The union of punitive damages and class actions can be aptly described with Samuel Johnson’s famous quotation regarding marriage: “The triumph of hope over experience.” By most conventional wisdom, there is little future for plaintiffs or defendants who desire to resolve punitive damages claims globally using the procedural vehicle of a class action. From a conceptual perspective, however, there are circumstances under which the union could function. This Article explores those possibilities, not in the spirit of normative support, but in the spirit of exploring theories that may have some prospective vitality. Notwithstanding the chilly reception that punitive damages class actions have received from appellate courts, there are several app...
In 2001 the Supreme Court, in Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., suggested that...
From their origins until the present date, class actions have rested on the assumption that those wi...
There is widespread agreement that tort (and criminal) law developed historically as an alternativ...
The union of punitive damages and class actions can be aptly described with Samuel Johnson’s famous ...
Conventional wisdom holds that the punitive damages class action is susceptiblenot only to doctrinal...
In this Article, I consider whether limited generosity classes may be used to determine a defendan...
Punitive damages and class actions can be viewed as sharing a common economic function – creating op...
Courts and commentators have often embraced the class action device as an ideal means of assessing p...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
Punitive damages were described by one early court as an unsightly and an unhealthy excrescense. A...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
This Note argues that a Rule 23 class action offers the best way to manage multiple actions for puni...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
In 2001 the Supreme Court, in Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., suggested that...
From their origins until the present date, class actions have rested on the assumption that those wi...
There is widespread agreement that tort (and criminal) law developed historically as an alternativ...
The union of punitive damages and class actions can be aptly described with Samuel Johnson’s famous ...
Conventional wisdom holds that the punitive damages class action is susceptiblenot only to doctrinal...
In this Article, I consider whether limited generosity classes may be used to determine a defendan...
Punitive damages and class actions can be viewed as sharing a common economic function – creating op...
Courts and commentators have often embraced the class action device as an ideal means of assessing p...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
Punitive damages were described by one early court as an unsightly and an unhealthy excrescense. A...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
A contemporary theory of punitive damages must answer two questions: (1) what place, if any, do puni...
This Note argues that a Rule 23 class action offers the best way to manage multiple actions for puni...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
In 2001 the Supreme Court, in Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., suggested that...
From their origins until the present date, class actions have rested on the assumption that those wi...
There is widespread agreement that tort (and criminal) law developed historically as an alternativ...