Many of our readers are consumer lawyers. Many of them handle complex, aggregated litigation, so they may be interested in Collected Wisdom on Selecting Leaders and Managing MDLs by law professor Elizabeth Burch and U.S. district judge Stephen Bough. Here is the abstract:
Today, nearly one out of every two new suits filed in federal civil court is part of a multidistrict litigation (MDL). Initially designed to organize antitrust cases against electrical equipment manufacturers, MDL’s adaptability and minimal requirements made it the preferred approach for coordinating pretrial process for all manner of cases, from securities, employment, intellectual property, and antitrust to sales practices, common disasters, and products liability. Yet, the simplicity of MDL’s technical requirements—that cases are pending in different districts and share a common factual question—belie the complexity of the proceedings themselves. Governed principally by insiders’ unwritten but longstanding norms, both newly-appointed MDL judges and lawyers with cases suddenly swept up in MDL may find themselves in unfamiliar waters.
For those both old and new to this burgeoning world, we have collected case-management wisdom from judges handling the thorniest of MDLs: products-liability proceedings with over 500 cases. Consider this article an insider’s guide on how to navigate the critical first step—appointing lead attorneys. We also offer best-practice tips on permitting dissent and objections, heading off meritless cases, developing future stars, keeping lawyers fiscally responsible, progressing cases, maintaining transparency, and seeking help from magistrate judges versus special masters.