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  • videocam On-Demand
  • card_travel Class Action and Other Litigation
  • schedule 90 minutes

Mediation for Improved Class Action Settlements: Timing, Process, Insurance, Techniques, Critical Terms

$297.00

This course is $0 with these passes:

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Description

Federal Rule Civil Procedure 23(e) requires court approval before claims, issues, or defenses of a certified class may be settled, voluntarily dismissed, or compromised. Under Rule 23(e)(1), before notice of the settlement can be sent to settlement class members, the court must conclude that it "will likely be able to approve" the proposed settlement and that it will likely be able to certify the proposed class. Rule 23(e)(2) sets out several factors courts must consider in deciding whether the settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable, and should receive final approval.

Mediation is a vital tool not only for reaching a class settlement but also for having sufficient data and evidence to present to the court to justify notice to the class under Rule 23(e)(1) and final approval under Rule 23(e)(2). The involvement of a neutral mediator can demonstrate that the settlement negotiation was at arms-length without collusion and that the requirements of the Rule have been met.

But even at mediation, there are significant terms and issues to address, such as the settlement class definition, the scope of releases, the timing and manner of payments, settlement administration, the disposition of unclaimed funds, injunctive relief, and what happens if the settlement fails.

Listen as this experienced panel discusses why mediation with a mediator experienced in class actions has become an indispensable tool in class action settlements.

Presented By

Donald R. Frederico
Adjunct Professor of Law
Miscellaneous

Mr. Frederico leads Pierce Atwood's class action defense practice, which has received a National Tier One ranking since 2017 in U.S. News-Best Lawyers "Best Law Firms" reports. A senior trial attorney with more than three decades of courtroom experience, he has represented defendants in a wide array of class actions in federal and state court, including in such areas as consumer fraud, product liability, labor and employment, environmental and toxic torts, antitrust, and civil RICO.

Bryan Schwartz
Attorney
Bryan Schwartz Law

Mr. Schwartz has represented clients' interests before a wide range of adjudicative bodies: from the United States District Court, to United States Courts of Appeals; from California Superior Courts to the California Supreme Court; from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, to the Merit Systems Protection Board; from the United States Department of Labor, to labor arbitration before the American Arbitration Association and other organizations. He has helped many grateful clients get their careers back on track after employer wrongdoing derailed them, obtaining tens of millions in recovery for employees across the country.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Wednesday, August 12, 2020

  • schedule

    1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT

  1. Timing of mediation
  2. The role of insurance
  3. Process-related issues
  4. Negotiation techniques
  5. Role of the mediator

This panel will review these and other issues that may arise in mediation:

  • Balancing the costs of litigation against risk management decisions with limited information
  • How to conduct the risk analysis
  • Dealing with insurer vs. insured dynamics
  • What to do when the parties seem hopelessly apart
  • When should the mediator make a settlement proposal?
  • What key terms should be documented in a mediation term sheet?