Class Action

  • January 29, 2025

    Roomba Maker Escapes Suit Over Scuttled Amazon Merger

    A Massachusetts federal judge has permanently thrown out a shareholder class action accusing iRobot Corp. of misleading investors about expected regulatory opposition that ultimately led to the abandonment of a proposed $1.7 billion merger with Amazon, saying "the pleading process ought not be used as a trial balloon, with repeated bites at the apple."

  • January 29, 2025

    Del. Justices Mull 'Nuanced' T-Mobile Data Breach Claims

    Delaware's chief justice pressed an attorney for T-Mobile Corp. stockholders Wednesday on what the attorney called a "nuanced" derivative claim that the company's board wrongly failed to pursue damages for massive data breaches after its controlling stockholder pressed for adoption of a vulnerable data sharing program.

  • January 29, 2025

    Mich. Judge Doubts Discovery Dispute Should DQ Firm

    A Michigan federal judge on Wednesday said a law firm's alleged "bad behavior" doesn't necessarily mean it can't represent a former CEO of a solar energy company, telling residents who sought to disqualify the firm because of a supposed conflict that their complaints may be better dealt with through discovery motions.

  • January 29, 2025

    Pension Plans Seek Trader's Testimony In $2B Tax Fraud Suit

    Pension plans and individuals who Denmark's government alleges received fraudulent refunds have asked a New York federal court to allow U.K. court testimony into the record from a trader who Danish authorities say masterminded a $2.1 billion tax fraud, saying it shows he deceived other participants.

  • January 29, 2025

    Farmers' Antitrust Claims Trimmed In Pesticides Case

    A North Carolina federal court has cut one set of federal antitrust claims from a suit brought by farmers accusing major pesticide manufacturers Syngenta AG and Corteva Inc. of blocking competition but allowed a slew of other claims to proceed.

  • January 29, 2025

    Full Fed. Circ. Won't Allow MSN To Launch Generic Entresto

    The Federal Circuit is standing by its decision to bar MSN Pharmaceuticals from launching a generic version of Novartis' bestseller, the cardiovascular drug Entresto, as Novartis tries to persuade the court that it deserves an injunction through July. 

  • January 29, 2025

    Co.'s Missing Signature Prevents Arbitration In Wage Row

    A former home sales representative for a cosmetics company can keep her wage suit in court, a California state appellate panel ruled, affirming a lower court's ruling that the company failed to show it had a valid arbitration agreement with the worker because it didn't sign the pact.

  • January 29, 2025

    Jenzabar Tells Del. Justices Investor Delay Sinks $26M Award

    An attorney for the founder of a higher education software company told Delaware's Supreme Court on Wednesday that shareholders moved too late to recover on claims they were kept in the dark when millions in stock purchase warrants were allowed to expire without notice that they could invest in a follow-on opportunity.

  • January 29, 2025

    Southwest's Plan Oversight Cost Workers Millions, Court Told

    Southwest Airlines cost workers millions of dollars in retirement savings by failing to ax a costly and underperforming investment fund from its combined $14 billion retirement plans, according to a proposed class action filed in Texas federal court.

  • January 29, 2025

    Ga. Judge Cuts Atty Fees In Home Depot Class Settlement

    A Georgia federal judge has granted final approval to a settlement between Home Depot Corp., Reliance Worldwide Corp. and a class suing over allegedly faulty water heater connector hoses but awarded class counsel $1.9 million in fees instead of the $2.1 million initially requested.

  • January 29, 2025

    Shopper Says Costco Adds Hidden Fees To Online Deliveries

    Costco is the target of a proposed consumer class action alleging the membership retailer is reneging on promises to waive online delivery fees by adding hidden charges that make products bought through the company's e-commerce site more expensive than the same products sold in stores.

  • January 29, 2025

    Workers Needed To Initiate Arbitration, Calif. Panel Says

    A group of workers needed to initiate arbitration in their proposed class action claiming an insurance company misclassified them as exempt employees after a trial court sent their claims out of court, a California state appellate panel ruled, flipping the lower court's decision reviving the suit.

  • January 28, 2025

    GigaCloud Partially Escapes Suit Over Revenue, Tech Claims

    GigaCloud Technology Inc. and its top brass have partially escaped a proposed class action alleging it misrepresented its operating metrics and revenues and use of artificial intelligence, with a New York federal judge saying that a federal securities law violation "cannot be premised upon a company's disclosure of accurate historical data."

