and equitable procedural systems in 1938, Equity Rule 38 became Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

Modern developments edit

A major revision of the FRCP in 1966 radically transformed Rule 23, made the opt-out class action the standard option, and gave birth to the modern class action. Entire treatises have been written since to summarize the huge mass of law that sprang up from the 1966 revision of Rule 23.[2]: 229  Just as medieval group litigation bound all members of the group regardless of whether they all actually appeared in court, the modern class action binds all members of the class, except for those who choose to opt out (if the rules permit them to do so).

The Advisory Committee that drafted the new Rule 23 in the mid-1960s was influenced by two major developments. First was the suggestion of Harry Kalven Jr. and Maurice Rosenfield in 1941 that class-action litigation by individual shareholders on behalf of all shareholders of a company could effectively supplement direct government regulation of securities markets and other similar markets.[2]: 232  The second development was the rise of the civil rights movement, environmentalism and consumerism.[2]: 240–244  The groups behind these movements, as well as many others in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, all turned to class actions as a means for achieving their goals. For example, a 1978 environmental law treatise reprinted the entire text of Rule 23 and mentioned "class actions" 14 times in its index.[2]: 244–245 

Businesses targeted by class actions for inflicting massive aggregate harm have sought ways to avoid class actions altogether. In the 1990s, the US Supreme Court issued several decisions that strengthened the "federal policy favoring arbitration".[5] In response, lawyers have added provisions to consumer contracts of adhesion called "collective action waivers", which prohibit those signing the contracts from bringing class-action suits. In 2011, the US Supreme Court ruled in a 5–4 decision in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion that the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925 preempts state laws that prohibit contracts from disallowing class-action lawsuits, which will make it more difficult for consumers to file class-action lawsuits. The dissent pointed to a saving clause in the federal act which allowed states to determine how a contract or its clauses may be revoked.[6]

In two major 21st-century cases, the Supreme Court ruled 5–4 against certification of class actions due to differences in each individual members' circumstances: first in Wal-Mart v. Dukes (2011) and later in Comcast Corp. v. Behrend (2013).[7]

Companies may insert the phrase "may elect to resolve any claim by individual arbitration" into their consumer and employment contracts to use arbitration and prevent class-action lawsuits.[8]

Rejecting arguments that they violated employees' rights to collective bargaining, and that modestly-valued consumer claims would be more efficiently litigated within the parameters of one lawsuit, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis (2018), allowed the use of so-called "class action waivers". Citing its deference to freedom to contract principles, the Epic Systems opinion opened the door dramatically to the use of these waivers as a condition of employment, consumer purchases and the like. Some commentators in opposition to the ruling see it as a "death knell" to many employment and consumer class actions, and have increasingly pushed for legislation to circumvent it in hopes of reviving otherwise-underrepresented parties' ability to litigate on a group basis. Supporters (mostly pro-business) of the high court's ruling argue its holding is consistent with private contract principles. Many of those supporters had long-since argued that class action procedures were generally inconsistent with due process mandates and unnecessarily promoted litigation of otherwise small claims—thus heralding the ruling's anti-litigation effect.

In 2017, the US Supreme Court issued its opinion in Bristol-Meyer Squibb Co. v. Superior Court of California, 137 S. Ct. 1773 (2017), holding that over five hundred plaintiffs from other states cannot bring a consolidated mass action against the pharmaceutical giant in the State of California. This opinion may arguably render nationwide mass action and class action impossible in any single state besides the defendant's home state.

In 2020, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals found incentive awards are impermissible. Incentive awards are a relatively modest payment made to class representatives as part of a class settlement. The ruling was a response to an objector who claimed Rule 23 required that the fee petition be filed before the time frame for class member objections to be filed; and payments to the class representative violates doctrine from two US Supreme Court cases from the 1800s.[9][10]

Statistics edit

As of 2010, there was no publicly maintained list of nonsecurities class-action settlements,[11] although a securities class-action database exists in the Stanford Law School Securities Class Action Clearinghouse and several for-profit companies maintain lists of the securities settlements. One study of federal settlements required the researcher to manually search databases of lawsuits for the relevant records, although state class actions were not included due to the difficulty in gathering the information.[11] Another source of data is US Bureau of Justice Statistics Civil Justice Survey of State Courts, which offers statistics for the year 2005.[12]

Advantages edit

Proponents of class actions state that they offer a number of advantages[13] because they aggregate many individualized claims into one representational lawsuit.

First, aggregation can increase the efficiency of the legal process, and lower the costs of litigation.[14] In cases with common questions of law and fact, aggregation of claims into a class action may avoid the necessity of repeating "days of the same witnesses, exhibits and issues from trial to trial". Jenkins v. Raymark Indus. Inc., 782 F.2d 468, 473 (5th Cir. 1986) (granting certification of a class action involving asbestos).

Second, a class action may overcome "the problem that small recoveries do not provide the incentive for any individual to bring a solo action prosecuting his or her rights". Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591, 617 (1997) (quoting Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 109 F.3d 388, 344 (7th Cir. 1997)). "A class action solves this problem by aggregating the relatively paltry potential recoveries into something worth someone's (usually an attorney's) labor." Amchem Prods., Inc., 521 U.S. at 617 (quoting Mace, 109 F.3d at 344). In other words, a class action ensures that a defendant who engages in widespread harm – but does so minimally against each individual plaintiff – must compensate those individuals for their injuries. For example, thousands of shareholders of a public company may have losses too small to justify separate lawsuits, but a class action can be brought efficiently on behalf of all shareholders. Perhaps even more important than compensation is that class treatment of claims may be the only way to impose the costs of wrongdoing on the wrongdoer, thus deterring future wrongdoing.

Third, class-action cases may be brought to purposely change behavior of a class of which the defendant is a member. Landeros v. Flood (1976) was a landmark case decided by the California Supreme Court that aimed at purposefully changing the behavior of doctors, encouraging them to report suspected child abuse. Otherwise, they would face the threat of civil action for damages in tort proximately flowing from the failure to report the suspected injuries. Previously, many physicians had remained reluctant to report cases of apparent child abuse, despite existing law that required it.

Fourth, in "limited fund" cases, a class action ensures that all plaintiffs receive relief and that early-filing plaintiffs do not raid the fund (i.e., the defendant) of all its assets before other plaintiffs may be compensated. See Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp., 527 U.S. 815 (1999). A class action in such a situation centralizes all claims into one venue where a court can equitably divide the assets amongst all the plaintiffs if they win the case.

Finally, a class action avoids the situation where different court rulings could create "incompatible standards" of conduct for the defendant to follow. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(1)(A). For example, a court might certify a case for class treatment where a number of individual bond-holders sue to determine whether they may convert their bonds to common stock. Refusing to litigate the case in one trial could result in different outcomes and inconsistent standards of conduct for the defendant corporation. Thus, courts will generally allow a class action in such a situation. See, e.g., Van Gemert v. Boeing Co., 259 F. Supp. 125 (S.D.N.Y. 1966).

Whether a class action is superior to individual litigation depends on the case and is determined by the judge's ruling on a motion for class certification. The Advisory Committee Note to Rule 23, for example, states that mass torts are ordinarily "not appropriate" for class treatment. Class treatment may not improve the efficiency of a mass tort because the claims frequently involve individualized issues of law and fact that will have to be re-tried on an individual basis. See Castano v. Am. Tobacco Co., 84 F.3d 734 (5th Cir. 1996) (rejecting nationwide class action against tobacco companies). Mass torts also involve high individual damage awards; thus, the absence of class treatment will not impede the ability of individual claimants to seek justice. Other cases, however, may be more conducive to class treatment.[citation needed]

The preamble to the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, passed by the United States Congress, found:

Class-action lawsuits are an important and valuable part of the legal system when they permit the fair and efficient resolution of legitimate claims of numerous parties by allowing the claims to be aggregated into a single action against a defendant that has allegedly caused harm.

Criticisms edit

There are several criticisms of class actions.[15][16][17] The preamble to the Class Action Fairness Act stated that some abusive class actions harmed class members with legitimate claims and defendants that have acted responsibly, adversely affected interstate commerce, and undermined public respect for the country's judicial system.

Class members often receive little or no benefit from class actions.[18] Examples cited for this include large fees for the attorneys, while leaving class members with coupons or other awards of little or no value; unjustified awards are made to certain plaintiffs at the expense of other class members; and confusing notices are published that prevent class members from being able to fully understand and effectively exercise their rights.[18]

For example, in the United States, class lawsuits sometimes bind all class members with a low settlement. These "coupon settlements" (which usually allow the plaintiffs to receive a small benefit such as a small check or a coupon for future services or products with the defendant company) are a way for a defendant to forestall major liability by precluding many people from litigating their claims separately, to recover reasonable compensation for the damages. However, existing law requires judicial approval of all class-action settlements, and in most cases, class members are given a chance to opt out of class settlement, though class members, despite opt-out notices, may be unaware of their right to opt-out because they did not receive the notice, did not read it or did not understand it.

The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 addresses these concerns. An independent expert may scrutinize coupon settlements before judicial approval in order to ensure that the settlement will be of value to the class members (28 U.S.C.A. 1712(d)). Further, if the action provides for settlement in coupons, "the portion of any attorney's fee award to class counsel that is attributable to the award of the coupons shall be based on the value to class members of the coupons that are redeemed". 28 U.S.C.A. 1712(a).

Ethics edit

Class action cases present significant ethical challenges. Defendants can hold reverse auctions and any of several parties can engage in collusive settlement discussions. Subclasses may have interests that diverge greatly from the class but may be treated the same. Proposed settlements could offer some groups (such as former customers) much greater benefits than others. In one paper presented at an ABA conference on class actions in 2007, authors commented that "competing cases can also provide opportunities for collusive settlement discussions and reverse auctions by defendants anxious to resolve their new exposure at the most economic cost".[19]

Defendant class action edit

Although normally plaintiffs are the class, defendant class actions are also possible. For example, in 2005, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon was sued as part of the Catholic priest sex-abuse scandal. All parishioners of the Archdiocese's churches were cited as a defendant class. This was done to include their assets (local churches) in any settlement.[20] Where both the plaintiffs and the defendants have been organized into court-approved classes, the action is called a bilateral class action.

Mass actions edit

In a class action, the plaintiff seeks court approval to litigate on behalf of a group of similarly situated persons. Not every plaintiff looks for or could obtain such approval. As a procedural alternative, plaintiff's counsel may attempt to sign up every similarly situated person that counsel can find as a client. Plaintiff's counsel can then join the claims of all of these persons in one complaint, a so-called "mass action", hoping to have the same efficiencies and economic leverage as if a class had been certified.

