“No Actual Harm Required” – California Court Of Appeal Kicks Open The Door For Standing Under The ICRAA

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., Jennifer A. Riley, Daniel D. Spencer, Katherine L. Alphonso, and Kenny T. Tran

Duane Morris Takeaways: On January 21, 2026, in Yeh v. Barrington Pacific, LLC, Case No. B337904, 2026 Cal. App. LEXIS 30 (Cal. App. Jan. 21, 2026), the California Court of Appeal for the Second Appellate District held that plaintiffs have standing to sue under the Investigative Consumer Reporting Agencies Act (ICRAA) without showing any actual injury because the statute authorizes a $10,000 minimum recovery untethered to any actual harm. At the same time, the Court of Appeal affirmed dismissal of the Unfair Competition Law (UCL) claims, reinforcing that UCL standing remains firmly rooted in concrete economic loss that cannot be manufactured from purely technical statutory violations.

Case Background

Barrington Pacific, LLC (Barrington) and its related entities own and operate multiple apartment complexes across Los Angeles, all managed under a centralized process. Id. at *3. Prospective tenants were required to complete a standardized rental application, authorize background screening, and pay a nonrefundable $41.50 application fee. Id. at *4. That fee was expressly allocated to obtaining credit reports, eviction histories, and resident screening reports, as well as processing internal costs. Id. Each applicant signed a written authorization permitting Barrington to obtain background information “including, but not limited to, resident screening and credit checking.” Id.

Between November 2020 and July 2022, more than 100 applicants, who were ultimately approved as tenants, filed individual lawsuits alleging Barrington violated the ICRAA’s disclosure requirements. Id. The alleged violations were procedural in nature, including failure to provide plaintiffs with a means of requesting a copy of such reports, failure to identify the consumer reporting agency, failure to disclose the scope of the investigative consumer reports procured, and failure to offer or provide copies of the reports. Id. at *4-5. Notably, no plaintiff alleged inaccurate information, denial of housing, identity theft, or any adverse consequence whatsoever. Id. at *7. Three plaintiffs also asserted UCL claims premised on the same alleged ICRAA violations. Id. at *5.

After the cases were related and consolidated, with Yeh designated as the lead action, Barrington moved for summary judgment. Id. at *5. Barrington argued that plaintiffs lacked standing because they could not show concrete injury, relying heavily on Limon v. Circle K Stores Inc., 84 Cal.App.5th 671 (2002), which held that uninjured plaintiffs lack standing under the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) when claims are based solely on statutory violations. The trial court agreed, concluding that the ICRAA’s $10,000 provision did not create standing through statutory penalty and that plaintiffs suffered no harm because they became tenants and alleged no inaccuracies in any of the information Barrington had. Id. at *6-7. Summary judgment was entered for Barrington on both the ICRAA and UCL claims. Id. at *6.

The California Court of Appeal’s Decision

The Court of Appeal reversed as to the ICRAA, holding plaintiffs need not prove actual harm to bring an ICRAA claim. Id. at *25. Central to the Court of Appeal’s analysis was Civil Code section 1786.50(a)(1), which permits recovery of “[a]ny actual damages sustained by the consumer as a result of the failure or, except in the case of class actions, ten thousand dollars ($10,000), whichever sum is greater.” Id. at *19. Emphasizing the disjunctive “or,” the Court of Appeal concluded that actual damages and the $10,000 amount are alternative remedies, not cumulative or interdependent. Id. at *20. The Court of Appeal relied on a line of recent California decisions recognizing that statutory schemes may confer standing through statutory damages or penalties untethered from actual harm. It cited Chai v. Velocity Investments, LLC, 108 Cal.App.5th 1030 (2025), Guracar v. California Capital Insurance Co., 111 Cal.App.5th 337 (2024), and Kashanian v. National Enterprise Systems, Inc., 114 Cal.App.5th 1037 (2025), each of which held that statutory damages provisions create standing even where plaintiffs admit no concrete injury. Id. at *11-16.  Like those statutes, the ICRAA creates informational rights and attaches a fixed monetary consequence to their violation in order to punish and deter noncompliance. Id. at *18.

The Court of Appeal expressly declined to follow Limon, explaining that its reasoning was tied to the FCRA’s distinct statutory language and federal Article III standing concerns. See Limon, supra, 84 Cal.App.5th at 700-03. The Court of Appeal reasoned that the legislative materials make clear that the “ICRAA was designed to overcome the FCRA’s practical limitations by ensuring that consumers could obtain a nontrivial recovery and thus would be motivated to enforce ICRAA, even when actual damages were nonexistent.”  Id. at *24-25.  Legislative history also showed the California Legislature intentionally set a minimum recovery, which was $300 in 1975 and has since been increased to $10,000, to incentivize enforcement and compliance. Id. at *25. Of note, opponents of the ICRAA’s enactment criticized the statute precisely because it would impose liability “without regard to whether the individual has ever suffered damages,” further confirming that this result was not accidental but deliberate. Id. at *24.  

The Court’s Reasoning on the UCL Claims

Where the opinion strongly favors the defense bar is its treatment of the UCL claims, the Court of Appeal affirmed summary adjudication, holding that Business and Professions Code section 17204 requires injury in fact and loss of money or property, regardless of whether the predicate statute allows recovery without harm. Id. at *31-32. Relying on cases such as Peterson v. Cellco Partnership, 164 Cal.App.4th 1583 (2008), the Court of Appeal reiterated that private UCL standing demands real economic injury. Id. at *31.  Per Peterson, a private plaintiff must make a twofold showing: “he or she must demonstrate injury in fact and a loss of money or property caused by unfair competition.” Peterson, 164 Cal.App.4th at 1590.

