Top Banner
INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini
25

INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

Mar 31, 2015

Download

Documents

Taniya Searer
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

INTERNATIONAL LAW

PARMA UNIVERSITYInternational Business and Development

International Markets and Organizations LawProf. Gabriele Catalini

Page 2: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

CLASS ACTION:U.S. AND ITALY APPROACHES

International markets and organisations lawProf. Gabriele Catalini

Page 3: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

DEFINITION

In law, a class action or a representative action is a

form of lawsuit in which a large group of people collectively

bring a claim to court and/or in which a class of defendants is

being sued.

Page 4: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

HYSTORY

• Medieval Europe: England 1125: record of a few individuals' representing a large group of people in legal suits.

• First Suit: 1309 a Discart vs. Otes case.• Rule 48: 1833: U.S. law first introduced group

litigation • Rule 38: allowed absent parties to be

represented as members of the prosecuting class.

• Rule 23: Rule 38 became Rule 23 and "opt out“ was introduced

• Private Securities Litigation Reform Act” of 1995: new rules in securities class action lawsuit.

• Class Action Fairness Act of 2005: expansion of federal jurisdiction over many large class-action lawsuits in the United States.

Page 5: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

U.S. FEDERAL CLASS ACTIONS

• Class action lawsuits may be brought in federal court if the claim arises under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 23 and 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332 (d)

• It is also possible to bring class action lawsuits under state law

• Typically, federal courts are thought to be more favorable for defendants and state courts more favorable for plaintiffs.

Page 6: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

“CANT” CHARACTERISTICS

1 Numerosity - the class must be so large as to make individual suits impractical

2 Commonality - there must be legal or factual claims in common

3 Typicality - the claims or defenses must be typical of the plaintiffs or defendants

4 Adequacy of Representation - the representative parties must adequately protect the interests of the class

5. common issues opposed to individual fact-specific conflicts between class members and the defendants

6. class action, instead of individual litigation, is a

superior vehicle for resolution of the disputes at hand

Page 7: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

STATE CLASS ACTIONS

• Since 1938, many states have adopted rules similar to the FRCP

• However, some states have civil procedure systems which deviate from the federal rules

• Some states, do not provide for any class actions, while others, limit the types of claims that may be brought as class actions.

Page 8: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

How does a Class Action suit work?

Step 1: drafting a complaint filing it in court "serving" on the defendants

Step 2: defendants answer or challenge the complaint

Step 3: a period of "discovery" takes place

Page 9: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

How does a Class Action suit work?

Step 4: the plaintiff files motion to certify a class action.

the defendants will file objections to certification. the Court will have a hearing. If plaintiffs win, the case will be certified.

Step 5: Notice about member’s rights and deadlines for "opting out"

Step 6: Trial or Settlement

Page 10: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

CLASS ACTION IN ITALY

Page 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

EUROPE'S ATTITUDE FOR THE CLASS ACTION

The European Consumer Commissioner:

“The old continent will never “go down [the American class action] road” with its “toxic cocktail” of contingency fees, punitive damages, and pretrial discovery”.

Page 12: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

HISTORY

• 1970 - the first Italian debate took place

• 2010, January 1st - the new consumer class action law became effective

• Italian consumer associations announced they would launch class actions for some 450,000 small Italian investors who claim they have been “cheated” by banks who sold them Argentinian bonds

Page 13: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

Other «participants» of class action

Page 14: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

THE TERMS

The Italian law has no retroactive effect, The Class Action Act allows claims based on torts occurring

after August 15, 2009

Page 15: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

FIRST RESULTS

In less than a year, six significant class action lawsuits have been filed against both Italian and foreign defendants, making Italy’s number of class action lawsuits high in comparison to other countries with recently introduced class action laws. At least two of the cases seek extremely high damages, totaling €6.25 billion together (and some numbers suggest that damages sought could exceed €10 billion).

Page 16: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

FEATURES

The class action law is the first law in Italy to provide for monetary damages in a class action, as previous laws only allowed for injunctions, marking extraordinary change in the Italian litigation system.

These lawsuits are limited to four types of cases:

•contracts,

•product liability,

•anti-competitive (anti-trust) practices,

•and unfair commercial practices.

Page 17: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

THE DIFFERENCE FROM THE US LAW

The law differs from the U.S. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23: in a number of areas, e.g., more restrictive class certification process; an “opt-in” basis; no discovery; absence of punitive damages.

Page 18: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

NEGATIVE TRENDS

Consumer associations are proactively looking for class action opportunities and are advertising to attract and “recruit” potential plaintiffs. But they are not actual plaintiffs.

So it is not clear: HOW and AT WHAT RATE the consumer associations will be “compensated” for their class action work; HOW and HOW MUCH they will pay the consumers; Do the consumer associations will advocate the specific interests of the class of plaintiffs they represent, or will pursue their own interests and/or the interests of their members as a whole?

Page 19: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

WHO MAY FILE?

Entities that can act on behalf of the plaintiff:

• Consumer association or committee with nationwide presence

• Consumer/Investor groups (registered with the Italian Ministry of Productive Activities)

• Promoters vis a vis Plaintiff

Page 20: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

The proceeding

1° Stage: Admissibility The class action is deemed inadmissible if:

• The claim is unfounded

• There is conflict of interest

• The rights infriged upon are not homogenous

• The lead plaintif is unable to adequately represent the interest of the class

Page 21: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

1° Stage: Admissibility

The lead plaintiff must be a consumer

The lead plaintiff must have “an interest in the suit”

The phase ends with a court decision

Page 22: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

Publicity and opt-ins

• Public dissemination of the admissibility finding

• A deadline for opting in is settled

• Members must affirmatively opt in to the class

• Decision on liability and damages can not be changed after the opting in.

Page 23: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

2° Stage: Liability and Damages

• Liability and damages are determined

The court specifies:

• Damage amount

• Uniformly applicable criterion for each individual claim

• No provision for punitive damages

Page 24: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.

Final considerations

• Italian consumer association vis a vis US plaintiff law firms

• Italian consumer association have the possibility to shape the law

• What’s next?

Page 25: INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Markets and Organizations Law Prof. Gabriele Catalini.