Because mass actions operate outside the detailed procedures laid out for class actions, they can pose special difficulties for both plaintiffs, defendants, and the court. For example, settlement of class actions follows a predictable path of negotiation with class counsel and representatives, court scrutiny, and notice. There may not be a way to uniformly settle all of the many claims brought via a mass action. Some states permit plaintiff's counsel to settle for all the mass action plaintiffs according to a majority vote, for example. Other states, such as New Jersey, require each plaintiff to approve the settlement of that plaintiff's own individual claims.

Class action legislation edit

Argentina edit

Class actions were recognized in "Halabi" leading case (Supreme Court, 2009).

Australia and New Zealand edit

Class actions became part of the Australian legal landscape only when the Federal Parliament amended the Federal Court of Australia Act in 1992 to introduce "representative proceedings",[21] the equivalent of the American "class actions".[22]

Likewise, class actions appeared slowly in the New Zealand legal system. However, a group can bring litigation through the action of a representative under the High Court Rules which provide that one or a multitude of persons may sue on behalf of, or for the benefit of, all persons "with the same interest in the subject matter of a proceeding". The presence and expansion of litigation funders have been playing a significant role in the emergence of class actions in New Zealand. For example, the "Fair Play on Fees" proceedings in relation to penalty fees charged by banks were funded by Litigation Lending Services (LLS), a company specializing in the funding and management of litigation in Australia and New Zealand. It was the biggest class-action suit in New Zealand history.[23][24]

Austria edit

The Austrian Code of Civil Procedure (Zivilprozessordnung – ZPO) does not provide for a special proceeding for complex class-action litigation. However, Austrian consumer organizations (Verein für Konsumenteninformation (VKI) and the Federal Chamber of Labour / Bundesarbeitskammer) have brought claims on behalf of hundreds or even thousands of consumers. In these cases, the individual consumers assigned their claims to one entity, who has then brought an ordinary (two-party) lawsuit over the assigned claims. The monetary benefits were redistributed among the class. This technique, labeled as "class action Austrian style," allows for a significant reduction of overall costs. The Austrian Supreme Court, in a judgment, confirmed the legal admissibility of these lawsuits under the condition that all claims are essentially based on the same grounds.

The Austrian Parliament unanimously requested the Austrian Federal Minister for Justice to examine the possibility of new legislation providing for a cost-effective and appropriate way to deal with mass claims. Together with the Austrian Ministry for Social Security, Generations and Consumer Protection, the Justice Ministry opened the discussion with a conference held in Vienna in June 2005. With the aid of a group of experts from many fields, the Justice Ministry began drafting the new law in September 2005. With the individual positions varying greatly, a political consensus could not be reached.[25]

Canada edit

Provincial laws in Canada allow class actions. All provinces permit plaintiff classes and some permit defendant classes. Quebec was the first province to enact class proceedings legislation, in 1978. Ontario was next, with the Class Proceedings Act, 1992. As of 2008, 9 of 10 provinces had enacted comprehensive class actions legislation. In Prince Edward Island, where no comprehensive legislation exists, following the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Western Canadian Shopping Centres Inc. v. Dutton, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 534, class actions may be advanced under a local rule of court. The Federal Court of Canada permits class actions under Part V.1 of the Federal Courts Rules.

Legislation in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, and Nova Scotia expressly or by judicial opinion has been read to allow for what are informally known as national "opt-out" class actions, whereby residents of other provinces may be included in the class definition and potentially be bound by the court's judgment on common issues unless they opt-out in a prescribed manner and time. Court rulings have determined that this permits a court in one province to include residents of other provinces in the class action on an "opt-out" basis.

Judicial opinions have indicated that provincial legislative national opt-out powers should not be exercised to interfere with the ability of another province to certify a parallel class action for residents of other provinces. The first court to certify will generally exclude residents of provinces whose courts have certified a parallel class action. However, in the Vioxx litigation, two provincial courts certified overlapping class actions whereby Canadian residents were class members in two class actions in two provinces.[26] Both decisions are under appeal.

Other legislation may provide for representative actions on behalf of a large number of plaintiffs, independent of class action procedures. For instance, under Ontario's Condominium Act, a condominium's governing corporation may launch a lawsuit on behalf of the owners for damage to the condominium's common elements, even though the corporation does not own the common elements.

The largest class action suit in Canada was settled in 2005 after Nora Bernard initiated efforts that led to an estimated 79,000 survivors of Canada's residential school system suing the Canadian government. The settlement amounted to upwards of $5 billion.[27]

Chile edit

Chile approved class actions in 2004.[28] The Chilean model is technically an opt-out issue class action, followed by a compensatory stage which can be collective or individual. This means that the class action is designed to declare the defendant generally liable with erga omnes effects if and only if the defendant is found liable, and the declaratory judgment can be used then to pursue damages in the same procedure or in individual ones in different jurisdictions. If the latter is the case, the liability cannot be discussed, but only the damages.[29] There under the Chilean procedural rules, one particular case works as an opt-out class action for damages. This is the case when defendants can identify and compensate consumers directly, i.e. because it is their banking institution. In such cases, the judge can skip the compensatory stage and order redress directly. Since 2005 more than 100 cases have been filed, mostly by Servicio Nacional del Consumidor [SERNAC], the Chilean consumer protection agency. Salient cases have been Condecus v. BancoEstado[30] and SERNAC v. La Polar.[31]

France edit

Under French law, an association can represent the collective interests of consumers; however, each claimant must be individually named in the lawsuit. On January 4, 2005, President Chirac urged changes that would provide greater consumer protection. A draft bill was proposed in April 2006 but did not pass.

Following the change of majority in France in 2012, the new government proposed introducing class actions into French law. The project of "loi Hamon" of May 2013 aimed to limit the class action to consumer and competition disputes. The law was passed on March 1, 2014.[32]

Germany edit

Class actions are generally not permitted in Germany, as German law does not recognize the concept of a targeted class being affected by certain actions. This requires each plaintiff to individually prove that they were affected by an action, and present their individual damages, and prove the causality between both parties.

Joint litigation (Streitgenossenschaft) is a legal act that may permit plaintiffs that are in the same legal community with respect to the dispute, or are entitled by the same factual or legal reason. These are not typically regarded as class action suits, as each individual plaintiff is entitled to compensation for their individual, incurred damages and not as a result of being a member of a class.

The combination of court cases (Prozessverbindung) is another method that permits a judge to combine multiple separate court cases into a single trial with a single verdict. According to § 147 ZPO, this is only permissible if all cases are regarding the same factual and legal event and basis.

Mediation Procedure edit

A genuine extension of the legal effect of a court decision beyond the parties involved in the proceedings is offered under corporate law. This procedure applies to the review of stock payoffs under Stock Corporation Act (Aktiengesetz. Pursuant to Sec. 13 Sentence 2 Mediation Procedure Act (Spruchverfahrensgesetz §), the court decision concerning the dismissal or direction of a binding arrangement of an adequate compensation is effective for and against all shareholders, including those who have already agreed to a previous settlement in this matter.

Investor Model Case Proceedings edit

The Capital Investor Model Case Act (Kapitalanleger-Musterverfahrensgesetz) is an attempt to enable model cases to be brought by a large number of potentially affected parties in the event of disputes, limited to the investment market.[33] In contrast to the US class actions, each affected party must file a lawsuit in its own name in order to participate in the model proceedings.

Model Declaratory Action edit

Effective on November 1, 2018, the Code of Civil Procedure (Zivilprozessordnung) introduced the Model Declaratory Action (§ 606 ZPO) that created the ability to bundle similar claims by many affected parties efficiently into one proceeding.

Registered Consumer Protection Associations can file – if they represent at least 10 individuals – for a (general) judicial finding whether the factual and legal requirements for of claims or legal relationships are met or not. These individuals have to register in order to inhibit their claims. Since these Adjudications are more of a general nature, each individual must assert their claims in their own court proceedings. The competent court is bound by the Model Declaratory Action decision.

Associate Action edit

German law also recognizes the Associative Action (Verbandsklage), which is comparable to the class action and is predominantly used in environmental law. In civil law, the Associative Action is represented by a foreign body in the matter of asserting and enforcing individual claims and the claimant can no longer control the proceedings.[34]

Class Action With Relation to the United States edit

Class actions can be brought by Germans in the US for events in Germany if the facts of the case relate to the US. For example, in the case of the Eschede train disaster, the lawsuit was allowed because several aggrieved parties came from the US and had purchased rail tickets there.

India edit

Decisions of the Indian Supreme Court in the 1980s loosened strict locus standi requirements to permit the filing of suits on behalf of rights of deprived sections of society by public-minded individuals or bodies. Although not strictly "class action litigation" as it is understood in American law, Public Interest Litigation arose out of the wide powers of judicial review granted to the Supreme Court of India and the various High Courts under Article 32 and Article 226 of the Constitution of India. The sort of remedies sought from courts in Public Interest Litigation go beyond mere award of damages to all affected groups, and have sometimes (controversially) gone on to include Court monitoring of the implementation of legislation and even the framing of guidelines in the absence of Parliamentary legislation.[35][36]

However, this innovative jurisprudence did not help the victims of the Bhopal gas tragedy,[citation needed] who were unable to fully prosecute a class-action litigation (as understood in the American sense) against Union Carbide due to procedural rules that would make such litigation impossible to conclude and unwieldy to carry out. Instead, the Government of India exercised its right of parens patriae to appropriate all the claims of the victims and proceeded to litigate on their behalf, first in the New York courts and later, in the Indian courts. Ultimately, the matter was settled between the Union of India and Union Carbide (in a settlement overseen by the Supreme Court of India) for a sum of 760 crore (US$95 million) as a complete settlement of all claims of all victims for all time to come.

Public interest litigation has now broadened in scope to cover larger and larger groups of citizens who may be affected by government inaction. Examples of this trend include the conversion of all public transport in the city of Delhi from diesel engines to compressed natural gas engines on the basis of the orders of the Delhi High Court; the monitoring of forest use by the High Courts and the Supreme Court to ensure that there is no unjustified loss of forest cover; and the directions mandating the disclosure of assets of electoral candidates for the Houses of Parliament and State Assembly.[37][38]

The Supreme Court has observed that the PIL has tended to become a means to gain publicity or obtain relief contrary to constitutionally valid legislation and policy. Observers point out that many High Courts and certain Supreme Court judges are reluctant to entertain PILs filed by non-governmental organizations and activists, citing concerns of separation of powers and parliamentary sovereignty.

