Class Action Reform
Frivolous lawsuits are on the rise and are having a devastating effect on our small businesses. While small companies take in 25% of America's business revenue, they bear 68% of business tort costs -- a staggering $88 billion!
America's legal crisis is crippling companies, driving down shareholder value, putting employees out of work, raising consumer prices, and making a handful of plaintiffs' lawyers millionaires overnight.
Here's the bottom line: A single frivolous lawsuit can ruin a business, small or large. The good news is that we are fighting back -- in Congress, in the states, and in the courts. Together we can work to make America's civil justice system simpler, fairer, and faster for all by enacting meaningful class action reform.
America's legal crisis is crippling companies, driving down shareholder value, putting employees out of work, raising consumer prices, and making a handful of plaintiffs' lawyers millionaires overnight.
Here's the bottom line: A single frivolous lawsuit can ruin a business, small or large. The good news is that we are fighting back -- in Congress, in the states, and in the courts. Together we can work to make America's civil justice system simpler, fairer, and faster for all by enacting meaningful class action reform.
Congress Acts to Stem Class Action Abuses
To help correct these abuses of the class action system, Congress passed the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, signed into law by President Bush on February 18, 2005. This bill is designed to help curb forum shopping by moving many large class actions out of state courts and into the federal court system. It is also helping to ensure that settlements are in the best interest of the class members -- as opposed to the best interest of their attorneys.
About the Legislation
The Class Action Fairness Act ensures a simpler, fairer, and faster legal system by:
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Helping move large, multi-state class action lawsuits from state to federal court, preventing widespread "venue shopping" by trial lawyers.
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Limiting settlements in which class members actually lose money to pay attorneys' fees.
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Ensuring the fair and even distribution of damage awards to all plaintiffs.
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Helping protect class members from getting coupons of little or no value while attorneys make millions of dollars.
When properly used, class action lawsuits can be a valuable part of the legal system. Class action lawsuits were originally designed to benefit consumers by allowing them to more easily join together and seek efficient legal relief as a group or "class" of individuals who have all been affected by a single event or circumstance. In recent years, however, the class action system has become severely abused.
Trial lawyers have used the class action legal mechanism to join together large and diverse groups of claimants as a means of extracting huge settlements or court awards from defendants. Through the practice of "forum shopping," plaintiff lawyers could file their suits in local plaintiff-friendly courtrooms that had little regard for defendants' right to due process.
And, while businesses often are the losers in state class actions, many plaintiffs do not end up as the winners. A number of high-profile cases resulted in class members "winning" coupons worth a few dollars while their lawyers have won millions (See Class Action Calamities). A RAND Institute for Civil Justice study of state class action settlements found that attorneys' fees and administrative costs account for nearly half of settlements or awards.
The Class Action Fairness Act is a landmark win in the fight for legal reform. However, we continue to monitor the class action system to ensure that this new law is applied and to detect and address any new abuses of the system.
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