masthead


  NELLCO Repository Home

Customized Email Alerts by Subject Area

Search

My Account

NELLCO Home



poweredbybepress

 

   logo
New York University School of Law

Available Papers  •  New York University School of Law Web Site  •  Search the Collection  •  Policies
NELLCO LSR > NYU > PLLTWP bealert

Getting Beyond Kansas
Samuel Issacharoff, Reiss Professor of Constitutional Law, NYU School of Law

originally published at 74 UMKCLR 613 (2006)

Download the Paper (PDF format) - August 1, 2006 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:

This essay, written for a symposium on the 20th anniversary of Philips Petroleum v. Shutts, critically examines the legacy of Shutts. The first part argues that Shutss solved the immediate problem of allowing a centralized forum to adjudicate common claims of market-based harms, despite the multistate citizenship of the affected individuals. Shutts handled this by applying a due process balancing approach to the question of personal jurisdiction and, in turn, allowing notice and the ability to opt out to suffice to establish binding personal jurisdiction over class actions. Shutts could not, however, provide a mechanism to ensure that the forum in which the case was consolidated was the most appropriate place to litigate the matter, as opposed to simply being an appropriate forum. The result was widespread forum-shopping in class actions. That problem has been addressed, to some extent, by the newly enacted Class Action Fairness Act.

The second part of this essay addresses the problem of choice of law once a case is consolidated in a single proceeding. Shutts struck down the application of forum law to transactions that were unrelated to the Kansas site of the litigation. But Shutts left open the question of what the permissible parameters of choice of law should be. This essay concludes with an argument for why the use of a standardized body of law, such as that from the home state of the defendant, is the necessary next step for the efficient adjudication of common market-based claims.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Samuel Issacharoff, "Getting Beyond Kansas" (August 1, 2006). New York University School of Law. New York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper 33.
http://lsr.nellco.org/nyu/plltwp/papers/33




REPOSITORY HOME  | SEARCH  | MY ACCOUNT  | NELLCO HOME |
Powered by bepress.