Here, the Plaintiffs’ theory that the $41.50 application fee constituted lost money failed outright. Id. at *32. They argued that they were harmed because they were required to pay for a report that they were not given a copy of. Id. The Court of Appeal disagreed – the rental application described how the $41.50 non-refundable processing fee would be used to screen applicants with respect to their credit history and other background information. Id. Moreover, the application broke down the elements of the $41.50 fee: $22.99 for credit and screening reports, and $18.51 in costs, including overhead and soft costs, related to the processing of the application. Id. Since the application did not suggest that the $41.50 fee was for a consumer report to be provided to the applicant, the Court of Appeal determined that Plaintiffs received precisely what they paid for: the processing and consideration of their rental applications, which resulted in their approval as tenants. Id. at *32-33. Finally, any failure to provide plaintiffs with copies of their consumer reports within three days also does not constitute an injury because plaintiffs failed to allege any concrete or particularized harm as a result of the delay. Id. at *33.

The Court of Appeal emphasized that applicants paid for screening and processing, received exactly that, and were approved as tenants. Id. The alleged failure to timely provide copies of reports did not deprive plaintiffs of property, cause lost opportunities, or result in financial harm. Id. Technical noncompliance alone was not enough.

Implications for Companies

The takeaway here is twofold.

First, Investigative Consumer Reporting Agencies (ICRAs) under the ICRAA, loosely defined as any person who, for compensation, gathers or communicates information regarding a consumer’s character, reputation, or personal characteristics, usually obtained through extensive, often more personal investigative methods — such as interviews or public record checks — should carefully audit ICRAA disclosures as plaintiffs can proceed without needing to prove actual harm. This decision underscores the ICRAA as a strict liability statute with teeth, and technical compliance matters even when no one is harmed.

Second, this case confirms that California courts remain unwilling to dilute UCL standing requirements. Even in an era of expansive statutory enforcement, courts continue to draw a hard line against no injury, no loss UCL claims. This ruling provides powerful authority to limit exposure by cutting off UCL claims early where plaintiffs cannot show injury in fact and a loss of money or property.

Hot Off The Presses! The Duane Morris Data Breach Class Action Review – 2026 And The Duane Morris Privacy Class Action Review – 2026!

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaways: Data breaches are becoming increasingly common and detrimental to companies. The scale of data breach class actions continued its record growth in 2025, as companies faced copycat and follow-on lawsuits across multiple jurisdictions. The last year also saw a virtual explosion in privacy class action litigation. As a result, compliance with privacy and data privacy laws in the myriad of ways that companies interact with employees, customers, and third parties is a corporate imperative.

To that end, the class action team at Duane Morris is pleased to present the third editions of the Data Breach Class Action Review – 2026 and the Privacy Class Action Review – 2026. These publications analyze the key data breach and privacy-related rulings and developments in 2025 and the significant legal decisions and trends impacting data breach and privacy class action litigation for 2026. We hope that companies and employers will benefit from this resource and assist them with their compliance with these evolving laws and standards.

Click here to download a copy of the Duane Morris Data Breach Class Action Review – 2026 eBook.

Click here to download a copy of the Duane Morris Privacy Class Action Review – 2026 eBook.

Stay tuned for more data breach and privacy class action analysis coming soon on our weekly podcast, the Class Action Weekly Wire.

AI Hallucinated Case Citations Prompt Sanctions And Delay Class Action Settlement

By Gerald L Maatman, Jr., Shannon Noelle, and Elizabeth G. Underwood

Duane Morris Takeaways: On November 20, 2025, in Buchanan v. Vuori, Inc., No. 5:23-CV-01121 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 20, 2025), Magistrate Judge Nathanael M. Cousins of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California imposed sanctions on plaintiff’s counsel for using artificial intelligence to generate case law citations in a motion for preliminary approval of a wage and hour collective action settlement.  The sanctions included an order directing plaintiff’s counsel to pay $250 to the clerk of court, striking the motion without leave to refile, and referring plaintiff’s counsel to the Court’s Standing Committee on Professional Conduct.  Importantly, because of the sanctions, Magistrate Judge Cousins found plaintiff’s counsel to be an inadequate representative of the class and precluded plaintiff’s counsel from filing an additional motion for approval of the class settlement.  This required defense counsel to file a case management statement requesting a stipulation of dismissal that was approved on January 8, 2026.  Plaintiff’s counsel’s use of AI ultimately delayed final disposition of the action until months later and underscores the growing trend of judicial commitment to accountability with respect to attorney use of AI in drafting legal filings.

Case Background

On March 14, 2023, a former Vuori, Inc. (“Vuori”) employee, Terrence Buchanan, sued Vuori, alleging that it had violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and various California Labor Codes by miscalculating the overtime paid to their employees by failing to include commissions or bonuses in calculating overtime.  See Case No. 5:23-cv-01121, ECF No. 1. Eventually, the parties settled the litigation.

On October 3, 2025, after a first try for settlement approval failed, counsel for Plaintiff filed a second motion for preliminary approval of a collective action settlement (ECF No. 81) followed by a corrected motion on October 28, 2025 (ECF No. 89).  Upon review of the corrected motion, the Court found that the memorandum in support of the motion included 8 quotations “supposedly attributable to a real case” that did not actually appear in the cited case and “one nonexistent case.”  See ECF No. 96, at 1.  On November 5, 2025, the Court ordered plaintiff’s counsel to show cause as to why he should not be sanctioned pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(c) and referred to the Court’s Standing Committee on Professional Conduct under Civil Local Rule 11-6 for providing fabricated case law to the Court.  Plaintiff’s counsel filed a response and proof of service that he provided the Court’s order to show cause to his client.  See ECF Nos. 92, 93.  He also filed a supplemental response.  See ECF No. 94.  The Court held a hearing on the order to show cause on November 19, 2025, at which counsel and plaintiff Buchanan appeared.  See ECF No. 96, 1-2.

