Author Archives: Brian Wolfman

Federal Trade Commission issues staff report on class-action notices, redress methods, claims rates, and check-cashing rates; agency sets comment period and October 29 public meeting

The Federal Trade Commission has issued a staff report on class-action notices, redress methods, claims rates, and check-cashing rates based on the agency's survey of the results in 149 consumer class actions. The FTC has put together this home page on the report, which contains links to related information.  Consistent with other data and anecdotal […]

“CPFB head misguided in reliance on consumer education”

That's the title of this piece in The Hill by law prof Lauren Willis. WIllis's bio notes that "[s]he is a leading critic of the use of financial education, disclosures, and 'nudges' (default settings) in consumer policy-making." Willis's Hill piece applies that critique to the regulatory approach of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau under the direction […]

Ninth Circuit: FOIA’s “reading room” provision is judicially enforceable

The Ninth Circuit today issued its decision in Animal Legal Defense Fund v. USDA. Here's the court's summary of the decision: The panel reversed in part and affirmed in part the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction of plaintiffs’ action against the U.S. Department of Agriculture, alleging claims under the Freedom of […]

What consumer-protection law can do when the FAA doesn’t get in the way: Eleventh Circuit strikes down contractual forum-selection and class-action-waiver clauses as contrary to public policy

Yesterday, in Davis v. Oasis Legal Finance Operating Company, the Eleventh Circuit struck down contractual forum-selection and class-action-waiver clauses as contrary to public policy. In Davis, a class of borrowers sued lenders, claiming that their loan agreements violated Georgia usury laws. The lenders sought to tank the case on the basis of contractual forum-selection and […]

Eleventh Circuit says no Article III standing in TCPA suit over receipt of one unsolicited text message

The Eleventh Circuit has just held in Salcedo v. Hanna that, under the circumstances pleaded there, a plaintiff who received one unsolicited text message lacked Article III standing to sue under Telephone Consumer Protection Act. The court relied on the Supreme Court's decision in Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540 (2016), and maintained […]

Ninth Circuit holds that ERISA claims are arbitrable, overruling its own precedent based on later Supreme Court arbitration ruling

The Ninth Circuit has held, in Dorman v. Charles Schwab, that ERISA claims (brought in court in a class action) can be forced out of court and into individual arbitration through an arbitration clause in an amendment to an ERISA 401(k) plan forced on Schwab's employees. Here's how the Ninth Circuit's informal summary explains the […]

Judicial identity, politics, and class certification

Law profs Stephen Burbank and Sean Farhang have written Politics, Identity, and Class Certification on the U.S. Courts of Appeals, which asks whether there are associations between personal characteristics of appellate judges and the party of the presidents who appointed those judges, among other things, and class-certification decisions. Here is the abstract: This article draws […]

California Supreme Court rejects strict class-certification “ascertainability” requirement

The California Supreme Court today issued its unanimous decision in Noel v. Thrifty Payless Inc., which rejected a strict class-certification "ascertainability" requirement sometimes associated with decisions of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. This paragraph sums up the issue and the court's conclusion: This case is a putative class action brought on […]

The conflict between the increasingly restrictive due-process constraints on personal jurisdiction and substantive state products-liability law

That's the topic of The New Privity by law prof Alexi Lahav. I thought the article would be interesting to our readers, who (1) may be concerned about the Supreme Court's expanding due-process restrictions on where alleged corporate wrongdoers may be sued and (2) want products-liability law to remain robust and adaptable. Here is the […]