Ireland edit

In Irish law, there is no such thing as a "class action" per se.[39] Third-party litigation funding is prohibited under Irish law.[40][41] Instead, there is the 'representative action' (Irish: gníomh ionadaíoch) or 'test case' (cás samplach).[42] A representative action is "where one claimant or defendant, with the same interest as a group of claimants or defendants in an action, institutes or defends proceedings on behalf of that group of claimants or defendants."[43]

Some test cases in Ireland have included:

Italy edit

Italy has class action legislation. Consumer associations can file claims on behalf of groups of consumers to obtain judicial orders against corporations that cause injury or damage to consumers. These types of claims are increasing, and Italian courts have allowed them against banks that continue to apply compound interest on retail clients' current account overdrafts. The introduction of class actions is on the government's agenda. On November 19, 2007, the Senato della Repubblica passed a class-action law in Finanziaria 2008, a financial document for the economy management of the government. From 10 December 2007, in order of Italian legislation system, the law is before the House and has to be passed also by the Camera dei Deputati, the second house of Italian Parliament, to become an effective law.[45] In 2004, the Italian parliament considered the introduction of a type of class action, specifically in the area of consumer law. No such law has been enacted, but scholars demonstrated that class actions (azioni rappresentative) do not contrast with Italian principles of civil procedure. Class action is regulated by art. 140 bis of the Italian consumers' code and has been in force since 1 July 2009.[46][47][48] On May 19, 2021, the reform of the Italian legal framework on class actions finally entered into force. The new rules, designed by Law n. 31 and published on April 18, 2019, (Law n. 31/2019), were initially intended to become effective on April 19, 2020, but had been delayed twice. The new rules on class actions are now included in the Italian Civil Procedure Code (ICPC). Overall, the new class action appears to be a viable instrument which, through a system of economic incentives, could overcome the rational apathy of small-claims holders and ensure redress.[49]

Netherlands edit

Dutch law allows associations (verenigingen) and foundations (stichtingen) to bring a so-called collective action on behalf of other persons, provided they can represent the interests of such persons according to their by-laws (statuten) (section 3:305a Dutch Civil Code). All types of actions are permitted. This includes a claim for monetary damages, provided the event occurred after 15 November 2016 (pursuant to new legislation which entered into force 1 January 2020). Most class actions over the past decade have been in the field of securities fraud and financial services. The acting association or foundation may come to a collective settlement with the defendant. The settlement may also include – and usually primarily consists of – monetary compensation of damages. Such settlement can be declared binding for all injured parties by the Amsterdam Court of Appeal (section 7:907 Dutch Civil Code). The injured parties have an opt-out right during the opt-out period set by the Court, usually 3 to 6 months. Settlements involving injured parties from outside The Netherlands can also be declared binding by the Court. Since US courts are reluctant to take up class actions brought on behalf of injured parties not residing in the US who have suffered damages due to acts or omissions committed outside the US, combinations of US class actions and Dutch collective actions may come to a settlement that covers plaintiffs worldwide. An example of this is the Royal Dutch Shell Oil Reserves Settlement that was declared binding upon both US and non-US plaintiffs.

Poland edit

"Pozew zbiorowy" or class action has been allowed under Polish law since July 19, 2010. A minimum of 10 persons, suing based on the same law, is required.

Russia edit

Collective litigation has been allowed under Russian law since 2002. Basic criteria are, like in the US, numerosity, commonality, and typicality.

Spain edit

Spanish law allows nominated consumer associations to take action to protect the interests of consumers. A number of groups already have the power to bring collective or class actions: certain consumer associations, bodies legally constituted to defend the "collective interest" and groups of injured parties.

Recent changes to Spanish civil procedure rules include the introduction of a quasi-class action right for certain consumer associations to claim damages on behalf of unidentified classes of consumers. The rules require consumer associations to represent an adequate number of affected parties who have suffered the same harm. Also, any judgment made by the Spanish court will list the individual beneficiaries or, if that is not possible, conditions that need to be fulfilled for a party to benefit from a judgment.

Switzerland edit

Swiss law does not allow for any form of class action. When the government proposed a new federal code of civil procedure in 2006, replacing the cantonal codes of civil procedure, it rejected the introduction of class actions, arguing that

[It] is alien to European legal thought to allow somebody to exercise rights on the behalf of a large number of people if these do not participate as parties in the action. ... Moreover, the class action is controversial even in its country of origin, the U.S., because it can result in significant procedural problems. ... Finally, the class action can be openly or discretely abused. The sums sued for are usually enormous, so that the respondent can be forced to concede, if they do not want to face sudden huge indebtness and insolvency (so-called legal blackmail).[50]

United Kingdom edit

England and Wales edit

The Civil Procedure Rules of the courts of England and Wales came into force in 1999 and have provided for group litigation orders in limited circumstances (under Part 19.6[51]). These have not been much used, with only two reported cases at the court of first instance in the first ten years after the Civil Procedure Rules took effect.[52][full citation needed] However, a sectoral mechanism was adopted by the Consumer Rights Act 2015, taking effect on October 1, 2015.[53][54] Under the provisions therein, opt-in or opt-out collective procedures may be certified for breaches of competition law.[55] This is currently the closest mechanism to a class action in England and Wales.

United States edit

In the United States, the class representative, also called a lead plaintiff, named plaintiff, or representative plaintiff is the named party in a class-action lawsuit.[56] Although the class representative is named as a party to the litigation, the court must approve the class representative when it certifies the lawsuit as a class action.

The class representative must be able to represent the interests of all the members of the class, by being typical of the class members and not having conflicts with them. He or she is responsible for hiring the attorney, filing the lawsuit, consulting on the case, and agreeing to any settlement. In exchange, the class representative may be entitled to compensation (at the court's discretion) out of the recovery amount.

Standing edit

In securities class actions that allege violations of Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, "officers and directors are liable together with the corporation for material misrepresentations in the registration statement."[57]

To have "standing" to sue under Section 11 of the 1933 Act in a class action, a plaintiff must be able to prove that he can "trace" his shares to the registration statement in question, as to which there is alleged a material misstatement or omission.[58][59][60] In the absence of an ability to actually trace his shares, such as when securities issued at multiple times are held by the Depository Trust Company in a fungible bulk and physical tracing of particular shares may be impossible, the plaintiff may be barred from pursuing his claim for lack of standing.[61][62][63][58][60]

Federal courts edit

In federal courts, class actions are governed by Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 23 and 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332(d).[64] Cases in federal courts are only allowed to proceed as class actions if the court has jurisdiction to hear the case, and if the case meets the criteria set out in Rule 23. In the vast majority of federal class actions, the class is acting as the plaintiff. However, Rule 23 also provides for defendant class actions.[citation needed]

Typically, federal courts are thought to be more favorable for defendants, and state courts more favorable for plaintiffs.[65] Many class actions are filed initially in state court. The defendant will frequently try to remove the case to federal court. The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005[66] increases defendants' ability to remove state cases to federal court by giving federal courts original jurisdiction for all class actions with damages exceeding $5,000,000 exclusive of interest and costs.[67] The Class Action Fairness Act contains carve-outs for, among other things, shareholder class actions covered by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and those concerning internal corporate governance issues (the latter typically being brought as shareholder derivative actions in the state courts of Delaware, the state of incorporation of most large corporations).[68]

Jurisdiction edit

Class actions may be brought in federal court if the claim arises under federal law or if the claim falls under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d). Under § 1332(d)(2) the federal district courts have original jurisdiction over any civil action where the amount in controversy exceeds $5,000,000 and

  • any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State different from any defendant; or
  • any member of a class of plaintiffs is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state and any defendant is a citizen of a State; or
  • any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State and any defendant is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state.[69]

Nationwide plaintiff classes are possible, but such suits must have a commonality of issues across state lines. This may be difficult if the civil law in the various states lack significant commonalities. Large class actions brought in federal court frequently are consolidated for pre-trial purposes through the device of multidistrict litigation (MDL).[70] It is also possible to bring class actions under state law, and in some cases the court may extend its jurisdiction to all the members of the class, including out of state (or even internationally) as the key element is the jurisdiction that the court has over the defendant.[citation needed]

Class certification under Rule 23 edit

For the case to proceed as a class action and bind absent class members, the court must certify the class under Rule 23 on a motion from the party wishing to proceed on a class basis. For a class to be certified, the moving party must meet all of the criteria listed under Rule 23(a), and at least one of the criteria listed under Rule 23(b).[64]

The 23(a) criteria are referred to as numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy.[71] Numerosity refers to the number of people in the class. To be certified, the class has to have enough members that simply adding each of them as a named party to the lawsuit would be impractical.[64] There is no bright-line rule to determine numerosity, but classes with hundreds of members are generally deemed to be sufficiently numerous.[71] To satisfy commonality, there must be a common question of law and fact such that "determination of its truth or falsity will resolve an issue that is central to the validity of each one of the claims in one stroke".[72] The typicality requirement ensures that the claims or defenses of the named plaintiff are typical of those of everyone else in the class.[64] Finally, adequacy requirement states that the named plaintiff must fairly and adequately represent the interests of the absent class members.[64]

Rule 23(b)(3) allows class certification if "questions of law or fact common to class members predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, and that a class action is superior to other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy."[73]

Notice and settlement edit

Due process requires in most cases that notice describing the class action be sent, published, or broadcast to class members. As part of this notice procedure, there may have to be several notices, first a notice allowing class members to opt out of the class, i.e. if individuals wish to proceed with their own litigation they are entitled to do so, only to the extent that they give timely notice to the class counsel or the court that they are opting out. Second, if there is a settlement proposal, the court will usually direct the class counsel to send a settlement notice to all the members of the certified class, informing them of the details of the proposed settlement.[citation needed]

State courts edit

Since 1938, many states have adopted rules similar to the FRCP. However, some states, like California, have civil procedure systems, which deviate significantly from the federal rules; the California Codes provide for four separate types of class actions. As a result, there are two separate treatises devoted solely to the complex topic of California class actions.[74] Some states, such as Virginia, do not provide for any class actions, while others, such as New York, limit the types of claims that may be brought as class actions.[citation needed]

