This essay is a history of the doctrine of res judicata in class suits. Itreveals that the condition of precedent on this issue was from the beginningequivocal and confused, and that it remains somewhat so today
This article traces the history of the class action. It begins with the early Bill of Peace in Engli...
The class action has come of age in America. With increasing regularity, class litigation plays a ce...
This essay is an invited response to Fred Smiths Vanderbilt Law Review article Undemocratic Restrain...
From their origins until the present date, class actions have rested on the assumption that those wi...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
This Note will attempt to work out a general approach to class actions recognizing the public law ch...
In the first portion of this Essay, I reviewed Professor Martin Redish’s theory that the application...
Despite the intense focus that courts and commentators have trained upon class litigation for the la...
As a procedural device the class action has a respectably long history and, from its beginnings, has...
Some 500 frontage owners in a certain described residential district entered into mutual covenants w...
The purpose of this article is to discuss numerous aspects of the class device, to discuss the many ...
Much ink has been spilled over the class action device. Commentators have thoroughly analyzed both ...
In this Article, Professor Monaghan addresses an issue of pressing concern in class action litigatio...
From the perspective of the present day, Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure contains a ...
The newly reconstituted Supreme Court of the United States has become the center of an earnest contr...
This article traces the history of the class action. It begins with the early Bill of Peace in Engli...
The class action has come of age in America. With increasing regularity, class litigation plays a ce...
This essay is an invited response to Fred Smiths Vanderbilt Law Review article Undemocratic Restrain...
From their origins until the present date, class actions have rested on the assumption that those wi...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
This Note will attempt to work out a general approach to class actions recognizing the public law ch...
In the first portion of this Essay, I reviewed Professor Martin Redish’s theory that the application...
Despite the intense focus that courts and commentators have trained upon class litigation for the la...
As a procedural device the class action has a respectably long history and, from its beginnings, has...
Some 500 frontage owners in a certain described residential district entered into mutual covenants w...
The purpose of this article is to discuss numerous aspects of the class device, to discuss the many ...
Much ink has been spilled over the class action device. Commentators have thoroughly analyzed both ...
In this Article, Professor Monaghan addresses an issue of pressing concern in class action litigatio...
From the perspective of the present day, Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure contains a ...
The newly reconstituted Supreme Court of the United States has become the center of an earnest contr...
This article traces the history of the class action. It begins with the early Bill of Peace in Engli...
The class action has come of age in America. With increasing regularity, class litigation plays a ce...
This essay is an invited response to Fred Smiths Vanderbilt Law Review article Undemocratic Restrain...