Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-2011
Journal Title
Notre Dame Law Review
ISSN
0745-3515
Abstract
The intersection of federalism and class-action litigation has been an area of significant controversy in recent years. With the 2005 Class Action Fairness Act placing more high-stakes class actions into federal court, an especially crucial question is the extent to which the Erie doctrine and the Rules Enabling Act (REA) require federal courts to follow state class-action law. The Supreme Court’s decision in Shady Grove Orthopedic Associates v. Allstate Insurance Co. begins to confront this issue, but many unanswered questions remain. Under several lines of argument that were neither made nor considered in Shady Grove, the Erie doctrine and the REA would require federal courts to apply state class-action law, whether state law is more tolerant or less tolerant of class actions than the prevailing federal approach. In particular, Shady Grove leaves open the possibility that state class-action law may influence a federal court’s application of Rule 23’s certification requirements, as well as other matters - available remedies, statutes of limitations, and the preclusive effect of the ultimate judgment - that can arise during the course of a putative class action. This article identifies these important unresolved issues, and then suggests a more precise doctrinal framework for addressing them (and Erie/REA issues more generally).
First Page
1131
Last Page
1180
Num Pages
50
Volume Number
86
Issue Number
3
Publisher
University of Notre Dame Law School
Recommended Citation
Adam N. Steinman,
Our Class Action Federalism: Erie and the Rules Enabling Act after Shady Grove,
86
Notre Dame L. Rev.
1131
(2011).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.tamu.edu/facscholar/2032
File Type
Included in
Civil Procedure Commons, Judges Commons, Jurisprudence Commons, State and Local Government Law Commons, Supreme Court of the United States Commons