Few issues have proven more vexing to private antitrust enforcement than those related to indirect-purchaser class actions. The current dual system of enforcement—federal and state—exacerbates the difficulty of litigating indirect-purchaser claims by layering procedural complexity on top of substantive complexity and by explicitly allowing (perhaps even incentivizing) duplicative recovery. Almost all commentators are in substantial agreement that reform is necessary, but Congress appears unlikely to take action on the issue in the near future. This Note proposes a procedural solution that would consolidate litigation in a single federal court based on the limited-fund class action model of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(1)(B). Under ...
American class actions are internationally regarded as a procedural form to avoid and widely critici...
Disgorgement is an equitable monetary remedy that requires a defendant to give up all ill-gotten gai...
Class actions are on the ropes. Courts in recent years have ramped up the standards governing the ce...
Few issues have proven more vexing to private antitrust enforcement than those related to indirect-p...
In Illinois Brick v. Illinois Co., the Supreme Court held that, under federal antitrust law, only di...
The landmark case of Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, which denied standing to indirect purchasers to...
California Antitrust laws, in contrast to the federal antitrust laws, permit recovery by a broad ran...
Section Four of the Clayton Act,2 the treble-damage action provision of the federal antitrust laws, ...
Any scheme for private antitrust enforcement is framed by two main questions: who will have standing...
The article discusses a court case Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, where in the U.S. Supreme Court d...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
In 1976, Congress passed the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Enforcement Act. This Act empowered state a...
This Article surveys several areas in which legislation might enhance the utility of federal class a...
American class actions are internationally regarded as a procedural form to avoid and widely critici...
Disgorgement is an equitable monetary remedy that requires a defendant to give up all ill-gotten gai...
Class actions are on the ropes. Courts in recent years have ramped up the standards governing the ce...
Few issues have proven more vexing to private antitrust enforcement than those related to indirect-p...
In Illinois Brick v. Illinois Co., the Supreme Court held that, under federal antitrust law, only di...
The landmark case of Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, which denied standing to indirect purchasers to...
California Antitrust laws, in contrast to the federal antitrust laws, permit recovery by a broad ran...
Section Four of the Clayton Act,2 the treble-damage action provision of the federal antitrust laws, ...
Any scheme for private antitrust enforcement is framed by two main questions: who will have standing...
The article discusses a court case Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, where in the U.S. Supreme Court d...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
In 1976, Congress passed the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Enforcement Act. This Act empowered state a...
This Article surveys several areas in which legislation might enhance the utility of federal class a...
American class actions are internationally regarded as a procedural form to avoid and widely critici...
Disgorgement is an equitable monetary remedy that requires a defendant to give up all ill-gotten gai...
Class actions are on the ropes. Courts in recent years have ramped up the standards governing the ce...