CLASS
ACTION LAWSUITS
The purported purpose of class
action law suits is to give the common man the ability to take
on the largest corporate or private entities (who can afford the
very best legal services) and have a chance of redressing the
wrong done by these entities. It is important to remember that
even though the actual damage or cost to the individual class
member may be small, the illicit gain to the corporate entity
can be huge if done to hundreds or even hundreds of thousands of
class members.
Class actions are, in reality,
normally structured to benefit three parties. These parties are
1) the attorneys--on both sides; 2) the court; and 3) sometimes
the original class (proponents). That the attorneys on both
sides are going to make money is obvious. What is not always
obvious is that the two sides are not always adversaries. As
there are several large firms that do a large percentage of all
class actions, what often happens is a firm which has filed a
class action against one company in a particular industry often
ends up filing against other companies in the same industry that
have committed the same offense.
This is often not as adversarial
as it at first may seem because the other companies
think--" company A was caught; case law was established;
the original firm has all the research, etc. (which are
often not public by order of the court or agreement of the
parties); and we better go to that firm and make the best deal
possible (agree to pay large attorneys' fees and get out as
cheaply and quickly as possible before someone comes after us on
their own. These are often done by the same attorneys on both
sides, in a very short time frame, and sometimes in the same
court as the original case). Remember, once they get past the
"opt-out" date and class members are locked-in and all
the companies past sins are wiped out by the court ordered
judgement (which is normally agreed to by the parties).
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