Five years ago, the Class Action Fair Act (“CAFA”) was enacted to deal with the onslaught of class action cases and to ensure, if I may say, fairness in the manner in which these cases were litigated but it appears that the ever active and creative plaintiffs bar is coming up with new ways to allow cases to remain in state court, rather than going to federal court where perhaps they feel or believe that the chances of winning are slimmer.  Defense counsel must adjust and adapt, quickly.

What some plaintiff counsel are doing is structuring and narrowing their Complaints so they can circumvent the jurisdictional diversity that the law mandates be applied. The fact is that CAFA was enacted to prevent abuse of the class action procedure/device.  The law eased the rules for establishing diversity jurisdiction so plaintiff lawyers could not engage in ting forum-shopping and lodge their suits in what they believed were states friendly to the plaintiff’s side. In this manner, defendants were able more facilely to remove cases to the federal courts.

The trick that has been discovered is to plead the case quite narrowly, in a real focused manner. For example, if the case is filed for less than one-hundred plaintiffs and damages of less than five million dollars are sought, the lawyers may be able to salvage keeping the case in state court, which they may perceive as a tactical advantage or may, in fact, be a tactical advantage.   In this analysis, the particular venue and/or the particular judge that preside over the case.

Often, class action cases settle. Rarely do they go to trial, given the enormous risks for the employer, i.e. fee-shifting, as well as for plaintiffs and their lawyers, who stand to realize nothing from a case if the class action motion is defeated or the case falls on the merits, e.g. employees found exempt, as a class.  Thus, there is much machination to get a case before the “right” judge who may broker. Whether with heavy hand or not, a settlement.

A recent, illustrative example. In a 2008 case involving Abbott Laboratories, a federal judge in the Eastern District of Tennessee ruled that the plaintiffs were trying to evade the dictates of CAFA by filing eleven class action Complaints, which mirrored each other, except that the period of time for which recovery was sought was different for each  “class.”   The various complaints defined the class period as various one-year periods ranging from 1990-2008.

However, each of the discrete Complaints included contentions relating to the entire reach of the charged conspiracy for all of the separate time periods in the ten years at issue.  The judge held that these artificial time demarcations were an attempt to ensure that the damages in each case were less than five million dollars, in order to circumvent CAFA. Essentially, he found that the plaintiffs were “gerrymandering” the cases to avoid the application of the CAFA.