Month: June 2015

Asbestos Cases Account for 75% of Madison County, IL Cases

Madison County, a small county in southwestern Illinois that has long been a prime venue for plaintiffs’ lawyers, may be the asbestos litigation capitol of the world. A new report by the Madison-St. Clair Record shows that 74.6% of cases filed in Madison County circuit court are asbestos cases.

The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association chalked the numbers up to historically large concentrations of industry and population. However the Record’s analysis challenged the Association’s claim and showed that industry in Madison County has drastically dropped over the past thirty years and that the county’s population only represents 2% of Illinois’ populace.

Madison County became a go-to destination for filing class action lawsuits around the turn of the 21st century. By 2002 it ranked third nationwide in the number of class actions filed per year behind only Cook County, IL, and Los Angeles County, CA. Lawyers frequently file more mesothelioma cases in Madison County than any other county in the nation. This stems in large part due to “rampant forum shopping” which has been detailed by a U.S. Chamber of Commerce report due to Madison County judges (and the Illinois Appellate Court) largely ignoring the forum non conveniens doctrine. According to the report many cases have little, if any, connection to the county and a minimal connection to the state of Illinois (The Record’s analysis shows that 98% of plaintiffs in these cases do not reside in Illinois).

Tort reform has been slow to come to Illinois. While the Class Action Fairness Act may be responsible for a temporary reduction of class action cases filed in Madison County, the numbers have since rebounded. Recently the Illinois senate judiciary committee voted down Governor Bruce Rauner’s tort reform bill. He has since stated that he intends to continue negotiations on tort reform as part of the state budget process. The budget process is currently stalled.

Supreme Court Set to Revisit Class Action Standards

The U.S. Supreme Court recently granted certiorari to Tyson Foods, Inc. v. Bouaphakeo, a case which has the potential to shake up the class action bar.

The case revolves around a dispute raised by Tyson pork-processing workers from an Iowa plant who alleged they were underpaid for time spent putting on and taking off protective gear and walking to and from workstations. The scope of the class was created using statistical information about how much time the average Tyson worker took to don the gear and get to their work station. No individualized analysis of class members was undergone. The class was awarded a $5.8 million judgment at trial and the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the judgment. In challenging the judgment, Tyson contends the workers’ class should not have been certified because there were significant differences in the types of protective gear and equipment used by different workers. They argue these differences are significant enough to violate Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (FRCP) 23(a)(2), “there are questions of law or fact common to the class.” Under FRCP 23(b)(3), these questions must “predominate over any questions affecting only individual members.” Tyson further argues that class certification was inappropriate because hundreds of uninjured members (who would wrongfully be entitled to receive benefits) are in the class. The outcome of this case could be as groundbreaking as the Court’s 2011 decision in Wal-Mart Stores v. Dukes.

This case is representative of a series of litigation which has been winding its way through the federal courts. These cases all concern the same general question – whether or not a class can be certified by use of statistics when there are individualized differences among the members and the membership includes many individuals who are uninjured. The Supreme Court has yet to act on similar certiorari petitions, in Wal-Mart Stores v. Braun and Dow Chemical v. Industrial Polymers Inc.