This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in class suits and proposes returning class action suits to their equity roots. Part I explores the historical trajectory of class action suits, beginning with their emergence under equity and their status within the Seventh Amendment\u27s law/equity distinction. It then explores the early American jurisprudential recognition of them as exclusively in equity and the erosion of this recognition in the wake of the Rules Enabling Act and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Part II surveys the arc of Supreme Court decisional law that led to Justice Souter\u27s pronouncement in Ortiz, examining how various factors, including the Court\u27s reading of t...
The seventh amendment to the United States Constitution requires that [i]n Suits at common law . . ...
Courts have struggled to define the scope and meaning of the seventh amendment over the past two cen...
Much ink has been spilled over the class action device. Commentators have thoroughly analyzed both ...
This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in clas...
This article examines the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence relating to the historic Seventh Amendment r...
The Federal Bill of Rights and state constitutions rely heavily on procedural protections, especiall...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The Seventh Amendment to the United States Cons...
Recognizing the continually increasing burden placed on the jury in complex litigation cases, the au...
The right to a jury trial in civil cases, as enumerated in the Seventh Amendment to the United State...
Class actions and shareholder derivative lawsuits are both forms of representative litigation that h...
The Founding Fathers thought the jury-trial right was so fundamental to our system of justice that t...
This Comment examines the growing trend to strike jury demands in complex commercial litigation. The...
The debate over improving the civil justice system has gone through many permutations over the years...
During the last forty years, the increasing complexity of problems in the law and the merger of law ...
The seventh amendment to the United States Constitution requires that [i]n Suits at common law . . ...
Courts have struggled to define the scope and meaning of the seventh amendment over the past two cen...
Much ink has been spilled over the class action device. Commentators have thoroughly analyzed both ...
This Note argues that the Seventh Amendment\u27s jury trial right does not include litigants in clas...
This article examines the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence relating to the historic Seventh Amendment r...
The Federal Bill of Rights and state constitutions rely heavily on procedural protections, especiall...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The Seventh Amendment to the United States Cons...
Recognizing the continually increasing burden placed on the jury in complex litigation cases, the au...
The right to a jury trial in civil cases, as enumerated in the Seventh Amendment to the United State...
Class actions and shareholder derivative lawsuits are both forms of representative litigation that h...
The Founding Fathers thought the jury-trial right was so fundamental to our system of justice that t...
This Comment examines the growing trend to strike jury demands in complex commercial litigation. The...
The debate over improving the civil justice system has gone through many permutations over the years...
During the last forty years, the increasing complexity of problems in the law and the merger of law ...
The seventh amendment to the United States Constitution requires that [i]n Suits at common law . . ...
Courts have struggled to define the scope and meaning of the seventh amendment over the past two cen...
Much ink has been spilled over the class action device. Commentators have thoroughly analyzed both ...