Class Actions

How to Tell if You Likely Qualify for a Class Action Lawsuit

By on July 22, 2013 - Comments off

Class Action Defined

Lawsuits involving many people in the same case are called class action lawsuits. One party can sue acting as a representative. Once the class action is certified by the court, only those class members who opt out are excluded from the suit. Class actions allow for the vindication of the rights of a large number of people.

Class action suits are brought when no single person would have enough incentive to bring a suit by themselves. Although class action settlements may be individually small, they can have a significant impact on a company and its reputation as it holds them liable for negligence. Settlements may mandate that the party at fault pay into a fund which will later be distributed to members of the class. Read the rest »

Posted in: Class Actions

 

Consumer Class Actions: Unfair Competition & False Advertising

By on May 19, 2009 - Comments off

In re Tobacco II Cases,— Cal.Rptr.3d —-, 2009 WL 1362556, 09 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5993, Cal., May 18, 2009 (NO. S147345)

In a major victory for California consumers victimized by fraudulent advertising and business practices, the California Supreme Court ruled on May 18, 2009 that Proposition 64 does not impose new procedural and substantive proof requirements on consumer class actions. The long-awaited decision, In Re Tobacco Cases II, reversed a holding by a lower court which interpreted Prop. 64 as requiring that all absent class members affirmatively demonstrate injury caused by an unfair practice in order to proceed as a class action. This would have severely hindered lawsuits under California’s Unfair Competition Law (UCL) and False Advertising Law (FAL), which are designed to protect against unfair, unlawful and fraudulent business practices. Robinson Calcagnie Robinson Shapiro Davis, Inc. senior partner Mark P. Robinson Jr., who argued the case before the Supreme Court on behalf of the Plaintiffs in the case, called the decision “a huge victory for the consumers of California.” “This gives the consumers rights to protect themselves from fraudulent advertising,” said Robinson, former president of the Consumer Attorneys of California, who was named California Trial Lawyer of the Year by the American Board of Trial Advocates in 2008.

The suit was brought by smokers alleging that the tobacco industry defendants violated the UCL and FAL by conducting a decades-long campaign of deceptive advertising and misleading statements about the addictive nature of nicotine and the relationship between tobacco use and disease. However, the ruling will potentially impact all consumer class actions in California involving unfair competition, fraudulent and unlawful business practices, and false advertising. Justice Carlos Moreno, writing for the majority, found that interpreting the statutes amended under Proposition 64 to require all unnamed members of a class action to individually establish standing would “effectively eliminate the class action lawsuit as a vehicle for the vindication of such rights.” The decision was immediately hailed by attorneys representing injured consumers.”We want to congratulate the fine work done by attorney Mark Robinson, a renowned fellow trial lawyer, for his excellent work in arguing the case before the California Supreme Court” noted Audet & Partners, LLP founder William M. Audet. “Without a doubt, Mark Robinson’s advocacy carried the day.”