In fiction edit

John Grisham's 2003 novel The King of Torts is a fable of the rights and wrongs of class actions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Class Action". Wex Legal Dictionary. 2007-08-06. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Yeazell, Stephen C. (1987). From Medieval Group Litigation to the Modern Class Action. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300037760. OCLC 15549646.
  3. ^ The New Federal Equity Rules Promulgated by the United States Supreme Court at the October Term, 1912: Together with the Cognate Statutory Provisions and Former Equity Rules; with an Introduction, Annotations and Forms, p. 52
  4. ^ Deborah R. Hensler, Nicholas M. Pace, Bonita Dombey-Moore, Beth Giddens, Jennifer Gross, Erik K. Moller, Class Action Dilemmas: Pursuing Public Goals for Private Gain (Santa Monica: RAND, 2000), 10–11.
  5. ^ Giles M. (2005). Opting Out of Liability 2009-04-02 at the Wayback Machine. Michigan Law Review.
  6. ^ Foreman C. "Supreme Court: AT&T can force arbitration, block class-action suits". Ars Technica.
  7. ^ Stempel, Jonathan (27 March 2013). . Reuters. Archived from the original on 2 June 2016. Retrieved 21 January 2024.
  8. ^ Silver-greenberg, Jessica; Gebeloff, Robert (2015-10-31). . The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2015-11-15. Retrieved 2015-10-31.
  9. ^ Troutman, Eric J. (September 18, 2020). "Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals Holds that Incentive Payments Commonly Awarded to Class Representatives are Impermissible in a Classwide Settlement". TCPA World. Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  10. ^ Johnson v. NPAS Solutions (11th Cir. September 17, 2020).
  11. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, Brian T. (2010-12-01). "An Empirical Study of Class Action Settlements and Their Fee Awards". Journal of Empirical Legal Studies. 7 (4): 811–846. doi:10.1111/j.1740-1461.2010.01196.x. ISSN 1740-1461. S2CID 4611237.
  12. ^ "Data Collection: Civil Justice Survey of State Courts (CJSSC)". Bureau of Justice Statistics. Office of Justice Programs. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  13. ^ Association of Trial Lawyers of America, Class Action Press Kit 2006-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "FindLaw Class Action and Mass Tort Center: Legal Research: Cohelan on California Class Actions". Classaction.findlaw.com. 1966-07-01. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  15. ^ Richard Epstein, "Class Actions: The Need for a Hard Second Look"
  16. ^ Michael Greve, "Harm-Less Lawsuits? What's Wrong with Consumer Class Actions" 2009-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Jim Copland, "Class Actions"
  18. ^ a b "Do Class Actions Benefit Class Members?". www.instituteforlegalreform.com. Retrieved 2016-01-17.
  19. ^ "Ethical Issues In Class Action Settlements" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  20. ^ [1] January 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Johnston, Robert; Karageorge, Felicity; Solomonidis, Rena; Briggs, Nicholas; Gaertner, Sara (April 2023). The Class Actions Law Review (7th ed.). United Kingdom: Law Business Research. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-80449-160-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  22. ^ Stuart Clark and Colin Loveday (2004). "Class Actions in Australia - An Overnew" (PDF). Clayton Utz. (PDF) from the original on 2012-03-30. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  23. ^ "Slater and Gordon announces launch of New Zealand class action against ANZ". Slater and Gordon. 18 June 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  24. ^ Meadows, Richard (11 March 2013). "Thousands sign up for bank class action". Stuff.co.nz. Fairfax Digital. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  25. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-08-11. Retrieved 2006-07-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ Ontario: Tiboni v. Merck Frosst Canada Ltd., [2008] O.J. No. 2996. Saskatchewan: Wuttunee v. Merck Frosst Canada Ltd., 2008 SKQB 78
  27. ^ Halifax Daily News article on Bernard in 2006 2008-09-30 at the Wayback Machine Archived at Arnold Pizzo McKiggan
  28. ^ Barroilhet, Agustin (2012-01-30). "Class Actions in Chile". Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network. SSRN 1995906. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ "Class Actions in Chile: Update | Global Class Actions Exchange". globalclassactions.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-25.
  30. ^ "BancoEstado devolverá US$12 millones a clientes por cobro de comisiones en cuentas de ahorro - LA TERCERA". La Tercera (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2016-10-25.
  31. ^ Barroilhet, Agustin (2016-05-27). "Self-interested gatekeeping? Clashes between public and private enforcers in two Chilean class actions". Class Actions in Context. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 362–384. doi:10.4337/9781783470440.00027. ISBN 9781783470440.
  32. ^ LOI n° 2014-344 du 17 mars 2014 relative à la consommation, March 17, 2014, retrieved 2017-12-12
  33. ^ "with a list of the KapMuG proceedings published in the Federal Gazette" (in German). Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  34. ^ "Sachstand WD 7 –3000/070 –12" (PDF). Deutscher Bundestag: Wissenschaftliche Dienste. 2012-03-19. (PDF) from the original on 2019-10-20. Retrieved 2019-10-20.
  35. ^ "PIL A Boon Or A Bane". Legalserviceindia.com. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  36. ^ . Karmayog.org. Archived from the original on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  37. ^ Justice M.B. Shah (2 May 2002). "Union of India Vs. Association for Democratic Reforms & Another" (PDF). Supreme Court of India Judgement on Civil Appeal No. 7178 of 2001.
  38. ^ . ADR. Archived from the original on 29 June 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
  39. ^ Boland, James (12 October 2018). "Revisiting the potential of class actions". The Irish Times. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  40. ^ "Law firms excluded from EU consumer class actions". 4 January 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  41. ^ McKeown, Andrew (31 January 2020). "Chief Justice launches report on litigation funding and class actions". Irish Legal news. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  42. ^ "Class/collective actions in Ireland: overview". Practical Law. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  43. ^ McClusky, Aoife; McClements, April (28 May 2019). "Class action procedure in Ireland". Lexology. Law Business Research. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  44. ^ Collins, Niall; Johnston, Peter; Gilvarry, Ailbhe; Farrell, Kevin (1 December 2019). "Class/collective actions in Ireland: overview". Practical Law. Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  45. ^ More information Class Action Italia
  46. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 2013-10-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  47. ^ FAVA P., L'importabilità delle class actions in Italia, in Contratto e Impresa 1/2004 FAVA P., Class actions all'italiana: "Paese che vai, usanza che trovi" (l’esperienza dei principali ordinamenti giuridici stranieri e le proposte A.A.C.C. n. 3838 e n. 3839), in Corr. Giur. 3/2004; FAVA P., Class actions tra efficientismo processuale, aumento di competitività e risparmio di spesa: l’esame di un contenzioso seriale concreto (le S.U. sul rapporto tra indennità di amministrazione e tredicesima), in Corr. Giur. 2006, 535; FAVA P., Indennità di amministrazione e tredicesima: il "no secco" delle Sezioni Unite. Un caso pratico per valutare le potenzialità delle azioni rappresentative (class actions) nel contenzioso seriale italiano, Rass. Avv. Stato 2005]
  48. ^ See also Class Action Italia, Dalle origini ad oggi 2008-02-12 at the Wayback Machine and Italy introduces consumer class actions or visit Italian reference site for Class Action Class Action Community 2010-01-31 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ "La class action nel codice di procedura civile". www.tedioli.com. December 10, 2019.
  50. ^ Message to Parliament on the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure, Federal Journal 2006 p. 7221 et seq. The quote, p. 7290, is the author's translation.
  51. ^ "CPR, Part 19.6". Justice.gov.uk. 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
  52. ^ "Different class: UK representative actions suffer a setback".
  53. ^ Mulheron, Rachael (2017). "The United Kingdom's New Opt-Out Class Action". Oxford Journal of Legal Studies. 37 (4): 814–843. doi:10.1093/ojls/gqx016.
  54. ^ Coleman, Clive (2015-10-01). "Class action legal change for UK". BBC News. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  55. ^ Yoshino, Troy M.; Labi, Suzanne (2023-11-27). "Class Actions 101: An Introduction to UK Collective Actions and How They Differ from US Class Actions". Class Action Insider, Winston & Strawn. Retrieved 2024-01-11.
  56. ^ Sullivan, E. Thomas (2009). Complex Litigation. LexisNexis. p. 441. ISBN 978-1422411469. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  57. ^ Grundfest, Joseph A. (September 2019). "The Limits of Delaware Corporate Law: Internal Affairs, Federal Forum Provisions, and Sciabacucchi". Harvard Law School on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation.
  58. ^ a b "Bloomberg Industry Group". Bloomberg Industry.
  59. ^ "Securities Fraud Plaintiff Need Not Show Reliance". www.americanbar.org.
  60. ^ a b Slack v. Prani, Supreme Court of the United States (2023).
  61. ^ "Pleading Section 11 Liability for Secondary Offerings". www.americanbar.org.
  62. ^ "CITIC Trust_FIC_Order_PACER.pdf" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2015-10-08.
  63. ^ Grundfest, Joseph A. (September 22, 2015). . Journal of Corporation Law. 41 (1): 38. Archived from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  64. ^ a b c d e "Rule 23". federalrulesofcivilprocedure.org. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
  65. ^ "Unintended Precedents". The American Prospect. February 28, 2010. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
  66. ^ "Class Action Fairness Act Public Law 109-2, 119 Stat. 4". Frwebgate.access.gpo.gov. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  67. ^ 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332(d)
  68. ^ "William B. Rubenstein, "Understanding the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005" (briefing paper)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2006-11-02. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  69. ^ 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2)
  70. ^ John G. Heyburn II. (PDF). Tulane Law Review. 82: 2225–2331. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
  71. ^ a b Greer, Marcy Hogan (2010). A Practitioner's Guide to Class Actions. Chicago: American Bar Association. pp. 57–59. ISBN 9781604429558.
  72. ^ Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 131 S. Ct, 2541 (2011).
  73. ^ Webber, David H. (2012). "The Plight of the Individual Investor". Northwestern University Law Review. 106: 181. Retrieved 21 November 2019. (Quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3) (emphasis added)).
  74. ^ See Cohelan on California Class Actions and California Class Actions: Practice and Procedure by Elizabeth Cabraser et al.

External links edit

United States edit

  • Manual for Complex Litigation, Fourth
  • Stanford Securities Class Action Clearinghouse
  • Class Action Lawsuits: A Legal Overview for the 115th Congress Congressional Research Service
  • Class Actions Seven Years After the Class Action Fairness Act: Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Twelfth Congress, Second Session, June 1, 2012