Order Imposing Sanctions And Finding Class Counsel Is Therefore Inadequate  

Magistrate Judge Cousins ordered sanctions by way of payment of $250 to the clerk of court pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(c), referred Plaintiff’s counsel to the Standing Committee on Professional Conduct pursuant to Civil Local Rule 11-6, and ordered that the motions for preliminary approval be stricken without leave to refile. 

In support of this decision, Magistrate Judge Cousins explained that “the rise in non-existent cases and quotations hallucinated by artificial intelligence tools” is of “particular concern.”  ECF No. 96 at 3.  He noted that Plaintiff’s counsel “acknowledge[d] without reservation” that his motion “contained one non-existent case citation.”  ECF No. 92, at 3 (citing ECF No. 92 at 2).  Plaintiff’s counsel also admitted to using about six different AI tools to prepare his motion “[a]s a solo practitioner under time pressure” and that he used the tools to check one another.  Id. at 3-4.  The Court noted that the corrected memorandum of law in support of the second motion for preliminary approval, did not correct the false case law hallucinated by the AI tools.  Id. at 4.  The Court made clear that the intentions of Plaintiff’s counsel were irrelevant and that his use of AI which “led him to submit a hallucinated case to the Court through his motion” and failure to conduct a reasonable inquiry into the law cited in his motion violated Rule 11(b) and Local Rule 11-4.  Id. at 4-5.  Specifically, the Court found that Plaintiff’s counsel violated his duty of candor owed to the tribunal under California Rule of Professional Conduct 3.3 by citing nonexistent cases and quotations to the Court and certifying “via signature that he had conducted reasonable inquiry into these citations when he had not.”  Id. at 5.

Though Plaintiff’s counsel offered to forfeit attorneys’ fees in the matter, to file an amended motion certifying that he verified all citations, and to complete continuing legal education, the Court declined his suggested sanctions and instead ordered that:  (1) plaintiffs’ second motion for preliminary approval of a class action settlement and corrected motion be stricken with prejudice; (2) Plaintiff’s counsel pay the clerk of court $250 by December 5, 2025; and (3) Plaintiff’s counsel be referred to the Court’s Standing Committee on Professional Conduct in connection with his violation of Local Rule 11-4 and unprofessional conduct.  As to the third remedial measure, the Standing Committee has authority to conduct further investigation or impose additional discipline, such as continuing legal education or notification of the state bar as it deems necessary and appropriate.  Magistrate Judge Cousins added that it was the Court’s “hope” that “the experience with the Standing Committee also proves constructive for Plaintiff’s counsel, who attests that he is a very busy sole practitioner who faces various logistical constraints.”  See ECF No. 96 at 6. 

Finally, and notably, the Court found that striking plaintiff’s motion for settlement approval “necessarily raises the questions” of whether Plaintiff’s counsel could adequately represent the class through final approval of settlement.  The Court found that Plaintiff’s counsel could not file an amended motion for preliminary approval of the class settlement because “it does not find that he is adequate class counsel, which would prevent the Court from approving a renewed motion for settlement approval.”  See ECF No. 96, at 7.

Delay Of Final Disposition Due To Sanctions And Inadequate Class Representative Finding  

On December 5, 2025, the Court docketed and acknowledged receipt of counsel’s payment of $250 to the clerk of court.  See ECF No. 98.  As Magistrate Judge Cousins found Plaintiff’s counsel to be an inadequate class representative and therefore prohibited him from filing further motions to approve the class action settlement, on January 7, 2026, counsel for Vuori was required to file a case management statement to get final disposition of the action and setting out Vuori’s position that the parties signed a settlement agreement containing “a general release of Plaintiff’s claims against Defendant” and, per the terms of that agreement, “Plaintiff was obligated to dismiss this action with prejudice no later than December 31, 2025.”  See ECF No. 100, at 2.  To that end, counsel for Vuori requested that “Plaintiff immediately dismiss this action with prejudice.”  Id.  On that same day, Plaintiff’s counsel filed a Stipulation of Dismissal with the Court.  See ECF No. 101.  On January 8, 2026, the Court granted the stipulation of dismissal with prejudice by order signed by Magistrate Judge Cousins.  See ECF No. 102.

Implications For Companies

This order is unprecedented. The implications of the sanctions order and the aftermath of the order is two-fold.  First, employers and companies should review class counsel’s filings scrupulously by noting any citations or quotations that seem incorrect and AI-generated as this may build a case for disqualifying class counsel and may prove as a barrier to getting approval of a class settlement agreement.  Second, employers and companies must be diligent in ensuring that in-house and outside counsel alike use human verification in connection with the use of any AI tool when drafting court filings to ensure that all case law citations and quotations have been independently verified by an attorney prior to filing such information with a court to avoid similar deleterious consequences.   

Preservation Behavior Will Avoid Waiver:  Third Circuit Vacates District Court Decision Finding Company Waived Right To Enforce Arbitration Provisions

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., Shannon Noelle, and Anna Sheridan

Duane Morris Takeaways: On January 7, 2026, in Valli et al. v. Avis Budget Group Inc. et al., Case No. 24-3025 (3d Cir. Jan. 7, 2026), the Third Circuit issued a mandate vacating an order from the District Court for the District of New Jersey denying a rental car company’s motion to compel arbitration and remanding the action for the District Court to address properly presented challenges to enforceability of the arbitration provisions that it did not reach in its decision.  Avis appealed an order from the District Court denying its motion to compel arbitration of the claims of a certified class of renters presenting legal challenges to imposition of fees associated with traffic or parking fines incurred during the rental period.  The Third Circuit found that Avis did not waive its right to compel arbitration by participating in litigation for years with the named Plaintiffs (whose rental agreements did not contain arbitration provisions) as Avis asserted its arbitration rights as an affirmative defense in its answers, raised the issue in opposition to class certification, and promptly field to a motion to compel after its Rule 23(f) petition challenging class certification was denied.  This decision underscores that where named plaintiffs are not subject to arbitration provisions, but class members may have such constraints, pre-certification conduct preserving arbitration rights is essential to avoid waiver post-certification when arbitration rights are ripe.   

