1 / 30

Class Actions and Mass Tort Litigation in a Global Context P rofessor Linda S. Mullenix

Class Actions and Mass Tort Litigation in a Global Context P rofessor Linda S. Mullenix. Saipan Peonage Litigation. Saipan Peonage Litigation. Questions: What was the Saipan peonage litigation? Who were the plaintiffs? Defendants? Where was this litigation brought?

thadeus
Download Presentation

Class Actions and Mass Tort Litigation in a Global Context P rofessor Linda S. Mullenix

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Class Actions and Mass Tort Litigation in a Global ContextProfessor Linda S. Mullenix Saipan Peonage Litigation

  2. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Questions: • What was the Saipan peonage litigation? • Who were the plaintiffs? Defendants? • Where was this litigation brought? • What was the basis for the court’s jurisdiction? • What was the basis for the claims?

  3. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Questions: • Is this litigation suitable for class action treatment? • Should the court certify a class action? • Pursuant to what class category? • What remedies are the class members seeking? • What problems was there with a proposed class? • What objections to class certification do the Defendants raise? Do those objections have merit? • Should the court approve a settlement class?

  4. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Questions: • How does this proposed class litigation compare to: • American mass tort cases? • The Hilao-Philippine Marcos litigation? • The Karadzic litigation? • The Austrian fire litigation? • The worldwide tainted blood products litigation? • The Holocaust era litigation?

  5. Saipan Peonage Litigation Does I v. The GAP, Inc., 2002 WL1000073 (D.N.Mariana Islands 2002)

  6. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Factual background: • Plaintiffs: Saipan garment factor workers • Class on behalf of 30,000 workers • Workers are non-resident (many from multiple Asian countries) • Defendants: multiple contractor Ds; 19 settling Ds • Brylane, Cutter & Buck, Donna Karan, Gymboree, J. Crew, Jones Apparel, May Department Stores, Nordstrom, Oskosh, Phillips-Van Heusen, Polo Ralph Lauren, Sears Roebuck, Tommy Hilfinger, Warnaco, Calvin Klein, Brooks Brothers, Woolrich

  7. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Factual background: • Legal Basis for litigation (statutes): • RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act) • Alien Torts Claim Act • Anti-Peonage Act

  8. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Factual background: • Allegations: • Ds conspiracy to dominate foreign garment work force • Conspiracy to deprive garment workers of basic human rights and protections • Peonage and involuntary servitude • Exploitation of P class for Ds’ profit • Ds conspiracy and common course of conduct

  9. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Factual background: • Forum: U.S. fed. Dist. Court Northern Mariana Islands • Procedural posture: • Consolidated cases under Rule 42(a) • Motion for class certification • Motion for preliminary approval of settlement

  10. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Class Action procedure: • Ps seek certification under Rule 23(a) • Ps seek certification under Rules 23(b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3) – all class categories • Remedies sought: • Damages, punitive damages • Plaintiffs propose damages proven on aggregate basis • Damages by expert testimony, representative sampling, polling, statistical analysis • Independent monitoring program to prevent future violations of law

  11. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Ds arguments against class certification: • Lack of commonality • Different plaintiffs • Different factual backgrounds; different experiences • Voluntary hours, recruitment fees, threats, housing and living conditions, restrictions on freedom of movement • Different employers • Different injuries • Different factories

  12. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Ds arguments against class certification: • Lack of typicality: • Highly individualized fact circumstances • Different injuries • Different defenses to individual class members • Lack of adequacy: • Intra-class conflict between current and former garment workers as to form of relief • Lack of knowledge and understanding of lawsuit • No role in decision-making • Insufficient knowledge of duties and obligations in lawsuit

  13. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Ds’ arguments against class categories: • Rule 23(b)(1) category not suitable for damage class actions • Rule 23(b)(2) only for injunctive relief; not suitable for damage class actions • Rule 23(b)(3): • Common issues do not predominate • Claims require individualized proof and inquiry into Ps mental states, alleged injuries, causes of alleged injuries

  14. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Ds’ arguments against class categories: • Rule 23(b)(3): • Lack of superiority: • Numerous individual issues need to be tried on case-by-case basis • 30,000 class members/28 different factories/ different departments/different supervisors/ 13 year period – class unwieldy • Aggregation into single action makes matters of proof difficult & unwieldy • Reasonable alternatives to class certification: • Action under Fair Labor Standards Act

