Class Action

  • October 24, 2025

    Private Schools Aid-Fixing Suit Abandoned After Dismissal

    Current and former students said Friday they won't be taking another crack at accusing 40 private universities and colleges of illegally conspiring to raise net attendance prices, effectively abandoning the proposed class action after an Illinois federal judge tossed the initial complaint last month but permitted amendment.

  • October 24, 2025

    Avalara Investors Fight Stay In $8.4B Buyout Dispute

    Shareholders of tax software company Avalara are fighting a motion by the company in Washington federal court to stay litigation accusing it of misleading investors ahead of an $8.4 billion deal to take the company private.

  • October 24, 2025

    Experian Faces 4th Circ. Fight Over Credit Probe Dispute

    The named plaintiff in a proposed class action accusing Experian of not properly reinvestigating credit reports with alleged inaccuracies is appealing a North Carolina federal judge's opinion that dismissed the last vestiges of his complaint, court records show.

  • October 24, 2025

    Admin Of $600M Derailment Deal Accused Of 'Alarming' Errors

    Class counsel who inked a $600 million derailment settlement with Norfolk Southern called on an Ohio federal judge to revoke nearly $10 million in fees paid to the case's prior settlement administrator after an initial audit found "alarming, large-scale errors" in its claims management.

  • October 24, 2025

    Off The Bench: NBA Gambling Woes, Golfer's $50M Trial Win

    In this week's Off The Bench, the NBA faces a gambling scandal during its opening week, a Florida jury hands golfer Jack Nicklaus a $50 million victory in his defamation lawsuit, and DraftKings and the NHL step into the realm of prediction markets.

  • October 24, 2025

    Campbell's Sued Over 'No Artificial Flavors' Cape Cod Chips

    Campbell's falsely advertises its Cape Cod Kettle Cooked Potato Chips as containing "no artificial colors, flavors or preservatives" despite citric acid being an ingredient, which deceives consumers who prefer foods they think are healthier to consume, according to a proposed class action filed Thursday in New York federal court.

  • October 24, 2025

    Tricida Investors Win OK Of $14.2M Deal Over Kidney Drug

    A California federal judge on Thursday granted final approval to a $14.2 million settlement that ends a class action against Tricida Inc. founder Gerrit Klaerner claiming he and the company misled investors on the approval chances for their new kidney disease drug, including nearly $4 million for plaintiffs' counsel.

  • October 24, 2025

    Hagens Berman Wants Judge DQ, Alleges Drug Lawsuit Bias

    Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP asserted Friday that the Pennsylvania federal judge overseeing the long-running thalidomide birth-defect litigation in the state should be recused, alleging over 100 undisclosed private contacts between the court and special discovery master as an indication of bias.

  • October 24, 2025

    NFL Players' Race Bias Claims Tossed In Concussion Case

    A Pennsylvania federal judge on Friday denied a motion by a group of 16 former football players who claimed that they were wrongly denied benefits under the National Football League's 2015 concussion injury settlement.

  • October 24, 2025

    Abbott Wins Third Bellwether In Cow Milk Baby Formula MDL

    An Illinois federal judge has given Abbott Laboratories Inc. its third bellwether win in multidistrict litigation alleging that its cow-milk-based baby formula gives infants necrotizing enterocolitis, saying the company successfully demonstrated that the plaintiff's proffered human-milk-based alternative would not be feasible.

  • October 24, 2025

    Trucking Co. Will Pay $3M To End Workers' 401(k) Fee Suit

    Knight-Swift Transportation will pay $3 million to end a class action from workers who alleged the trucking business allowed excessive fees in its $432 million employee 401(k) plan, according to a filing in Arizona federal court.

  • October 24, 2025

    FPI's $3M Deal Gets Initial OK In Yardi Price-Fixing Suit

    A Washington federal judge has granted preliminary approval to property management firm FPI Management Inc.'s $2.8 million deal settling out of a proposed price-fixing class action accusing it and others of using Yardi Systems Inc.'s third-party software to inflate residential rents.

  • October 23, 2025

    Top Calif. Judge Warns Attys On AI, Eyes Antitrust Changes

    Speaking at an antitrust law conference Thursday, California Supreme Court Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero warned Golden State lawyers to use artificial intelligence "cautiously and not cut any corners," and talked about "important work" by the California Law Revision Commission that could result in the state's antitrust law being "untethered" from federal law.