Case Background

The named Plaintiff Dawn Valli filed a putative class action in September 2014 challenging Avis’ imposition of fees associated with a speeding traffic violation caught by a traffic camera that Avis paid and then charged Plaintiff Valli the $150 traffic fine it covered as well as a $30 administrative fee.  Case No. 24-3025, ECF No. 53-3, at 3.  The notice that Avis sent to Plaintiff Valli warned that Avis would charge $180 to Ms. Valli’s credit card if she did not make timely payment.  Id. at 4.  Plaintiff Valli brought an action on behalf of herself and other putative class members asserting state law claims including violations of the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act and unjust enrichment on the theory that Avis deprived renters of an opportunity to contest the traffic violations by paying fines before notifying renters of the infractions and allowing them the ability to contest the fines.  Id. 

Avis moved to dismiss the complaint several times for failure to state a claim.  Id. at 4-5.  On April 1, 2016, Avis updated its rental agreement to include a mandatory arbitration provision for disputes arising out of the rental agreement and rental of its vehicles.  Id. at 5.  After Avis filed a renewed motion to dismiss (which did not mention the arbitration agreement as it only applied prospectively), the District Court denied the motion on May 10, 2017.  Id. at 6.  On May 25, 2017, Avis answered the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) asserting its arbitration rights as an affirmative defense.  Id.  In June 2018, Avis allowed Ms. Valli to file a second amended complaint (“SAC”) adding another named Plaintiff.  Id. at 7.  Avis again invoked its arbitration rights as an affirmative defense in its answer.  Id.

In July 2019, the two named Plaintiffs moved to certify a class of renters that were required to reimburse Avis for traffic, parking, tolls, or other violations and associated administrative fees.  Id. at 8.   In support of the motion for class certification, Plaintiffs defined the class period for the first time as September 30, 2008, through the present.  Id.  In opposition to class certification, Avis argued that the named Plaintiffs—who were not subject to its 2016 arbitration provisions—could not adequately represent the interest of renters that must arbitrate their claims.  Id.  Avis also argued that, at the motion to dismiss stage, such arguments were not ripe as it was unclear how the named Plaintiffs would define the class and whether it would include renters bound by arbitration agreements.  Id.  Oral argument on class certification occurred two years later, but Avis asserted the argument that the arbitration provisions defeated class certification.  Id. at 8-9.  Plaintiffs countered that Avis waived the argument by not having raised it earlier and choosing to participate in the litigation.  Id. at 9.  The District Court ordered supplemental briefing on the issue.  Id.  In its supplemental brief filed on September 15, 2022, Avis reiterated that nearly half the members of the putative class signed arbitration agreements and the named Plaintiffs (who had not) could not fairly represent the interests of those putative class members.  Id.  Avis filed another brief approximately two weeks later, arguing that it had preserved its arbitration rights by raising arbitration as an affirmative defense in its answers to both the FAC and SAC.  Id.  Avis also emphasized that Plaintiffs’ July 2019 class certification motion was the first time they identified arbitration-bound renters as putative class members.  Id.

In October 2023, the District Court certified a subclass of individuals that rented an Avis vehicle from September 30, 2008, through the present and whose rented vehicle was the subject of an alleged parking, traffic, tolls, or other violation, where the class member was charged for such fine, penalty, and court costs, and/or associated administrative fee.  Id. at 10.  Avis filed a Rule 23(f) petition challenging certification of the class that was denied in November 2023.  Id. at 10-11.  Three months later, in February 2024, Avis moved to compel individual arbitration of the relevant class members’ claims.  Id. at 11.  Avis disputed that it waived its right to enforce its arbitration agreements arguing that any earlier motion to compel would have been directed at unnamed class members and would have therefore been futile before class certification.  Id.  On September 30, 2024, the District Court denied Avis’ motion to compel arbitration and faulted Avis for failing to formally seek to enforce arbitration until after the class had been certified.  Avis appealed that decision to the Third Circuit.

The Third Circuit’s Decision

The Third Circuit found that Avis’ pre-certification litigation conduct was indeed relevant to the waiver issue, but this conduct indicated that the company had adequately preserved its arbitration rights. 

The Third Circuit found that “[c]entral to th[e] case” was the “interplay between” the doctrine of waiver and futility.  Id. at 12.  The Third Circuit resolved the parties’ dispute as to whether Avis’ pre-certification conduct was relevant to the issue of waiver by answering this question in the affirmative.  Id. at 14.  In support of that finding, the Third Circuit found it notable that Avis “knew” of its prospective right to enforce arbitration “even if it lacked a present ability to enforce it pre-certification.”  Id. at 19.  The Third Circuit reasoned that the purpose of the waiver doctrine is to prevent “gamesmanship” or permitting a defendant to litigate aggressively for a merits advantage so that it can pivot to arbitration “the moment it becomes advantageous to do so, all without consequence.”  Id. at 20.  Yet, the Third Circuit found that the doctrine of futility “excuses the failure to file a formal motion to compel as to the unnamed class members” because to do so would be futile given that a District Court lacks jurisdiction to grant such a request.  Id.  The Third Circuit next addressed what a party must do to preserve future arbitration rights it cannot presently enforce.  Id. at 21.  The Third Circuit held that to implicitly waive arbitration rights, a party must litigate in a way that is inconsistent with a desire to arbitrate. 

