This Article examines the effect of the U.S. Supreme Court’s jurisdictional tightening in Daimler and Walden on mass litigation. This Article shows how the Supreme Court’s changes to general and specific jurisdiction, considered together, end the practice of tactically allocating non-diverse plaintiffs across state lines to defeat diversity jurisdiction in nationwide litigation, a doctrine this Article terms fraudulent aggregation. This Article places the doctrine of fraudulent aggregation in the context of fraudulent joinder, the emerging doctrine of fraudulent misjoinder, and other attempts to avoid federal court jurisdiction through artful pleading. Examples from recent products liability litigation show both the application of the doctr...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
In Marshel v. AFW Fabric Corp., decided on February 13,1976, the court unanimously sustained a chall...
The urban misdemeanor process relies on a wide variety of informal groupings and aggregations. Orde...
This Article examines the effect of the U.S. Supreme Court’s jurisdictional tightening in Daimler an...
Although it is destined for the personal jurisdiction canon, the Supreme Court’s eight-to-one decisi...
Aggregation—the ability to join parties or claims in a federal civil lawsuit—has usually been govern...
This Article will first review the intersection of federal jurisdiction and litigation strategy by e...
Playing off the strict requirements of federal diversity jurisdiction, plaintiffs can structure thei...
In the courts and in the academy, the ostensible commitment of American tort law to individualized j...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
If a plaintiff brings two claims, each with a 0.4 probability of being valid, the plaintiff will usu...
This Article evaluates a conundrum and identifies a genuine risk faced by state and federal courts i...
No procedural topic has garnered more attention in the past fifty years than the class action and ag...
In early 2014, the Supreme Court decided two new personal jurisdiction cases that will have a deep a...
In a quartet of recent decisions, the Supreme Court substantially reshaped the analysis of due proce...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
In Marshel v. AFW Fabric Corp., decided on February 13,1976, the court unanimously sustained a chall...
The urban misdemeanor process relies on a wide variety of informal groupings and aggregations. Orde...
This Article examines the effect of the U.S. Supreme Court’s jurisdictional tightening in Daimler an...
Although it is destined for the personal jurisdiction canon, the Supreme Court’s eight-to-one decisi...
Aggregation—the ability to join parties or claims in a federal civil lawsuit—has usually been govern...
This Article will first review the intersection of federal jurisdiction and litigation strategy by e...
Playing off the strict requirements of federal diversity jurisdiction, plaintiffs can structure thei...
In the courts and in the academy, the ostensible commitment of American tort law to individualized j...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
If a plaintiff brings two claims, each with a 0.4 probability of being valid, the plaintiff will usu...
This Article evaluates a conundrum and identifies a genuine risk faced by state and federal courts i...
No procedural topic has garnered more attention in the past fifty years than the class action and ag...
In early 2014, the Supreme Court decided two new personal jurisdiction cases that will have a deep a...
In a quartet of recent decisions, the Supreme Court substantially reshaped the analysis of due proce...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
In Marshel v. AFW Fabric Corp., decided on February 13,1976, the court unanimously sustained a chall...
The urban misdemeanor process relies on a wide variety of informal groupings and aggregations. Orde...