  • January 28, 2025

    Staples Settles Out Of Visa, Mastercard Swipe Fee Battle

    Staples on Tuesday settled out of an over decade-long antitrust battle lodged against Visa and Mastercard for allegedly overcharging merchants via swipe fees, leaving the payment card companies with one less retailer to face in trial this year over their alleged anticompetitive fee scheme.

  • January 28, 2025

    Capri Investors Sue Over Scrapped $8.5B Tapestry Merger

    Fashion brand giants Capri Holdings Ltd. and Tapestry Inc. misled investors about potential antitrust regulatory issues associated with their planned $8.5 billion merger that ultimately led to the deal's failure and investor losses, according to a proposed securities class action filed Tuesday in Delaware federal court.

  • January 28, 2025

    9th Circ. Backs Class Attys' $8M In Fees In Joint Juice Suit

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday upheld an $8 million fee award to plaintiffs who prevailed in a false advertising suit against food company Premier Nutrition Corp. over its Joint Juice supplement, finding the lower court didn't abuse its discretion in awarding fees for work plaintiffs' attorneys performed while a related case was pending.

  • January 28, 2025

    Black Homebuyers Seek OK For Predatory Lending Settlement

    A proposed class of Black homebuyers has asked a Michigan federal judge to approve their $750,000 settlement with real estate companies and their investors who allegedly bought up run-down Detroit properties to sell to Black buyers with abusive lending terms.

  • January 28, 2025

    'Pencils Down' For Meta, Netflix Antitrust Case In Ill.

    Meta Platforms Inc., Netflix and a proposed class of consumers claiming the companies cut an illegal deal ceding the video streaming market to Netflix can wait to continue litigating their case until a California federal judge mulls summary judgment over similar claims out west, an Illinois federal judge said Tuesday.

  • January 28, 2025

    Texas Judge OKs $40M Settlement In Six Flags Expansion Suit

    A Texas federal judge indicated Tuesday that he would approve a $40 million class settlement between Six Flags Entertainment Corp. and investors accusing the amusement park operator of bungling expansion plans in China — after having previously dismissed the case twice.

  • January 28, 2025

    Firms Hook $850K Fee Award In Eyewear Co. Data Breach Deal

    Class counsel in a data breach suit against eye wear company Luxottica of America Inc. secured $850,000 in attorney fees on Tuesday as part of a $250,000 settlement ending claims the retailer failed to protect customers' personal information, according to an Ohio judge's order.

  • January 28, 2025

    Chancery Nixes TRO in Jenzabar Stock Buyback Dispute

    Investors in an educational software venture mired in Delaware Court of Chancery litigation dating to 2009 lost an 11th-hour effort to broaden the latest case on Tuesday, with a vice chancellor noting that the state Supreme Court is set to take up an appeal in the already decided action on Wednesday.

  • January 28, 2025

    Allegheny Health Network Hit With Data Breach Claims

    A Pittsburgh-based healthcare system failed in its responsibility to keep its patients' private health information secure from cybercriminals who breached databases maintained by an information technology contractor, a Pennsylvania woman claimed in a proposed class action.

  • January 28, 2025

    Dolce & Gabbana Wants 'Worthless' NFT Outfit Suit Tossed

    The U.S. division of Italian luxury fashion brand Dolce & Gabbana has urged a New York federal judge to toss a proposed investor class action accusing it of abandoning a nonfungible tokens project while retaining the more than $25 million that was used to fund it, arguing that the U.S. arm of the company was not at all involved in the project.

  • January 28, 2025

    OpenAI Must Hand Over GPT-4 Dataset In Authors' IP Fight

    A California federal judge on Tuesday ordered OpenAI Inc. to produce a dataset used to train the company's flagship GPT-4 model to counsel representing a proposed class of authors in their high-stakes copyright infringement battle, rejecting OpenAI's argument that handing over the dataset poses too many security issues.

  • January 28, 2025

    'Extraordinary' $630M CDK Deal Wraps Auto Dealer Data MDL

    A certified class of car dealership app makers is seeking preliminary approval for the final settlement in the years-old web of cases accusing CDK Global of monopolizing auto dealership management software, with a $630 million Wisconsin federal court deal that puts a $140 million premium on estimated damages.

Expert Analysis

  • How Courts Split On Damages Analysis In Automotive Suits

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    As high-profile vehicle recalls and lawsuits alleging vehicle defects surge, many plaintiffs are turning to choice-based conjoint analysis to calculate damages, but a review of federal district court decisions reveals a range of views on the validity of this methodology, say Joshua Hochberg and Shireen Meer at Berkeley Research.