The District Court had identified two such events:  (1) Avis’ motion of August 18, 2016 that did not mention arbitration; and (2) Avis’ participation in discovery and mediation.  Id. at 26.  Rejecting the first ground for finding waiver, the Third Circuit opined that it was not until two years later that plaintiffs defined the putative class to include post-April 2016 renters thus the motion to dismiss did not waive its arbitration rights.  As to the second ground for finding waiver, the Third Circuit ruled that while Avis did not object to discovery or seek to exclude information concerning arbitration-bound renters, Plaintiffs could identify “only a single instance in which Avis produced information not also relevant to other customers who are not subject to arbitration.”  Id. at 27.  Further, “critically, Avis never sought discovery specifically targeted at arbitration-bound putative class members.”   Id. at 27-28.  The Third Circuit clarified that “discovery and mediation conduct can support a finding of waiver in the appropriate circumstances,” but explained that “discovery directed at non-arbitrable claims does not, by itself, waive the right to arbitrate arbitrable claims.”  Id. at 28.   The Third Circuit also found it significant that Avis “repeatedly put its intent to arbitrate on record” by consistently asserting its arbitration rights in opposing certification and reaffirming its stance two years later during oral argument.  Id. at 29.  The Third Circuit further reasoned that the fact that Avis moved to compel arbitration four months after the District Court’s certification decision was prompt enough and “not unreasonable” particularly as Avis’ Rule 23(f) petition was still pending.  Id.  Ten days after the Third Circuit denied the Rule 23(f) petition, the District Court held a status conference on December 14, 2023, setting a deadline of February 2024 for the motion to compel which Avis met.   Id. at 29-30.

The Third Circuit stopped short of directing the District Court to compel the relevant class members to arbitrate their claims and did not reach the Plaintiff’s claims challenging the enforceability of the arbitration agreements, finding that the District Court relied exclusively on waiver in its decision and remanding the action permitting the District Court to reach the issue of enforceability if properly presented. 

On January 13, 2026, the District of New Jersey issued an order implementing the mandate of the Third Circuit and vacating its September 30, 2024 order denying Avis’ motion to compel arbitration.  A status conference is set for February 2026.

Implications For Class Action Defendants

Where named plaintiffs are not subject to arbitration agreements but defendants suspect that putative class members may be, defendants must act promptly to preserve their arbitration rights even where a motion to compel arbitration is not ripe, by asserting arbitration rights as an affirmative defense in answers to class action complaints and in opposition to class certification (as a basis for lacking commonality, adequate representation, typicality, etc.).  The Third Circuit’s decision in Avis provides a guidepost for proper preservation of arbitration rights that class action defendants are well-advised to heed.

Announcing The Duane Morris EEOC And Government Enforcement Litigation Review – 2026!

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaways: Given the importance of compliance with workplace anti-discrimination laws for our clients, we are pleased to present the fourth annual edition of the Duane Morris EEOC And Government Enforcement Litigation Review – 2026. The EEOC And Government Enforcement Litigation Review – 2026 analyzes the EEOC’s and U.S. Department of Labor enforcement lawsuit filings in 2025 and the significant legal decisions and trends impacting this litigation for 2026.

Click here to bookmark or download a copy of the EEOC And Government Enforcement Litigation Review – 2026 e-book.

The Review explains the impact of the EEOC’s six enforcement priorities as outlined in its Strategic Enforcement Plan on employers’ business planning and how the direction of the Commission’s Plan should influence key employer decisions. The Review also contains a compilation of significant rulings decided in 2025 that impacted government-initiated litigation and a list of the most significant settlements in 2025.

We hope readers will enjoy this new publication. We will continue to update blog readers on any important EEOC developments and look forward to sharing further thoughts and analysis in 2026!

Stay tuned for key EEOC and government-enforcement related analysis on the Class Action Weekly Wire Podcast.

VIDEO – DMCAR Trend #9: Artificial Intelligence Impacted The Class Action Landscape On Multiple Levels

By Gerald L. Maatman, and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: In 2025, Artificial IntelligenceAI – continued to influence class action litigation on multiple fronts. First, we saw a growth of class action lawsuits targeting AI, including in the copyright area and employment space, as well as the securities fraud area with claims of “AI washing.” Second, we saw an increasing number of courts and lawyers err in their use of AI to generate documents filed on dockets across the country and encountered numerous examples of the ways in which AI is continuing to impact the efficiencies that underlie the litigation process.

DMCAR Editor Jerry Maatman discusses this trend in detail in the video below:

  1. AI Provided Raw Material For Class Action Lawsuits

AI has been an accelerating force in class action litigation as a source of claims stemming from the development, use, and promotion of AI technologies. In 2025, some of those filed claims or ongoing claims included claims stemming from alleged copyright infringement, algorithmic bias or discrimination, and securities fraud.

On the copyright front, courts issued key decisions, including divergent decisions on whether using copyrighted works to train generative AI models constitutes “fair use” under the Copyright Act. In copyright cases, the plaintiffs typically allege that a developer of a generative AI tool violated copyright laws by using publicly available copyrighted works to train and inform the output of the AI tools. In Tremblay v. OpenAI, Inc., No. 23-CV-3223 (N.D. Cal. June 13, 2024), for instance, the plaintiffs alleged that OpenAI trained its algorithm by “copying massive amounts of text” to enable it to “emit convincingly naturalistic text outputs in response to user prompts.” The plaintiffs alleged these outputs included summaries that were so accurate that the algorithm must have collected and retained knowledge of the ingested copyrighted works in order to output similar textual content. The plaintiffs typically invoke the Copyright Act to allege that the defendant willfully made unauthorized copies of thousands of copyrighted works, generating damages up to $150,000 per copyrighted work for willful infringement, and, therefore, to seek billions in damages.

