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Session-Replay Class Action Tossed by the Eighth Circuit
February 21, 2025 | Blog | By Esteban Morales, Joshua Briones
In a recent appellate decision, Jones v. Bloomingdales.com, LLC, the Eighth Circuit has cast doubt over the merits of these lawsuits at the federal level.
Can a Consumer Plausibly Allege Your Product Labeling is False or Misleading Under California Law?
December 12, 2024 | Blog | By Paige Adaskaveg, Daniel Herling, Arameh Zargham O'Boyle, Sebastian Navarro
The following decisions provide useful guidance for crafting product labeling that is resilient to legal challenges brought under California’s consumer protection laws.
Arbitration Clauses and Class Action Waivers in Residential Leases: Are They Enforceable?
September 4, 2024 | Blog | By Mathilda McGee-Tubb, Janki Viroja
Landlords and property managers are increasingly adding arbitration clauses with class action waivers to their residential leases. These lease provisions can protect landlords from the significant time and costs associated with litigating claims brought by residents, including potential class claims that present high exposure risk for multifamily owners and managers. But the enforceability of these types of provisions remains an open question in many states.
District Court Denies Class Cert in TCPA Suit on Ascertainability Grounds
August 2, 2024 | Blog | By Joshua Briones, Esteban Morales, Nadia Zivkov
In a win for Defendant IQVIA, Inc., accused of allegedly sending faxes in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania denied Plaintiff Brian J. Lyngaas D.D.S.’s (Lyngaas) motion for class certification, agreeing with IQVIA that the class did not cross the Third Circuit’s threshold ascertainability requirement.
Fashion Nova’s Arbitration Clause Fades Away
March 1, 2024 | Blog | By Geoffrey Friedman, Matthew Hurley
Online retailers routinely include arbitration clauses in the terms of service for their website, seeking to send any consumer claims to arbitration and to eliminate a consumer’s right to file a class action lawsuit.
Significant Unruh Act and ADA Website Accessibility Ruling from the California Court of Appeal
August 23, 2022 | Blog | By Todd Rosenbaum, Adam B. Korn, Macklin W. Thornton
In a significant August 2022 ruling, the California Court of Appeal narrowed the reach of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Unruh) as they apply to online-only businesses. The Appeals Court held in Martinez v. Cot’n Wash Inc. that the websites of online-only businesses are not places of public accommodation within the meaning of the ADA or with regard to Unruh. This decision is a welcome relief for small and medium-sized businesses throughout the country that have been frequent targets of demand letters and lawsuits from California plaintiffs.