  • Lessons From Rising Fake Discount Consumer Class Actions

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    Ellen Robbins and Scott Allbright at Akerman discuss the rise of false reference price consumer class actions and outline key strategies to minimize legal risk and protect businesses.

  • Classwide Calculations May Get Price Premium Damages Wrong

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    In many consumer class actions, plaintiffs assert that they overpaid for a product because of a misrepresented or defective product feature, and that a single price premium estimate can be applied classwide — but failure to account for differences in price premiums across a putative class may lead to improper damage awards, say economists at Ankura Consulting.

  • Mirror, Mirror On The Wall, Is My Counterclaim Bound To Fall?

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    A Pennsylvania federal court’s recent dismissal of the defendants’ counterclaims in Morgan v. Noss should remind attorneys to avoid the temptation to repackage a claim’s facts and law into a mirror-image counterclaim, as this approach will often result in a waste of time and resources, says Matthew Selmasska at Kaufman Dolowich.

  • Series

    Playing Dungeons & Dragons Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Playing Dungeons & Dragons – a tabletop role-playing game – helped pave the way for my legal career by providing me with foundational skills such as persuasion and team building, says Derrick Carman at Robins Kaplan.

  • Parsing NJ Court's Rationale For Denying Lipitor Class Cert.

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    A New Jersey federal court's recent Lipitor rulings granting summary judgment and denying motions for class certification for two plaintiff classes offer insight into the level of rigorous analysis required by both parties and their experts to satisfy the requirements of class certification, says Catia Twal at Edgeworth Economics.

  • Illinois BIPA Reform Offers Welcome Relief To Businesses

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    Illinois' recent amendment to its Biometric Information Privacy Act limits the number of violations and damages a plaintiff can claim — a crucial step in shielding businesses from unintended legal consequences, including litigation risk and compliance costs, say attorneys at Taft.

  • Gilead Drug Ruling Creates Corporate Governance Dilemma

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    If upheld, a California state appellate court's decision — finding that Gilead is liable for delaying commercialization of a safer HIV drug to maximize profits on another drug — threatens to undermine long-standing rules of corporate law and exposes companies to liability for decisions based on sound business judgment, says Shireen Barday at Pallas.

  • Class Action Law Makes An LLC A 'Jurisdictional Platypus'

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    The applicability of Section 1332(d)(10) of the Class Action Fairness Act is still widely misunderstood — and given the ambiguous nature of limited liability companies, the law will likely continue to confound courts and litigants — so parties should be prepared for a range of outcomes, says Andrew Gunem at Strauss Borrelli.

  • 3 Leadership Practices For A More Supportive Firm Culture

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    Traditional leadership styles frequently amplify the inherent pressures of legal work, but a few simple, time-neutral strategies can strengthen the skills and confidence of employees and foster a more collaborative culture, while supporting individual growth and contribution to organizational goals, says Benjamin Grimes at BKG Leadership.

  • How Courts' Differing Views On Standing Affect PFAS Claims

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    Two recent opinions from New York federal courts — in Lurenz v. Coca-Cola, and Winans v. Ornua Foods North America — illustrate how pivotal the differing views on standing held by different courts will be for product liability litigation involving per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, particularly consumer claims, say attorneys at Hollingsworth.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Rulings On Hyperlinked Documents

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    Recent rulings show that counsel should engage in early discussions with clients regarding the potential of hyperlinked documents in electronically stored information, which will allow for more deliberate negotiation of any agreements regarding the scope of discovery, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Loper Bright Limits Federal Agencies' Ability To Alter Course

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision to dismantle Chevron deference also effectively overrules its 2005 decision in National Cable & Telecommunications Association v. Brand X, greatly diminishing agencies' ability to change regulatory course from one administration to the next, says Steven Gordon at Holland & Knight.

  • Addressing The Growing Hazards Of Mass Arbitration

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    Though retail companies typically include arbitration provisions in their terms of service, the recent trend of costly mass arbitrations filed by plaintiffs may cause businesses to rethink this conventional wisdom, say attorneys at BCLP.

  • Series

    Teaching Scuba Diving Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    As a master scuba instructor, I’ve learned how to prepare for the unexpected, overcome fears and practice patience, and each of these skills – among the many others I’ve developed – has profoundly enhanced my work as a lawyer, says Ron Raether at Troutman Pepper.

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