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New Class Action Proposals: Ring Alarm Bells For Business |
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Written by Graham Maher
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Monday, 06 September 2010 10:31 |
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The NSW Attorney-General has this month announced plans to introduce new class action laws which will give the NSW Supreme Court the power to order that unclaimed damages awarded in class actions be paid to a public interest beneficiary which is not a party to, or represented in, the proceedings.
While a draft of these laws is not yet available, the proposals raise a number of important legal issues and practical concerns for business.
Because potential claimants need not be notified individually of a class action, their rights may be affected without their knowledge. Further, in class actions where the total amount of damages can be determined with some accuracy, but individual claims are small, identifying potential claimants may be difficult and some may not bother to recover their damages.
When class action procedures were introduced in Australia, the expressed purpose was to improve access to justice for those who could not otherwise afford to bring Court proceedings and to improve the efficiency with which Courts were able to deal with a multitude of claims which had substantially common issues in dispute. Currently the Federal Court cannot make orders involving direct or indirect payments for the benefit of persons who are not a party to the proceedings or part of a represented class.
Any unclaimed monies revert to the defendant. This position will change if the proposed class action laws are introduced in NSW.
Other jurisdictions have already used so called Cy-pres Remedies to distribute unclaimed monies in class actions.
Cy-pres Remedies were developed by Courts as part of the law of trusts. The term means "as close as possible". Where a trust would otherwise fail, Courts imputed an intention to the creator of the trust to confer the benefit on a closely related object or purpose.
So, for example, money placed on trust in order to eradicate polio from Australia, could be redirected by the Court toward the eradication of glaucoma once the polio problem had been successfully tackled. Without such remedies the trust monies would revert to the trust's creator or beneficiaries after polio had been eradicated.
Very careful consideration needs to be given to these new class action laws once a draft bill is released. If cy-pres awards are to be part of the new laws, and assuming they survive potential constitutional challenge, at a minimum, clear and specific direction needs to be given as to how and when judges should exercise their discretion to make such awards.
This article is available in full at Mondaq.
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