Europe edit

  • Collective Redress in Europe

class, action, this, article, about, legal, term, other, uses, class, action, class, action, lawsuit, also, known, class, suit, class, action, representative, action, representative, action, type, lawsuit, where, parties, group, people, represented, collective. This article is about the legal term For other uses see Class Action A class action lawsuit also known as a class suit class action representative action or representative action is a type of lawsuit where one of the parties is a group of people who are represented collectively by a member or members of that group The class action originated in the United States and is still predominantly an American phenomenon but Canada as well as several European countries with civil law have made changes in recent years to allow consumer organizations to bring claims on behalf of consumers Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 England and the United Kingdom 2 2 United States 2 2 1 Modern developments 2 3 Statistics 3 Advantages 4 Criticisms 5 Ethics 6 Defendant class action 7 Mass actions 8 Class action legislation 8 1 Argentina 8 2 Australia and New Zealand 8 3 Austria 8 4 Canada 8 5 Chile 8 6 France 8 7 Germany 8 7 1 Mediation Procedure 8 7 2 Investor Model Case Proceedings 8 7 3 Model Declaratory Action 8 7 4 Associate Action 8 7 5 Class Action With Relation to the United States 8 8 India 8 9 Ireland 8 10 Italy 8 11 Netherlands 8 12 Poland 8 13 Russia 8 14 Spain 8 15 Switzerland 8 16 United Kingdom 8 16 1 England and Wales 8 17 United States 8 17 1 Standing 8 17 2 Federal courts 8 17 2 1 Jurisdiction 8 17 2 2 Class certification under Rule 23 8 17 2 3 Notice and settlement 8 17 3 State courts 9 In fiction 10 See also 11 References 12 External links 12 1 United States 12 2 EuropeDescription editIn a typical class action a plaintiff sues a defendant or a number of defendants on behalf of a group or class of absent parties 1 This differs from a traditional lawsuit where one party sues another party and all of the parties are present in court Although standards differ between states and countries class actions are most common where the allegations usually involve at least 40 people who the same defendant has injured in the same way 1 Instead of each damaged person bringing one s own lawsuit the class action allows all the claims of all class members whether they know they have been damaged or not to be resolved in a single proceeding through the efforts of the representative plaintiff s and appointed class counsel 1 History editEngland and the United Kingdom edit The antecedent of the class action was what modern observers call group litigation which appears to have been quite common in medieval England from about 1200 onward 2 38 These lawsuits involved groups of people either suing or being sued in actions at common law These groups were usually based on existing societal structures like villages towns parishes and guilds Unlike modern courts the medieval English courts did not question the right of the actual plaintiffs to sue on behalf of a group or a few representatives to defend an entire group 2 38 40 nbsp Engraving of the Star Chamber published in Old and new London in 1873 taken from a drawing made in 1836From 1400 to 1700 group litigation gradually switched from being the norm in England to the exception 2 100 The development of the concept of the corporation led to the wealthy supporters of the corporate form becoming suspicious of all unincorporated legal entities which in turn led to the modern concept of the unincorporated or voluntary association 2 124 25 The tumultuous history of the Wars of the Roses and then the Star Chamber resulted in periods during which the common law courts were frequently paralyzed and out of the confusion the Court of Chancery emerged with exclusive jurisdiction over group litigation 2 125 32 By 1850 Parliament had enacted several statutes on a case by case basis to deal with issues regularly faced by certain types of organizations like joint stock companies and with the impetus for most types of group litigation removed it went into a steep decline in English jurisprudence from which it never recovered 2 210 12 It was further weakened by the fact that equity pleading in general was falling into disfavor which culminated in the Judicature Acts of 1874 and 1875 2 210 12 Group litigation was essentially dead in the United Kingdom after 1850 United States edit nbsp Associate Justice Joseph StoryClass actions survived in the United States thanks to the influence of Supreme Court Associate Justice Joseph Story who imported it into US law through summary discussions in his two equity treatises as well as his opinion in West v Randall 1820 2 219 20 However Story did not necessarily endorse class actions because he could not conceive of a modern function or a coherent theory for representative litigation 2 219 20 The oldest predecessor to the class action rule in the United States was in the Federal Equity Rules specifically Equity Rule 48 promulgated in 1842 Where the parties on either side are very numerous and cannot without manifest inconvenience and oppressive delays in the suit be all brought before it the court in its discretion may dispense with making all of them parties and may proceed in the suit having sufficient parties before it to represent all the adverse interests of the plaintiffs and the defendants in the suit properly before it But in such cases the decree shall be without prejudice to the rights and claims of all the absent parties 3 This allowed for representative suits in situations where there were too many individual parties which now forms the first requirement for class action litigation numerosity 4 However this rule did not allow such suits to bind similarly situated absent parties which rendered the rule ineffective 2 221 Within ten years the Supreme Court interpreted Rule 48 in such a way so that it could apply to absent parties under certain circumstances but only by ignoring the plain meaning of the rule 2 221 222 In the rules published in 1912 Equity Rule 48 was replaced with Equity Rule 38 as part of a major restructuring of the Equity Rules and when federal courts merged their legal and equitable procedural systems in 1938 Equity Rule 38 became Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Modern developments edit A major revision of the FRCP in 1966 radically transformed Rule 23 made the opt out class action the standard option and gave birth to the modern class action Entire treatises have been written since to summarize the huge mass of law that sprang up from the 1966 revision of Rule 23 2 229 Just as medieval group litigation bound all members of the group regardless of whether they all actually appeared in court the modern class action binds all members of the class except for those who choose to opt out if the rules permit them to do so The Advisory Committee that drafted the new Rule 23 in the mid 1960s was influenced by two major developments First was the suggestion of Harry Kalven Jr and Maurice Rosenfield in 1941 that class action litigation by individual shareholders on behalf of all shareholders of a company could effectively supplement direct government regulation of securities markets and other similar markets 2 232 The second development was the rise of the civil rights movement environmentalism and consumerism 2 240 244 The groups behind these movements as well as many others in the 1960s 1970s and 1980s all turned to class actions as a means for achieving their goals For example a 1978 environmental law treatise reprinted the entire text of Rule 23 and mentioned class actions 14 times in its index 2 244 245 Businesses targeted by class actions for inflicting massive aggregate harm have sought ways to avoid class actions altogether In the 1990s the US Supreme Court issued several decisions that strengthened the federal policy favoring arbitration 5 In response lawyers have added provisions to consumer contracts of adhesion called collective action waivers which prohibit those signing the contracts from bringing class action suits In 2011 the US Supreme Court ruled in a 5 4 decision in AT amp T Mobility v Concepcion that the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925 preempts state laws that prohibit contracts from disallowing class action lawsuits which will make it more difficult for consumers to file class action lawsuits The dissent pointed to a saving clause in the federal act which allowed states to determine how a contract or its clauses may be revoked 6 In two major 21st century cases the Supreme Court ruled 5 4 against certification of class actions due to differences in each individual members circumstances first in Wal Mart v Dukes 2011 and later in Comcast Corp v Behrend 2013 7 Companies may insert the phrase may elect to resolve any claim by individual arbitration into their consumer and employment contracts to use arbitration and prevent class action lawsuits 8 Rejecting arguments that they violated employees rights to collective bargaining and that modestly valued consumer claims would be more efficiently litigated within the parameters of one lawsuit the U S Supreme Court in Epic Systems Corp v Lewis 2018 allowed the use of so called class action waivers Citing its deference to freedom to contract principles the Epic Systems opinion opened the door dramatically to the use of these waivers as a condition of employment consumer purchases and the like Some commentators in opposition to the ruling see it as a death knell to many employment and consumer class actions and have increasingly pushed for legislation to circumvent it in hopes of reviving otherwise underrepresented parties ability to litigate on a group basis Supporters mostly pro business of the high court s ruling argue its holding is consistent with private contract principles Many of those supporters had long since argued that class action procedures were generally inconsistent with due process mandates and unnecessarily promoted litigation of otherwise small claims thus heralding the ruling s anti litigation effect In 2017 the US Supreme Court issued its opinion in Bristol Meyer Squibb Co v Superior Court of California 137 S Ct 1773 2017 holding that over five hundred plaintiffs from other states cannot bring a consolidated mass action against the pharmaceutical giant in the State of California This opinion may arguably render nationwide mass action and class action impossible in any single state besides the defendant s home state In 2020 the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals found incentive awards are impermissible Incentive awards are a relatively modest payment made to class representatives as part of a class settlement The ruling was a response to an objector who claimed Rule 23 required that the fee petition be filed before the time frame for class member objections to be filed and payments to the class representative violates doctrine from two US Supreme Court cases from the 1800s 9 10 Statistics edit As of 2010 there was no publicly maintained list of nonsecurities class action settlements 11 although a securities class action database exists in the Stanford Law School Securities Class Action Clearinghouse and several for profit companies maintain lists of the securities settlements One study of federal settlements required the researcher to manually search databases of lawsuits for the relevant records although state class actions were not included due to the difficulty in gathering the information 11 Another source of data is US Bureau of Justice Statistics Civil Justice Survey of State Courts which offers statistics for the year 2005 12 Advantages editProponents of class actions state that they offer a number of advantages 13 because they aggregate many individualized claims into one representational lawsuit First aggregation can increase the efficiency of the legal process and lower the costs of litigation 14 In cases with common questions of law and fact aggregation of claims into a class action may avoid the necessity of repeating days of the same witnesses exhibits and issues from trial to trial Jenkins v Raymark Indus Inc 782 F 2d 468 473 5th Cir 1986 granting certification of a class action involving asbestos Second a class action may overcome the problem that small recoveries do not provide the incentive for any individual to bring a solo action prosecuting his or her rights Amchem Prods Inc v Windsor 521 U S 591 617 1997 quoting Mace v Van Ru Credit Corp 109 F 3d 388 344 7th Cir 1997 A class action solves this problem by aggregating the relatively paltry potential recoveries into something worth someone s usually an attorney s labor Amchem Prods Inc 521 U S at 617 quoting Mace 109 F 3d at 344 In other words a class action ensures that a defendant who engages in widespread harm but does so minimally against each individual plaintiff must compensate those individuals for their injuries For example thousands of shareholders of a public company may have losses too small to justify separate lawsuits but a class action can be brought efficiently on behalf of all shareholders Perhaps even more important than compensation is that class treatment of claims may be the only way to impose the costs of wrongdoing on the wrongdoer thus deterring future wrongdoing Third class action cases may be brought to purposely change behavior of a class of which the defendant is a member Landeros v Flood 1976 was a landmark case decided by the California Supreme Court that aimed at purposefully changing the behavior of doctors encouraging them to report suspected child abuse Otherwise they would face the threat of civil action for damages in tort proximately flowing from the failure to report the suspected injuries Previously many physicians had remained reluctant to report cases of apparent child abuse despite existing law that required it Fourth in limited fund cases a class action ensures that all plaintiffs receive relief and that early filing plaintiffs do not raid the fund i e the defendant of all its assets before other plaintiffs may be compensated See Ortiz v Fibreboard Corp 527 U S 815 1999 A class action in such a situation centralizes all claims into one venue where a court can equitably divide the assets amongst all the plaintiffs if they win the case Finally a class action avoids the situation where different court rulings could create incompatible standards of conduct for the defendant to follow See Fed R Civ P 23 b 1 A For example a court might