  15. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Court’s decision on class certification: • Class certification approved • All Rule 23(a) pre-requisites satisfied: • Numerosity • Commonality • Typicality • Adequacy

  16. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Court’s decision on class certification: • Commonality (satisfied): • Differences among class members do not defeat commonality • All injuries stem from same alleged conspiracy among Ds • Lawsuit challenges system-wide practice or policy that affects all putative class members

  17. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Court’s decision on class certification: • Typicality (satisfied): • Alleged injuries all similar to class reps. • Alleged injuries all flow from same alleged common scheme, conspiracy, course of conduct • Injuries are similar: allegation of economic and other damages as result of Ds alleged pattern of racketeering, conspiracy, violation of constitutional, statutory and international human rights

  18. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Court’s decision on class certification: • Adequacy (satisfied): • Doe representatives had sufficient knowledge and understanding of case to represent class • Class counsel adequate • No conflict between current and former class members because action is not for damages for unpaid wages, but for injunctive and declaratory relief

  19. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Does I v. The GAP (N.D. Mariana Is. 2002): • Court’s decision on class certification: • Rule 23 class categories: • Grants certification under Rule 23(b)(1)(a); proper because fundamental purpose is to establish independent monitoring program • Grants certification under Rule 23(b)(2); proper because primary relief is monitoring program, not damages • Grants certification under Rule 23(b)(3); proper because common questions predominate and class action is superior means to resolve

  20. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Questions: • Is the court’s analysis of the Rule 23(a) requirements sound? Has the court persuasively answered the Defendants’ arguments? • Can a court certify a class action under all three class categories? • Does this present a contradiction? • Is this really a class action for damages, or injunctive relief? • How would such a class be tried? • Does the court comment sufficiently on the damages portion of this case? How would damages be resolved in this class action? • Does the judge need more information at class certification about how damages will be tried?

  21. Saipan Peonage Litigation Preliminary Approval of the Class Settlement

  22. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Questions: • Is it unusual for a judge to certify a class and preliminarily approve the settlement in the same decision or order? • Do all the Ds agree to the settlement? • Do the dissenting, non-settling Ds have a right to object to the settlement? • What problems do the court’s approval of the settlement present for the non-settling Ds?

  23. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Preliminary approval of class settlement: • Two groups of Ds emerge: • Settling Ds • Non-settling Ds • Settling Ds deny engaging in or condoning unfair labor practices • Settling Ds deny liability for claims in the complaint

  24. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Preliminary approval of class settlement: • Terms of the settlement (4): • Creation of code of conduct with garment suppliers • Establishment of independent workplace and living quarters monitoring • Establishment of fund to pay for monioring program and to compensate class members for harms • 10% to cy pres fund to finance California litigation • Payment of Ps’ costs and attorney fees, costs of administration and notice program

  25. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Objections of Non-Settling Ds: • Selection of Verite (D) to monitor program unfair; will not act as neutral, impartial body • Conflicts of interest within the class • Creation of cy pres fund to finance California litigation unfair & unreasonable; diverst funds to non-parties • Opt-out notice plan is inadequate because it leaves many class members without effective notice

  26. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Preliminary approval of class settlement: • Court finds settlement fair, adequate, & reasonable • Relies on settlement class decision in In re Holcaust Victims Assets Litigation, 105 F. Supp. 2d 139 (E.D.N.Y. 2000)(settlement standards)

  27. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Court’s Preliminary Approval of Settlement (5 reasons): • Settlement not negotiated in haste • Settlement negoitations begun 3 years earlier • Dozen draft agreements • Settlement agreement entered into in good faith • Arm’s-length negotiations • Experienced counsel on both sides

  28. Saipan Peonage Litigation • Court’s Preliminary Approval of Settlement (5 reasons): • Allegations against Verite as program monitor unsupported • Settlement provisions for checks and controls on program moitor • No evidence in record of collusion • No evidence in record of conflicts of interest

  29. Final Questions: • Is this an approiate class certification? • Is this an appropriate exercise of judicial authority to approve the preliminary settlement? • Does the court do an adequate job of assesing whether the proposed settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable? • Is the GAP case a good model for resolving group harms?

  30. Fine

More Related