The $1.5 billion settlement reached in Bartz, et al. v. Anthropic is a landmark settlement and a prime example. In that suit, three authors filed a class action lawsuit against Anthropic claiming that Anthropic had downloaded millions of copyrighted books from “shadow libraries” like Library Genesis and Pirate Library Mirror to train its AI systems. In June 2025, Judge William H. Alsup of the Northern District of California denied Anthropic’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of fair use in a split-the-baby decision. The record showed that Anthropic downloaded more than seven million books from pirate sites but also bought and scanned millions more. The court held that Anthropic’s use of legally acquired books for AI training was protected fair use but that downloading and keeping pirated copies was not, noting that a developer that has obtained copies of books “from a pirate site has infringed already, full stop.” In August 2025, Judge Alsup granted the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, sua sponte defining the class to include “all beneficial or legal copyright owners of the exclusive right to reproduce copies of any book” in the datasets that met his criteria. With tens of billions of dollars on the line, the parties promptly reached a settlement for $1.5 billion, the largest settlement of any class action in 2025.

Notably, shortly after Judge Alsup’s decision on summary judgment, Judge Vince Chhabria of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California reached a different conclusion in Kadrey, et al. v. Meta Platforms, Inc., No. 2023-CV-03417 (N.D. Cal. June 25, 2025). In that case, 13 authors, mostly famous fiction writers, sued Meta for downloading their books from online “shadow libraries” and using the books to train Meta’s generative AI models (specifically, its large language models, called Llama). The parties filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment regarding fair use. The court rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that “the fact that the AI developer downloaded the books from shadow libraries and did not start with an ‘authorized copy’ of each book gives them an automatic win.” The court held that, because Meta’s use of the works was highly transformative, to overcome a fair use defense, the plaintiffs needed to show that the AI model harmed the market for the plaintiffs’ works. Because the plaintiffs presented no meaningful evidence of market dilution, the court entered summary judgment for Meta on the fair use defense.

On the employment front, Mobley, et al. v. Workday, Inc., No. 23-CV-770 (N.D. Cal. May 16, 2025), continues to reign as one of the most watched and influential cases. In Mobley, the plaintiff, an African American male over the age of 40, who alleged that he suffers from anxiety and depression, brought suit against Workday claiming that its applicant screening tools discriminated against applicants on the basis of race, age, and disability. The plaintiff claimed that he applied for 80 to 100 jobs, and despite holding a bachelor’s degree in finance, among other qualifications, did not get a single job offer. The district court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss on the ground that plaintiff failed to plead sufficient facts regarding the supposed liability of Workday as a software vendor for the hiring decisions of potential employers. In other words, the plaintiff failed to allege that Workday was “procuring” employees for its customers and merely claimed that he applied for jobs with a number of companies that all happened to use Workday.

On February 20, 2024, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint alleging that Workday was an agent of the employers that delegated authority to Workday to make hiring process decisions or, alternatively, that Workday was an employment agency or an indirect employer. Plaintiff claimed, among other things, that, in one instance, he applied for a position at 12:55 a.m. and his application was rejected less than an hour later. Judge Rita F. Lin granted in part and denied in part Workday’s motion to dismiss the amended complaint. The court reasoned, among other things that the relevant statutes prohibit discrimination “not just by employers but also by agents of those employers,” so an employer cannot “escape liability for discrimination by delegating [] traditional functions, like hiring, to a third party,” and an employer’s agent can be independently liable when the employer has delegated to the agent “functions [that] are traditionally exercised by the employer.” The court noted that, if it reasoned otherwise, and accepted Workday’s arguments, then companies could “escape liability for hiring decisions by saying that function has been handed to over to someone else (or here, artificial intelligence).”

The court opined that, given Workday’s allegedly “crucial role in deciding which applicants can get their ‘foot in the door’ for an interview, Workday’s tools are engaged in conduct that is at the heart of equal access to employment opportunities.” The court also denied Workday’s motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s disparate impact discrimination claims reasoning that “[t]he zero percent success rate at passing Workday’s initial screening” combined with the plaintiff’s allegations of bias in Workday’s training data and tools plausibly supported an inference that Workday’s algorithmic tools disproportionately rejected applicants based on factors other than qualifications, such as a candidate’s race, age, or disability. Thereafter, the court conditionally certified a collective action of all individuals aged 40 and over who applied for jobs using Workday’s platform and were rejected. In doing so, it authorized plaintiff to send notice of the lawsuit to applications nationwide. This litigation has been closely watched for its novel case theory based on artificial intelligence use in making personnel decisions and, given its success to date, is likely to prompt tag along and copycat litigation.

On the securities front, over the past three years, plaintiffs have filed dozens of lawsuits alleging that various defendants made false or misleading statements related to AI technology or related to AI as a driver of market revenue or demand, including claims that companies overstated their AI capabilities, effectiveness, or revenue generation in a practice known as “AI washing.” For instance, on April 17, 2025, the plaintiff Wayne County Employees’ Retirement System filed suit against AppLovin Corporation, No. 25-CV-03438 (N.D. Cal.), alleging that, among other things, the company falsely attributed its financial success to its enhanced AXON 2.0 digital ad platform and the use of “cutting edge” AI technologies to match advertisements to mobile games. In the complaint, the plaintiffs claim that the company’s revenue instead stemmed from manipulative ad practices, such as forced, silent app installations and that, upon release of short-seller reports disclosing the alleged practices, the company’s share price declined more than 12%.

Because investors have shown a willingness to pay a premium for shares of companies that appear positioned to capitalize on the effective use of AI, such statements have had the tendency to boost share prices. When projections fail to materialize, however, and share prices decline, plaintiffs are poised to take advantage.