  • October 23, 2025

    EV-Maker Rivian Will Pay $250M To End Investors' Fraud Suit

    Rivian Automotive Inc. investors asked a California federal judge Thursday to greenlight a $250 million settlement resolving their claims that the company underpriced its electric vehicles and misrepresented its profitability ahead of a blockbuster 2021 initial public offering, just one day before a summary judgment hearing.

  • October 23, 2025

    Gov't Defends Holding Noncitizens On Overseas Bases

    A Trump administration attorney told a D.C. federal judge Thursday that the government can hold noncitizen detainees on U.S. military installations all over the world if it wanted to, a claim that a lawyer challenging immigration detention at Guantanamo Bay called "unprecedented" and clearly wrong.

  • October 23, 2025

    Judge Stays Discovery In Berkshire Subsidiary Antitrust Case

    A federal judge on Thursday opted to stay the majority of discovery in a proposed antitrust class action against a Berkshire Hathaway-owned maker of calcium silicate insulation, or calsil, finding the cost of discovery in the case would be too "voluminous" to sort through with a pending motion for dismissal.

  • October 23, 2025

    Adidas Hid Ye's Hate Speech From Investors, 9th Circ. Told

    Adidas investors urged the Ninth Circuit on Thursday to revive allegations that the sportswear giant failed to disclose the risks of relying on the rapper Ye for a multibillion-dollar fashion partnership, arguing that executives hid evidence of his "raging" antisemitism, like his proposal for a swastika shoe design.

  • October 23, 2025

    Google Rips $425M Privacy Verdict As Users Seek $2.4B More

    A class of some 98 million cellphone users who won a $425 million jury verdict finding that Google unlawfully collected their information asked a California federal judge to make the tech giant disgorge another $2.36 billion, while Google asked the court to dismantle the class and vacate the verdict.

  • October 23, 2025

    Rio Tinto Investors Get Final OK On $139M Deal, Atty Fees

    A New York federal judge on Thursday awarded $17.7 million in attorney fees and granted final approval for a $139 million settlement reached in a securities class action that accused mining giant Rio Tinto of concealing delays and cost overruns in a $7 billion copper-gold mine development in southern Mongolia.

  • October 23, 2025

    Truist Bank $4M Robocall Deal, $1.3M Fee Get Final OK

    A $4.1 million settlement between Truist Bank and a group of nearly 6,000 cellphone users who alleged the bank violated the Telephone Consumer Protection Act by sending them unwanted robocalls was granted final approval in North Carolina federal court Thursday.

  • October 23, 2025

    Investor Says Biotech Co. Rigged Votes To Expand Share Pool

    A stockholder of Pennsylvania-based Ocugen Inc. sued the biotech company Thursday in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging that the company's board contrived a "clever" but unlawful scheme to push through a 2024 charter amendment that expanded its authorized share count without the required majority approval.

  • October 23, 2025

    NextGen Customers Seek Initial OK Of $19M Data Hack Deal

    A Georgia federal judge was asked Wednesday to grant preliminary approval of a settlement that would end a proposed class action against NextGen Healthcare over a 2023 data hack that allegedly affected more than 1 million people.

  • October 23, 2025

    Lending App EarnIn Users Must Arbitrate NC Class Claims

    Users of payday loan app EarnIn must arbitrate claims that the company's cash advance product violates North Carolina's consumer protection laws, a federal judge ruled, finding that the users clearly agreed to arbitration when they signed up for the app.

  • October 23, 2025

    Ga. Civil Engineering Co. Hit With Data Breach Class Action

    A Georgia civil engineering firm was hit with a proposed class action over a 2024 data breach, as a former employee sharply criticized the company for taking weeks to resolve the hack and over nine months to report it.

  • October 23, 2025

    Triumph Tries Again To Dump Pork Price-Fixing Claims

    Triumph Foods urged a Minnesota federal court to reconsider throwing out claims against it concerning alleged price-fixing in the pork industry, saying it shouldn't be held responsible for the alleged actions of hog farmers and the company that sells the pork it processes.

Expert Analysis

  • Chancery Ruling Raises Bar For Advance Notice Bylaws Suits

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    The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent ruling in Siegel v. Morse will make it more difficult for plaintiffs to successfully challenge advance notice bylaws before the emergence of an actual or threatened proxy contest, presumably reducing the occurrence of such challenges, say attorneys at Venable.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Becoming A Firmwide MVP

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    Though lawyers don't have a neat metric like baseball players for measuring the value they contribute to their organizations, the sooner new attorneys learn skills frequently skipped in law school — like networking, marketing, client development and case evaluation — the more valuable, and less replaceable, they will be, says Alex Barnett at DiCello Levitt.