certify a case for class treatment where a number of individual bond holders sue to determine whether they may convert their bonds to common stock Refusing to litigate the case in one trial could result in different outcomes and inconsistent standards of conduct for the defendant corporation Thus courts will generally allow a class action in such a situation See e g Van Gemert v Boeing Co 259 F Supp 125 S D N Y 1966 Whether a class action is superior to individual litigation depends on the case and is determined by the judge s ruling on a motion for class certification The Advisory Committee Note to Rule 23 for example states that mass torts are ordinarily not appropriate for class treatment Class treatment may not improve the efficiency of a mass tort because the claims frequently involve individualized issues of law and fact that will have to be re tried on an individual basis See Castano v Am Tobacco Co 84 F 3d 734 5th Cir 1996 rejecting nationwide class action against tobacco companies Mass torts also involve high individual damage awards thus the absence of class treatment will not impede the ability of individual claimants to seek justice Other cases however may be more conducive to class treatment citation needed The preamble to the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 passed by the United States Congress found Class action lawsuits are an important and valuable part of the legal system when they permit the fair and efficient resolution of legitimate claims of numerous parties by allowing the claims to be aggregated into a single action against a defendant that has allegedly caused harm Criticisms editThere are several criticisms of class actions 15 16 17 The preamble to the Class Action Fairness Act stated that some abusive class actions harmed class members with legitimate claims and defendants that have acted responsibly adversely affected interstate commerce and undermined public respect for the country s judicial system Class members often receive little or no benefit from class actions 18 Examples cited for this include large fees for the attorneys while leaving class members with coupons or other awards of little or no value unjustified awards are made to certain plaintiffs at the expense of other class members and confusing notices are published that prevent class members from being able to fully understand and effectively exercise their rights 18 For example in the United States class lawsuits sometimes bind all class members with a low settlement These coupon settlements which usually allow the plaintiffs to receive a small benefit such as a small check or a coupon for future services or products with the defendant company are a way for a defendant to forestall major liability by precluding many people from litigating their claims separately to recover reasonable compensation for the damages However existing law requires judicial approval of all class action settlements and in most cases class members are given a chance to opt out of class settlement though class members despite opt out notices may be unaware of their right to opt out because they did not receive the notice did not read it or did not understand it The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 addresses these concerns An independent expert may scrutinize coupon settlements before judicial approval in order to ensure that the settlement will be of value to the class members 28 U S C A 1712 d Further if the action provides for settlement in coupons the portion of any attorney s fee award to class counsel that is attributable to the award of the coupons shall be based on the value to class members of the coupons that are redeemed 28 U S C A 1712 a Ethics editClass action cases present significant ethical challenges Defendants can hold reverse auctions and any of several parties can engage in collusive settlement discussions Subclasses may have interests that diverge greatly from the class but may be treated the same Proposed settlements could offer some groups such as former customers much greater benefits than others In one paper presented at an ABA conference on class actions in 2007 authors commented that competing cases can also provide opportunities for collusive settlement discussions and reverse auctions by defendants anxious to resolve their new exposure at the most economic cost 19 Defendant class action editAlthough normally plaintiffs are the class defendant class actions are also possible For example in 2005 the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon was sued as part of the Catholic priest sex abuse scandal All parishioners of the Archdiocese s churches were cited as a defendant class This was done to include their assets local churches in any settlement 20 Where both the plaintiffs and the defendants have been organized into court approved classes the action is called a bilateral class action Mass actions editIn a class action the plaintiff seeks court approval to litigate on behalf of a group of similarly situated persons Not every plaintiff looks for or could obtain such approval As a procedural alternative plaintiff s counsel may attempt to sign up every similarly situated person that counsel can find as a client Plaintiff s counsel can then join the claims of all of these persons in one complaint a so called mass action hoping to have the same efficiencies and economic leverage as if a class had been certified Because mass actions operate outside the detailed procedures laid out for class actions they can pose special difficulties for both plaintiffs defendants and the court For example settlement of class actions follows a predictable path of negotiation with class counsel and representatives court scrutiny and notice There may not be a way to uniformly settle all of the many claims brought via a mass action Some states permit plaintiff s counsel to settle for all the mass action plaintiffs according to a majority vote for example Other states such as New Jersey require each plaintiff to approve the settlement of that plaintiff s own individual claims Class action legislation editArgentina edit Class actions were recognized in Halabi leading case Supreme Court 2009 Australia and New Zealand edit Class actions became part of the Australian legal landscape only when the Federal Parliament amended the Federal Court of Australia Act in 1992 to introduce representative proceedings 21 the equivalent of the American class actions 22 Likewise class actions appeared slowly in the New Zealand legal system However a group can bring litigation through the action of a representative under the High Court Rules which provide that one or a multitude of persons may sue on behalf of or for the benefit of all persons with the same interest in the subject matter of a proceeding The presence and expansion of litigation funders have been playing a significant role in the emergence of class actions in New Zealand For example the Fair Play on Fees proceedings in relation to penalty fees charged by banks were funded by Litigation Lending Services LLS a company specializing in the funding and management of litigation in Australia and New Zealand It was the biggest class action suit in New Zealand history 23 24 Austria edit The Austrian Code of Civil Procedure Zivilprozessordnung ZPO does not provide for a special proceeding for complex class action litigation However Austrian consumer organizations Verein fur Konsumenteninformation VKI and the Federal Chamber of Labour Bundesarbeitskammer have brought claims on behalf of hundreds or even thousands of consumers In these cases the individual consumers assigned their claims to one entity who has then brought an ordinary two party lawsuit over the assigned claims The monetary benefits were redistributed among the class This technique labeled as class action Austrian style allows for a significant reduction of overall costs The Austrian Supreme Court in a judgment confirmed the legal admissibility of these lawsuits under the condition that all claims are essentially based on the same grounds The Austrian Parliament unanimously requested the Austrian Federal Minister for Justice to examine the possibility of new legislation providing for a cost effective and appropriate way to deal with mass claims Together with the Austrian Ministry for Social Security Generations and Consumer Protection the Justice Ministry opened the discussion with a conference held in Vienna in June 2005 With the aid of a group of experts from many fields the Justice Ministry began drafting the new law in September 2005 With the individual positions varying greatly a political consensus could not be reached 25 Canada edit Provincial laws in Canada allow class actions All provinces permit plaintiff classes and some permit defendant classes Quebec was the first province to enact class proceedings legislation in 1978 Ontario was next with the Class Proceedings Act 1992 As of 2008 9 of 10 provinces had enacted comprehensive class actions legislation In Prince Edward Island where no comprehensive legislation exists following the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Western Canadian Shopping Centres Inc v Dutton 2001 2 S C R 534 class actions may be advanced under a local rule of court The Federal Court of Canada permits class actions under Part V 1 of the Federal Courts Rules Legislation in Saskatchewan Manitoba Ontario and Nova Scotia expressly or by judicial opinion has been read to allow for what are informally known as national opt out class actions whereby residents of other provinces may be included in the class definition and potentially be bound by the court s judgment on common issues unless they opt out in a prescribed manner and time Court rulings have determined that this permits a court in one province to include residents of other provinces in the class action on an opt out basis Judicial opinions have indicated that provincial legislative national opt out powers should not be exercised to interfere with the ability of another province to certify a parallel class action for residents of other provinces The first court to certify will generally exclude residents of provinces whose courts have certified a parallel class action However in the Vioxx litigation two provincial courts certified overlapping class actions whereby Canadian residents were class members in two class actions in two provinces 26 Both decisions are under appeal Other legislation may provide for representative actions on behalf of a large number of plaintiffs independent of class action procedures For instance under Ontario s Condominium Act a condominium s governing corporation may launch a lawsuit on behalf of the owners for damage to the condominium s common elements even though the corporation does not own the common elements The largest class action suit in Canada was settled in 2005 after Nora Bernard initiated efforts that led to an estimated 79 000 survivors of Canada s residential school system suing the Canadian government The settlement amounted to upwards of 5 billion 27 Chile edit Chile approved class actions in 2004 28 The Chilean model is technically an opt out issue class action followed by a compensatory stage which can be collective or individual This means that the class action is designed to declare the defendant generally liable with erga omnes effects if and only if the defendant is found liable and the declaratory judgment can be used then to pursue damages in the same procedure or in individual ones in different jurisdictions If the latter is the case the liability cannot be discussed but only the damages 29 There under the Chilean procedural rules one particular case works as an opt out class action for damages This is the case when defendants can identify and compensate consumers directly i e because it is their banking institution In such cases the judge can skip the compensatory stage and order redress directly Since 2005 more than 100 cases have been filed mostly by Servicio Nacional del Consumidor SERNAC the Chilean consumer protection agency Salient cases have been Condecus v BancoEstado 30 and SERNAC v La Polar 31 France edit Under French law an association can represent the collective interests of consumers however each claimant must be individually named in the lawsuit On January 4 2005 President Chirac urged changes that would provide greater consumer protection A draft bill was proposed in April 2006 but did not pass Following the change of majority in France in 2012 the new government proposed introducing class actions into French law The project of loi Hamon of May 2013 aimed to limit the class action to consumer and competition disputes The law was passed on March 1 2014 32 Germany edit Class actions are generally not permitted in Germany as German law does not recognize the concept of a targeted class being affected by certain actions This requires each plaintiff to individually prove that they were affected by an action and present their individual damages and prove the causality between both parties Joint litigation Streitgenossenschaft is a legal act that may permit plaintiffs that are in the same legal community with respect to the dispute or are entitled by the same factual or legal reason These are not typically regarded as class action suits as each individual plaintiff is entitled to compensation for their individual incurred damages and not as a result of being a member of a class The combination of court cases Prozessverbindung is another method that permits a judge to combine multiple separate court cases into a single trial with a single verdict According to 147 ZPO this is only permissible if all cases are regarding the same factual and legal event and basis Mediation Procedure edit A genuine extension of the legal effect of a court decision beyond the parties involved in the proceedings is offered under corporate law This procedure applies to the review of stock payoffs under Stock Corporation Act Aktiengesetz Pursuant to Sec 13 Sentence 2 Mediation Procedure Act Spruchverfahrensgesetz the court decision concerning the dismissal or direction of a binding arrangement of an adequate compensation is effective for and against all shareholders including those who have already agreed to a previous settlement in this matter Investor Model Case Proceedings edit The Capital Investor Model Case Act Kapitalanleger Musterverfahrensgesetz is an attempt to enable model cases to be brought by a large number of potentially affected parties in the event of disputes limited to the investment market 33 In