In another example, plaintiffs filed a securities class action against Apple in the Northern District of California alleging that Apple made misleading and false statements regarding Siri’s generative AI features. The plaintiffs allege that Apple, at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference and on earnings calls, made claims that its AI solution called Apple Intelligence would create a more advanced and capable Siri. The plaintiffs allege that Apple continued to maintain that these features would arrive in early 2025 until March 2025 when it admitted that “[i]t’s going to take us longer than we thought.” The plaintiffs allege that, in the wake of these announcements, Apple’s share price dropped almost $47.

In sum, with AI continuing to flourish, the implications of its development, use, and advertisement are providing the raw material for creative plaintiffs’ class action lawyers. We should expect to see an upward trend of key decisions and new cases in 2026 and beyond as this burgeoning area of the law continues to expand.

  1. AI Continued To Impact The Litigation Process

As legal professionals on both sides leverage AI to attempt to increase efficiency and gain a strategic advantage, examples of improper use abound. Rarely a day passes without a headline reporting attorney misconduct. To date, much of the AI misuse has centered on attorneys submitting or courts generating filings and legal briefs with fake citations. So-called “AI hallucinations” can take the form of citations to cases that do not exist or, even worse, the attribution of incorrect “hallucinated” holdings or quotations to existing opinions.

Bar associations have compiled dozens if not hundreds of instances of attorneys misusing generative AI in complaints, legal memoranda, expert reports, and appellate briefs. Perhaps more disturbing, these examples are joined by at least two instances of courts withdrawing decisions due to the incorporation of AI-generated contend.

Such conduct has led to severe sanctions, including fines and suspensions for violation of ethical duties, as well as (presumably) terminations. To date, claims of overbilling for such AI-generated worked product have not been made public, and lawyers continue to reiterate and train that AI is a tool and not a substitute for the application of legal analysis and judgment.

At the same time, AI is becoming an asset in the hands of more cautious connoisseurs who are taking advantage of its efficiencies for projects involving data analytics, document reviews, and form generation. Its use has become transformative in the settlement administration process where it has exposed vulnerabilities in the claims administration process by, for example, generating thousands of entries that dilute legitimate claims, thereby reducing legitimate recoveries.

Similar to classrooms where teachers use AI to detect AI, recipients are responding with their own AI-based tools to detect irregularities.

As the technology continues to evolve, it continues to impact that class action space in particular, which is particularly susceptible to mass-generated claims, demand letters, and form complaints. As a result, we are likely seeing the tip of the iceberg in terms of AI’s influence on the class action space.

VIDEO – DMCAR Trend #8: Chasms Among Circuits Continued To Expand In Several Areas Crucial To Class Action Litigation

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: In 2025, case law continued to develop in fragmented ways among the federal circuits on issues material to plaintiffs’ ability to maintain and certify class actions, enhancing the likelihood of and incentive for forum shopping. In terms of standards governing conditional certification of FLSA, EPA, and ADEA matters, 2025 saw the crystallization of four distinct standards, ranging in the burdens applicable to plaintiffs, as well as in the review and consideration of the evidence presented. A second chasm relates to courts’ approaches uninjured class members, or the notion that each member of a putative class as defined might not have experienced a concrete injury sufficient to provide such individual standing to pursue a claim. A third chasm reflects courts’ divergent views relative to personal jurisdiction and whether a court that cannot exercise general personal jurisdiction must have a basis for specific personal jurisdiction as to each putative class member.

DMCAR co-editor Jennifer Riley explains this trend in detail in the video below:

These fractures have made forum selection more consequential than ever. Plaintiffs are increasingly skewing their filings toward federal circuits where they anticipate a greater likelihood of a favorable outcome, including toward jurisdictions where judges are taking a more lenient approach to certification or a more permissive view on issues like standing and jurisdiction. To date, efforts to persuade the U.S. Supreme Court to take up cases that would resolve these splits have failed, so we expect they will continue to drive uncertainty in class-related litigation through 2026.

  1. Courts Disagree Over The Standards For Conditional Certification Of Collective Actions

The standards for conditional certification under the FLSA, EPA, and ADEA, continue to diverge such that district and appellate courts are applying any of at least four distinct approaches. These statutes provide little guidance as to the process they intended to incorporate for so-called conditional certification. In 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), the FLSA provides that “[a]n action . . . may be maintained against any employer (including a public agency) . . . by any one or more employees for and in behalf of himself or themselves and other employees similarly-situated. No employee shall be a party plaintiff to any such action unless he gives his consent in writing to become a party and such consent is filed in the court in which such action is brought.” 29 U.S.C. § 216(b). Courts have interpreted such language to authorize a process by which courts grant “conditional certification” of a collective action, authorize notice to persons who fall within the defined group, and permit those persons to “opt-in” by returned their consent forms. Courts, however, have disagreed over the standards plaintiffs must satisfy to initiate this process. In other words, how and when should a court determine if such persons are “similarly-situated”? 

To date, federal courts that have addressed these issues have developed or adopted one of four primary schemes.

First, for many years, court accepted the familiar and lenient two-step standard set forth in Lusardi v. Xerox Corp., 118 F.R.D. 351 (D.N.J. 1987), and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit expressly adopted this standard in Scott v. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc., 954 F.3d 502, 515 (2d Cir. 2020), while the First, Third, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits had done the same by “acquiescence” without express adoption. See Kwoka v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Company of Boston, LLC, 141 F.4th 10, 22 (1st. Cir. 2025); Zavala v. Wal Mart Stores Inc., 691 F.3d 527, 534 (3d Cir. 2012); Thiessen v. General Electric Capital Corp., 267 F.3d 1095, 1105 (10th Cir. 2001); Hipp v. Liberty National Life Insurance Co., 252 F.3d 1208, 1219 (11th Cir. 2001)

Under Lusardi, a court considers at “step one” whether a plaintiff has made a “modest factual showing” based on his or her evidence, which often comprises one or more declarations, and may or may not even look at competing evidence submitted by the employer. If the court determines that a plaintiff has satisfied his or her “lenient” burden, the court authorizes notice. At the close of discovery, the employer then can move to decertify the conditionally certified collective action, and the court will consider based on the evidence whether the plaintiff has demonstrated that the persons who joined the action are similarly situated.

