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It's not unusual to hear
complaints on talk radio or the talking head cable
stations about the so-called problem of class action
lawsuits. It just doesn't seem fair that some lawyer
brings a class action, and makes a million dollars in
attorney fees, and all I got was a lousy few dollars, or
maybe just a gift certificate. Right?
Wrong.
It seems unfair only if you
don't understand what class actions were invented to do.
And unfortunately, most Americans do not understand.
Here's the type of problem that class actions were
intended to correct: Suppose I own an electric company,
and I figure out a way to overcharge each of my
customers by ten dollars. Millions of customers! Tens of
Millions of dollars!! And here's the beauty part: Since
each customer only lost ten dollars, who is going to
hire a lawyer to try to get it back? What a great scam!!
Even if it's discovered, most people will simply write
off the loss as too small a problem to worry about. But
as the electric company owner, I have hit the jackpot to
the tune of ten million dollars!
That's the type of wrong that class actions were
intended to correct. And without class actions, the
wealthy can nickel-and-dime the little guy, safe in the
knowledge that the individual losses are too small to
bother with, even for a working man.
How do class actions solve this problem?
In a class action, a bunch of
people can act together to recover those little
overcharges. One lawyer acts for everyone, so that it
becomes economically feasible to go to court. Here's how
it works: One victim gets a lawyer. If that lawyer can
convince the judge that there are a large number of
similarly-situated other victims, then the judge can
"certify" the class. Once a class is certified, then any
victim who does not specifically object is automatically
included.
At the end of the case, all
of the members of the class get their ten dollars back,
less the fee for the attorney who brought the suit.
Sometimes, that fee is a million dollars.
Now, a million dollar
attorney fee may seem like a lot. And it is. But class
actions are a huge amount of work, and are very risky.
If the wrongdoer goes out of business, all of that work
may be for nothing. But the bottom line is this: The
purpose of class actions is to recover money that was
stolen from the little guy.
And isn't it better to return
most of the money, less the attorney fee, than it is to
allow the thief to keep it all?
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