contrast to the US class actions each affected party must file a lawsuit in its own name in order to participate in the model proceedings Model Declaratory Action edit Effective on November 1 2018 the Code of Civil Procedure Zivilprozessordnung introduced the Model Declaratory Action 606 ZPO that created the ability to bundle similar claims by many affected parties efficiently into one proceeding Registered Consumer Protection Associations can file if they represent at least 10 individuals for a general judicial finding whether the factual and legal requirements for of claims or legal relationships are met or not These individuals have to register in order to inhibit their claims Since these Adjudications are more of a general nature each individual must assert their claims in their own court proceedings The competent court is bound by the Model Declaratory Action decision Associate Action edit German law also recognizes the Associative Action Verbandsklage which is comparable to the class action and is predominantly used in environmental law In civil law the Associative Action is represented by a foreign body in the matter of asserting and enforcing individual claims and the claimant can no longer control the proceedings 34 Class Action With Relation to the United States edit Class actions can be brought by Germans in the US for events in Germany if the facts of the case relate to the US For example in the case of the Eschede train disaster the lawsuit was allowed because several aggrieved parties came from the US and had purchased rail tickets there India edit Main article Public Interest Litigation See also Constitution of India and Judiciary of India Decisions of the Indian Supreme Court in the 1980s loosened strict locus standi requirements to permit the filing of suits on behalf of rights of deprived sections of society by public minded individuals or bodies Although not strictly class action litigation as it is understood in American law Public Interest Litigation arose out of the wide powers of judicial review granted to the Supreme Court of India and the various High Courts under Article 32 and Article 226 of the Constitution of India The sort of remedies sought from courts in Public Interest Litigation go beyond mere award of damages to all affected groups and have sometimes controversially gone on to include Court monitoring of the implementation of legislation and even the framing of guidelines in the absence of Parliamentary legislation 35 36 However this innovative jurisprudence did not help the victims of the Bhopal gas tragedy citation needed who were unable to fully prosecute a class action litigation as understood in the American sense against Union Carbide due to procedural rules that would make such litigation impossible to conclude and unwieldy to carry out Instead the Government of India exercised its right of parens patriae to appropriate all the claims of the victims and proceeded to litigate on their behalf first in the New York courts and later in the Indian courts Ultimately the matter was settled between the Union of India and Union Carbide in a settlement overseen by the Supreme Court of India for a sum of 760 crore US 95 million as a complete settlement of all claims of all victims for all time to come Public interest litigation has now broadened in scope to cover larger and larger groups of citizens who may be affected by government inaction Examples of this trend include the conversion of all public transport in the city of Delhi from diesel engines to compressed natural gas engines on the basis of the orders of the Delhi High Court the monitoring of forest use by the High Courts and the Supreme Court to ensure that there is no unjustified loss of forest cover and the directions mandating the disclosure of assets of electoral candidates for the Houses of Parliament and State Assembly 37 38 The Supreme Court has observed that the PIL has tended to become a means to gain publicity or obtain relief contrary to constitutionally valid legislation and policy Observers point out that many High Courts and certain Supreme Court judges are reluctant to entertain PILs filed by non governmental organizations and activists citing concerns of separation of powers and parliamentary sovereignty Ireland edit In Irish law there is no such thing as a class action per se 39 Third party litigation funding is prohibited under Irish law 40 41 Instead there is the representative action Irish gniomh ionadaioch or test case cas samplach 42 A representative action is where one claimant or defendant with the same interest as a group of claimants or defendants in an action institutes or defends proceedings on behalf of that group of claimants or defendants 43 Some test cases in Ireland have included the CervicalCheck cancer scandal financial product misselling Damages claims brought by Irish hauliers against price fixing by European truck makers 44 Italy edit Italy has class action legislation Consumer associations can file claims on behalf of groups of consumers to obtain judicial orders against corporations that cause injury or damage to consumers These types of claims are increasing and Italian courts have allowed them against banks that continue to apply compound interest on retail clients current account overdrafts The introduction of class actions is on the government s agenda On November 19 2007 the Senato della Repubblica passed a class action law in Finanziaria 2008 a financial document for the economy management of the government From 10 December 2007 in order of Italian legislation system the law is before the House and has to be passed also by the Camera dei Deputati the second house of Italian Parliament to become an effective law 45 In 2004 the Italian parliament considered the introduction of a type of class action specifically in the area of consumer law No such law has been enacted but scholars demonstrated that class actions azioni rappresentative do not contrast with Italian principles of civil procedure Class action is regulated by art 140 bis of the Italian consumers code and has been in force since 1 July 2009 46 47 48 On May 19 2021 the reform of the Italian legal framework on class actions finally entered into force The new rules designed by Law n 31 and published on April 18 2019 Law n 31 2019 were initially intended to become effective on April 19 2020 but had been delayed twice The new rules on class actions are now included in the Italian Civil Procedure Code ICPC Overall the new class action appears to be a viable instrument which through a system of economic incentives could overcome the rational apathy of small claims holders and ensure redress 49 Netherlands edit Dutch law allows associations verenigingen and foundations stichtingen to bring a so called collective action on behalf of other persons provided they can represent the interests of such persons according to their by laws statuten section 3 305a Dutch Civil Code All types of actions are permitted This includes a claim for monetary damages provided the event occurred after 15 November 2016 pursuant to new legislation which entered into force 1 January 2020 Most class actions over the past decade have been in the field of securities fraud and financial services The acting association or foundation may come to a collective settlement with the defendant The settlement may also include and usually primarily consists of monetary compensation of damages Such settlement can be declared binding for all injured parties by the Amsterdam Court of Appeal section 7 907 Dutch Civil Code The injured parties have an opt out right during the opt out period set by the Court usually 3 to 6 months Settlements involving injured parties from outside The Netherlands can also be declared binding by the Court Since US courts are reluctant to take up class actions brought on behalf of injured parties not residing in the US who have suffered damages due to acts or omissions committed outside the US combinations of US class actions and Dutch collective actions may come to a settlement that covers plaintiffs worldwide An example of this is the Royal Dutch Shell Oil Reserves Settlement that was declared binding upon both US and non US plaintiffs Poland edit Pozew zbiorowy or class action has been allowed under Polish law since July 19 2010 A minimum of 10 persons suing based on the same law is required Russia edit Collective litigation has been allowed under Russian law since 2002 Basic criteria are like in the US numerosity commonality and typicality Spain edit Spanish law allows nominated consumer associations to take action to protect the interests of consumers A number of groups already have the power to bring collective or class actions certain consumer associations bodies legally constituted to defend the collective interest and groups of injured parties Recent changes to Spanish civil procedure rules include the introduction of a quasi class action right for certain consumer associations to claim damages on behalf of unidentified classes of consumers The rules require consumer associations to represent an adequate number of affected parties who have suffered the same harm Also any judgment made by the Spanish court will list the individual beneficiaries or if that is not possible conditions that need to be fulfilled for a party to benefit from a judgment Switzerland edit Swiss law does not allow for any form of class action When the government proposed a new federal code of civil procedure in 2006 replacing the cantonal codes of civil procedure it rejected the introduction of class actions arguing that It is alien to European legal thought to allow somebody to exercise rights on the behalf of a large number of people if these do not participate as parties in the action Moreover the class action is controversial even in its country of origin the U S because it can result in significant procedural problems Finally the class action can be openly or discretely abused The sums sued for are usually enormous so that the respondent can be forced to concede if they do not want to face sudden huge indebtness and insolvency so called legal blackmail 50 United Kingdom edit England and Wales edit The Civil Procedure Rules of the courts of England and Wales came into force in 1999 and have provided for group litigation orders in limited circumstances under Part 19 6 51 These have not been much used with only two reported cases at the court of first instance in the first ten years after the Civil Procedure Rules took effect 52 full citation needed However a sectoral mechanism was adopted by the Consumer Rights Act 2015 taking effect on October 1 2015 53 54 Under the provisions therein opt in or opt out collective procedures may be certified for breaches of competition law 55 This is currently the closest mechanism to a class action in England and Wales United States edit See also Class action United States In the United States the class representative also called a lead plaintiff named plaintiff or representative plaintiff is the named party in a class action lawsuit 56 Although the class representative is named as a party to the litigation the court must approve the class representative when it certifies the lawsuit as a class action The class representative must be able to represent the interests of all the members of the class by being typical of the class members and not having conflicts with them He or she is responsible for hiring the attorney filing the lawsuit consulting on the case and agreeing to any settlement In exchange the class representative may be entitled to compensation at the court s discretion out of the recovery amount Standing edit In securities class actions that allege violations of Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933 officers and directors are liable together with the corporation for material misrepresentations in the registration statement 57 To have standing to sue under Section 11 of the 1933 Act in a class action a plaintiff must be able to prove that he can trace his shares to the registration statement in question as to which there is alleged a material misstatement or omission 58 59 60 In the absence of an ability to actually trace his shares such as when securities issued at multiple times are held by the Depository Trust Company in a fungible bulk and physical tracing of particular shares may be impossible the plaintiff may be barred from pursuing his claim for lack of standing 61 62 63 58 60 Federal courts edit In federal courts class actions are governed by Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 23 and 28 U S C A 1332 d 64 Cases in federal courts are only allowed to proceed as class actions if the court has jurisdiction to hear the case and if the case meets the criteria set out in Rule 23 In the vast majority of federal class actions the class is acting as the plaintiff However Rule 23 also provides for defendant class actions citation needed Typically federal courts are thought to be more favorable for defendants and state courts more favorable for plaintiffs 65 Many class actions are filed initially in state court The defendant will frequently try to remove the case to federal court The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 66 increases defendants ability to remove state cases to federal court by giving federal courts original jurisdiction for all class actions with damages exceeding 5 000 000 exclusive of interest and costs 67 The Class Action Fairness Act contains carve outs for among other things shareholder class actions covered by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and those concerning internal corporate governance issues the latter typically being brought as shareholder derivative actions in the state courts of Delaware the state of incorporation of most large corporations 68 Jurisdiction edit Class actions may be brought in federal court if the claim arises under federal law or if the claim falls under 28 U S C 1332 d Under 1332 d 2 the federal district courts have original jurisdiction over any civil action where the amount in controversy exceeds 5 000 000 and any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State different from any defendant or any member of a class of plaintiffs is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state and any defendant is a citizen of a State or any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State and any defendant is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state 69 Nationwide plaintiff classes are possible but such suits