  • Age Bias Suit Against Aircraft Co. Offers Lessons For Layoffs

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    In Raymond v. Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, an aircraft maker's former employees recently dismissed their remaining claims after the Tenth Circuit rejected their nearly decade-old collective action alleging age discrimination stemming from a 2013 reduction in force, reminding employers about the importance of carefully planning and documenting mass layoffs, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • How Mass Arbitration Defense Strategies Have Fared In Court

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    As businesses face consumers who leverage arbitration agreements to compel mass arbitration, companies are trying defense strategies like batching arbitration cases to reduce costs, and escaping specific mass arbitrations without rejecting the process completely, with varying results in the courtroom, say attorneys at Montgomery McCracken.

  • $38M Law Firm Settlement Highlights 'Unworthy Client' Perils

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    A recent settlement of claims against law firm Eckert Seamans for allegedly abetting a Ponzi scheme underscores the continuing threat of clients who seek to exploit their lawyers in perpetrating fraud, and the critical importance of preemptive measures to avoid these clients, say attorneys at Lockton Companies.

  • Series

    Teaching Business Law Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Teaching business law to college students has rekindled my sense of purpose as a lawyer — I am more mindful of the importance of the rule of law and the benefits of our common law system, which helps me maintain a clearer perspective on work, says David Feldman at Feldman Legal Advisors.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Discovery

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    The discovery process and the rules that govern it are often absent from law school curricula, but developing a solid grasp of the particulars can give any new attorney a leg up in their practice, says Jordan Davies at Knowles Gallant.

  • Web Tracking Ruling Signals Potential Broadening Of CCPA

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    The Northern District of California's recent decision in Shah v. Capital One Financial Corp. is notable, as it signals a potential broadening of the California Consumer Privacy Act's private right of action beyond data breaches to unauthorized, nonbreach disclosures involving the use of now-ubiquitous tracking technologies, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.

  • Opinion

    Int'l Athletes' Wages Should Be On-Campus Employment

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    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security should recognize participation in college athletics by international student-athletes as on-campus employment to prevent the potentially disastrous ripple effects on teams, schools and their surrounding communities, says Catherine Haight at Haight Law Group.

  • Series

    Playing Guitar Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Being a lawyer not only requires logic and hard work, but also belief, emotion, situational awareness and lots of natural energy — playing guitar enhances all of these qualities, increasing my capacity to do my best work, says Kosta Stojilkovic at Wilkinson Stekloff.

  • Crisis Management Lessons From The Parenting Playbook

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    The parenting skills we use to help our kids through challenges — like rehearsing for stressful situations, modeling confidence and taking time to reset our emotions — can also teach us the fundamentals of leading clients through a corporate crisis, say Deborah Solmor at the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation and Cara Peterman at Alston & Bird.

  • Justices' Labcorp Questions Explore Class Cert. Tensions

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    At the recent oral argument before the U.S. Supreme Court in Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings v. Davis, the justices' questioning highlighted a fundamental tension between constitutional standing requirements, the procedural framework of Rule 23, and the practical challenges of managing large, diverse classes in complex litigation, say attorneys at Winston & Strawn.

  • Series

    Adapting To Private Practice: From NY Fed To BigLaw

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    While the move to private practice brings a learning curve, it also brings chances to learn new skills and grow your network, requiring a clear understanding of how your skills can complement and contribute to a firm's existing practice, and where you can add new value, says Meghann Donahue at Covington.

  • Top 3 Litigation Finance Deal-Killers, And How To Avoid Them

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    Like all transactions, litigation finance deals can sometimes collapse, but understanding the most common reasons for failure, including a lack of trust or a misunderstanding of deal terms, can help both parties avoid problems, say Rebecca Berrebi at Avenue 33 and Boris Ziser at Schulte Roth.

  • How Attys Can Use A Therapy Model To Help Triggered Clients

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    Attorneys can lean on key principles from a psychotherapeutic paradigm known as the "Internal Family Systems" model to help manage triggered clients and get settlement negotiations back on track, says Jennifer Gibbs at Zelle.

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