Friday, June 20, 2008
Scheuerman on the Relationship Between Punitive Damages & Class Actions
Sheila Scheuerman (Charleston) just posted an article entitled "Two World Collide: How the Supreme Court's Recent Punitive Damages Jurisprudence Affects Class Actions" on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This article examines the intersection between two controversial areas of the law - punitive damages and class actions - and argues that the Supreme Court's recent jurisprudence clarifying the due process limits on punitive damages has broad implications on the procedural laws governing the types of cases that can properly be certified as a class action. Specifically, the article discusses the Supreme Court's evolving approach to punitive damages from one that considered the harm a defendant's conduct caused to society as a whole to one that now focuses almost exclusively on the harm to the specific individual bringing the lawsuit. This shift, which recently culminated in the Court's 2007 decision in Philip Morris USA v. Williams, constitutionally requires that the amount of a punitive damages award relate to the amount of harm suffered by the party bringing the suit. That requirement is at odds with class action practices that treat punitive damages as a common, class-wide issue and that have allowed juries to assess a punitive damages award before evaluating the harm to the individual class members. The article argues, therefore, that where injuries are not uniform among class members, punitive damages cannot be pursued as a class-wide remedy.
ADL
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/mass_tort_litigation/2008/06/scheuerman-on-t.html
It's a very thought provoking article. I believe the author's first name is Sheila, not Susan. She's one of the contributors to TortsProfblog.
Posted by: Cal Punitives | Jun 20, 2008 10:30:29 AM