must have a commonality of issues across state lines This may be difficult if the civil law in the various states lack significant commonalities Large class actions brought in federal court frequently are consolidated for pre trial purposes through the device of multidistrict litigation MDL 70 It is also possible to bring class actions under state law and in some cases the court may extend its jurisdiction to all the members of the class including out of state or even internationally as the key element is the jurisdiction that the court has over the defendant citation needed Class certification under Rule 23 edit For the case to proceed as a class action and bind absent class members the court must certify the class under Rule 23 on a motion from the party wishing to proceed on a class basis For a class to be certified the moving party must meet all of the criteria listed under Rule 23 a and at least one of the criteria listed under Rule 23 b 64 The 23 a criteria are referred to as numerosity commonality typicality and adequacy 71 Numerosity refers to the number of people in the class To be certified the class has to have enough members that simply adding each of them as a named party to the lawsuit would be impractical 64 There is no bright line rule to determine numerosity but classes with hundreds of members are generally deemed to be sufficiently numerous 71 To satisfy commonality there must be a common question of law and fact such that determination of its truth or falsity will resolve an issue that is central to the validity of each one of the claims in one stroke 72 The typicality requirement ensures that the claims or defenses of the named plaintiff are typical of those of everyone else in the class 64 Finally adequacy requirement states that the named plaintiff must fairly and adequately represent the interests of the absent class members 64 Rule 23 b 3 allows class certification if questions of law or fact common to class members predominate over any questions affecting only individual members and that a class action is superior to other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy 73 Notice and settlement edit Due process requires in most cases that notice describing the class action be sent published or broadcast to class members As part of this notice procedure there may have to be several notices first a notice allowing class members to opt out of the class i e if individuals wish to proceed with their own litigation they are entitled to do so only to the extent that they give timely notice to the class counsel or the court that they are opting out Second if there is a settlement proposal the court will usually direct the class counsel to send a settlement notice to all the members of the certified class informing them of the details of the proposed settlement citation needed State courts edit Since 1938 many states have adopted rules similar to the FRCP However some states like California have civil procedure systems which deviate significantly from the federal rules the California Codes provide for four separate types of class actions As a result there are two separate treatises devoted solely to the complex topic of California class actions 74 Some states such as Virginia do not provide for any class actions while others such as New York limit the types of claims that may be brought as class actions citation needed In fiction editJohn Grisham s 2003 novel The King of Torts is a fable of the rights and wrongs of class actions See also editArbitration clause a contract clause that attempts to prevent lawsuits by requiring arbitration in a private forum Bill of Peace an English predecessor to class actions Class Action 1991 American legal drama film Collective redress a similar legal framework under development in the European Union Dukes v Wal Mart 2011 the largest civil rights class action lawsuit to date List of class action lawsuits Public Interest Litigation a similar system adopted in India Securities Class ActionReferences edit a b c Class Action Wex Legal Dictionary 2007 08 06 Retrieved 5 May 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Yeazell Stephen C 1987 From Medieval Group Litigation to the Modern Class Action New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300037760 OCLC 15549646 The New Federal Equity Rules Promulgated by the United States Supreme Court at the October Term 1912 Together with the Cognate Statutory Provisions and Former Equity Rules with an Introduction Annotations and Forms p 52 Deborah R Hensler Nicholas M Pace Bonita Dombey Moore Beth Giddens Jennifer Gross Erik K Moller Class Action Dilemmas Pursuing Public Goals for Private Gain Santa Monica RAND 2000 10 11 Giles M 2005 Opting Out of Liability Archived 2009 04 02 at the Wayback Machine Michigan Law Review Foreman C Supreme Court AT amp T can force arbitration block class action suits Ars Technica Stempel Jonathan 27 March 2013 Supreme Court rules for Comcast in class action Reuters Archived from the original on 2 June 2016 Retrieved 21 January 2024 Silver greenberg Jessica Gebeloff Robert 2015 10 31 Arbitration Everywhere Stacking the Deck of Justice The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2015 11 15 Retrieved 2015 10 31 Troutman Eric J September 18 2020 Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals Holds that Incentive Payments Commonly Awarded to Class Representatives are Impermissible in a Classwide Settlement TCPA World Retrieved September 19 2020 Johnson v NPAS Solutions 11th Cir September 17 2020 a b Fitzpatrick Brian T 2010 12 01 An Empirical Study of Class Action Settlements and Their Fee Awards Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 7 4 811 846 doi 10 1111 j 1740 1461 2010 01196 x ISSN 1740 1461 S2CID 4611237 Data Collection Civil Justice Survey of State Courts CJSSC Bureau of Justice Statistics Office of Justice Programs Retrieved 21 March 2018 Association of Trial Lawyers of America Class Action Press Kit Archived 2006 12 03 at the Wayback Machine FindLaw Class Action and Mass Tort Center Legal Research Cohelan on California Class Actions Classaction findlaw com 1966 07 01 Retrieved 2013 10 03 Richard Epstein Class Actions The Need for a Hard Second Look Michael Greve Harm Less Lawsuits What s Wrong with Consumer Class Actions Archived 2009 07 15 at the Wayback Machine Jim Copland Class Actions a b Do Class Actions Benefit Class Members www instituteforlegalreform com Retrieved 2016 01 17 Ethical Issues In Class Action Settlements PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 13 Retrieved 2013 10 03 1 Archived January 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Johnston Robert Karageorge Felicity Solomonidis Rena Briggs Nicholas Gaertner Sara April 2023 The Class Actions Law Review 7th ed United Kingdom Law Business Research p 8 ISBN 978 1 80449 160 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Stuart Clark and Colin Loveday 2004 Class Actions in Australia An Overnew PDF Clayton Utz Archived PDF from the original on 2012 03 30 Retrieved 2 October 2015 Slater and Gordon announces launch of New Zealand class action against ANZ Slater and Gordon 18 June 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2015 Meadows Richard 11 March 2013 Thousands sign up for bank class action Stuff co nz Fairfax Digital Retrieved 12 March 2013 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2006 08 11 Retrieved 2006 07 29 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ontario Tiboni v Merck Frosst Canada Ltd 2008 O J No 2996 Saskatchewan Wuttunee v Merck Frosst Canada Ltd 2008 SKQB 78 Halifax Daily News article on Bernard in 2006 Archived 2008 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Archived at Arnold Pizzo McKiggan Barroilhet Agustin 2012 01 30 Class Actions in Chile Rochester NY Social Science Research Network SSRN 1995906 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Class Actions in Chile Update Global Class Actions Exchange globalclassactions stanford edu Retrieved 2016 10 25 BancoEstado devolvera US 12 millones a clientes por cobro de comisiones en cuentas de ahorro LA TERCERA La Tercera in European Spanish Retrieved 2016 10 25 Barroilhet Agustin 2016 05 27 Self interested gatekeeping Clashes between public and private enforcers in two Chilean class actions Class Actions in Context Edward Elgar Publishing pp 362 384 doi 10 4337 9781783470440 00027 ISBN 9781783470440 LOI n 2014 344 du 17 mars 2014 relative a la consommation March 17 2014 retrieved 2017 12 12 with a list of the KapMuG proceedings published in the Federal Gazette in German Retrieved 2021 05 30 Sachstand WD 7 3000 070 12 PDF Deutscher Bundestag Wissenschaftliche Dienste 2012 03 19 Archived PDF from the original on 2019 10 20 Retrieved 2019 10 20 PIL A Boon Or A Bane Legalserviceindia com Retrieved 2013 10 04 Introduction to Public Interest Litigation Karmayog org Archived from the original on 2013 10 05 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Justice M B Shah 2 May 2002 Union of India Vs Association for Democratic Reforms amp Another PDF Supreme Court of India Judgement on Civil Appeal No 7178 of 2001 Our Achievements ADR Archived from the original on 29 June 2009 Retrieved 2 November 2012 Boland James 12 October 2018 Revisiting the potential of class actions The Irish Times Retrieved 17 August 2020 Law firms excluded from EU consumer class actions 4 January 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2020 McKeown Andrew 31 January 2020 Chief Justice launches report on litigation funding and class actions Irish Legal news Retrieved 17 August 2020 Class collective actions in Ireland overview Practical Law Retrieved 2021 12 20 McClusky Aoife McClements April 28 May 2019 Class action procedure in Ireland Lexology Law Business Research Retrieved 17 August 2020 Collins Niall Johnston Peter Gilvarry Ailbhe Farrell Kevin 1 December 2019 Class collective actions in Ireland overview Practical Law Thomson Reuters Retrieved 17 August 2020 More information Class Action Italia art 140 bis PDF Archived from the original on 2013 10 05 Retrieved 2013 10 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link FAVA P L importabilita delle class actions in Italia in Contratto e Impresa 1 2004 FAVA P Class actions all italiana Paese che vai usanza che trovi l esperienza dei principali ordinamenti giuridici stranieri e le proposte A A C C n 3838 e n 3839 in Corr Giur 3 2004 FAVA P Class actions tra efficientismo processuale aumento di competitivita e risparmio di spesa l esame di un contenzioso seriale concreto le S U sul rapporto tra indennita di amministrazione e tredicesima in Corr Giur 2006 535 FAVA P Indennita di amministrazione e tredicesima il no secco delle Sezioni Unite Un caso pratico per valutare le potenzialita delle azioni rappresentative class actions nel contenzioso seriale italiano Rass Avv Stato 2005 See also Class Action Italia Dalle origini ad oggi Archived 2008 02 12 at the Wayback Machine and Italy introduces consumer class actions or visit Italian reference site for Class Action Class Action Community Archived 2010 01 31 at the Wayback Machine La class action nel codice di procedura civile www tedioli com December 10 2019 Message to Parliament on the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure Federal Journal 2006 p 7221 et seq The quote p 7290 is the author s translation CPR Part 19 6 Justice gov uk 2013 09 27 Retrieved 2013 10 04 Different class UK representative actions suffer a setback Mulheron Rachael 2017 The United Kingdom s New Opt Out Class Action Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 37 4 814 843 doi 10 1093 ojls gqx016 Coleman Clive 2015 10 01 Class action legal change for UK BBC News Retrieved 2018 04 04 Yoshino Troy M Labi Suzanne 2023 11 27 Class Actions 101 An Introduction to UK Collective Actions and How They Differ from US Class Actions Class Action Insider Winston amp Strawn Retrieved 2024 01 11 Sullivan E Thomas 2009 Complex Litigation LexisNexis p 441 ISBN 978 1422411469 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Grundfest Joseph A September 2019 The Limits of Delaware Corporate Law Internal Affairs Federal Forum Provisions and Sciabacucchi Harvard Law School on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation a b Bloomberg Industry Group Bloomberg Industry Securities Fraud Plaintiff Need Not Show Reliance www americanbar org a b Slack v Prani Supreme Court of the United States 2023 Pleading Section 11 Liability for Secondary Offerings www americanbar org CITIC Trust FIC Order PACER pdf PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2015 10 08 Grundfest Joseph A September 22 2015 Morrison the Restricted Scope of Securities Act Section 11 Liability and Prospects for Regulatory Reform Journal of Corporation Law 41 1 38 Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved December 28 2020 a b c d e Rule 23 federalrulesofcivilprocedure org Retrieved 2016 01 11 Unintended Precedents The American Prospect February 28 2010 Retrieved March 21 2018 Class Action Fairness Act Public Law 109 2 119 Stat 4 Frwebgate access gpo gov Retrieved 2013 10 03 28 U S C A 1332 d William B Rubenstein Understanding the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 briefing paper PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2006 11 02 Retrieved 2013 10 03 28 U S C 1332 d 2 John G Heyburn II A View from the Panel Part of the Solution PDF Tulane Law Review 82 2225 2331 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 04 26 Retrieved 2011 12 12 a b Greer Marcy Hogan 2010 A Practitioner s Guide to Class Actions Chicago American Bar Association pp 57 59 ISBN 9781604429558 Wal Mart Stores Inc v Dukes 131 S Ct 2541 2011 Webber David H 2012 The Plight of the Individual Investor Northwestern University Law Review 106 181 Retrieved 21 November 2019 Quoting Fed R Civ P 23 b 3 emphasis added See Cohelan on California Class Actions and California Class Actions Practice and Procedure by Elizabeth Cabraser et al External links editUnited States edit Manual for Complex Litigation Fourth Stanford Securities Class Action Clearinghouse Class Action Lawsuits A Legal Overview for the 115th Congress Congressional Research Service Class Actions Seven Years After the Class Action Fairness Act Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Committee on the Judiciary House of Representatives One Hundred Twelfth Congress Second Session June 1 2012Europe edit Collective Redress in Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Class action amp oldid 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