The Ninth Circuit clarified in Campbell v. City of Los Angeles, 903 F.3d 1090, 1114 (9th Cir. 2018), that the plaintiff must show he or she is similarly situated with respect to “some material aspect” of his or her claim and not merely in some way that is irrelevant to the claims asserted.

Second, in the first example of a court revisiting and examining the text of the FLSA, the Fifth Circuit prompted the ensuing split with its decision in Swales v. KLLM Transportation Services, LLC, 985 F.3d 430, 443 (5th Cir. 2021). In that decision, the Fifth Circuit rejected Lusardi’s two-step approach outright and directed district courts to “rigorously enforce” the FLSA’s similarity requirement at the outset of the litigation in a one-step approach. “[T]he district court needs to consider all of the available evidence” at the time the motion is filed and decide whether the plaintiff in fact has “met [his or her] burden of establishing similarity.” Id. at 442-43.

Third, in the wake of Swales the Sixth Circuit likewise revisited the standard in Clark v. A&L Homecare & Training Center, LLC, 68 F.4th 1003 (6th Cir. 2023). The Sixth Circuit rejected Lusardi, but also declined to adopt Swales. Instead, the court likened the standard to one comparable to the standard for obtaining a preliminary injunction. An employee must show a “strong likelihood” that others are similarly situated to the employee before the district court may authorize the plaintiff to send notice of the action. The Sixth Circuit left open the standard by which the court should consider a potential motion for decertification down the line. Id. at 1011.

Fourth, most recently, the Seventh Circuit addressed the same issue in Richards, et al. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 149 F.4th 901 (7th Cir. 2025). The Seventh Circuit rejected the Lusardi framework but declined to go as far as Swales or Clark. Instead, the Seventh Circuit ruled that “a plaintiff must first make a threshold showing that there is a material factual dispute as to whether the proposed collective is similarly situated” to secure a ruling authorizing notice, and an employer “must be permitted to submit rebuttal evidence” for the court to consider. Id. at 913. The court declined to set any bright line rule as to whether a court should decide the similarly situated question in a one or two step approach, noting that the analysis is not an “all-or-nothing determination.” Id. at 913-914.

The U.S. Courts of Appeal for the District of Columbia, Fourth, and Eighth Circuits have not yet opined on the proper method, leaving district courts to exercise their discretion. These divergent standards have influenced forum selection, as plaintiffs significantly have decreased the number of collective actions they pursue in the Fifth and Sixth Circuits in particular, in favor of filing in forums that apply more lenient standards.

  1. Courts Continue To Disagree Over Standing And Personal Jurisdiction

Courts continue to disagree regarding the impact and treatment of uninjured class members, a key issue that remains unresolved. It is axiomatic that individuals who did not suffer injury as the result of the defendant’s conduct cannot maintain claims, and courts do not have the power to award them relief. As the U.S. Supreme Court reiterated in its seminal 2020 decision in TransUnion, “Article III does not give federal courts the power to order relief to any uninjured plaintiff, class action or not.” TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 141 S.Ct. 2190, 2208 (quoting Tyson Foods v. Bouaphakeo, 577 U.S. 442, 466 (2016) (Roberts, C.J., concurring)). In this respect, the “plaintiffs must maintain their personal interest in the dispute at all stages of the litigation . . . And standing is not dispensed in gross; rather, plaintiffs must demonstrate standing for each claim that they press and for each form of relief that they seek.” Id.

Despite this admonition, courts continue to grapple with the application of these concepts in the class certification context and, in particular, they disagree over whether to certify a class, a plaintiff must demonstrate that every putative class member has standing, or, stated differently, must demonstrate that the class excludes those individuals who did not suffer harm. In TransUnion, the Supreme Court expressly left open the question of “whether every class member must demonstrate standing before a court certifies a class.” Id. at n.4. Such a requirement has significant consequences for the class action landscape.

As a result, in January 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court granted a petition for certiorari in Laboratory Corporation Of American Holdings v. Davis, 145 S.Ct. 1608 (2025). In Davis, plaintiffs filed suit on behalf of a putative class of legally blind patients alleging that Lab Corp. violated the ADA by failing to make its self-service check-in kiosks accessible. In May 2022, the district court certified a broad class of that included all legally blind individuals were denied full and equal enjoyment of its goods and services due to “LabCorp’s failure to make its e-check-in kiosks accessible,” emphasizing that individualized damages questions do not defeat the predominance requirement. Lab Corp. sought interlocutory appeal, arguing that plaintiffs’ class definition swept in uninjured individuals who would not have used kiosks anyway. The Ninth Circuit granted the petition and affirmed. Applying Ninth Circuit precedent, the appellate court reasoned that Rule 23 permits certification of a class even when the class “‘potentially includes more than a de minimis number of uninjured class members.’” The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari in January 2025. Following briefing and oral argument, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to resolve the issue and dismissed the writ as improvidently granted. Justice Kavanaugh authored a dissent from such decision noting that, if given the opportunity, he would hold that “[f]ederal courts may not certify a damages class under Rule 23 when, as here, the proposed class includes both injured and uninjured class members.”

Without guidance from the U.S. Supreme Court, lower federal courts have continued to reach varying decisions on the issue. For instance, on July 17, 2025, the Fifth Circuit issued its decision in Wilson v. Centene Management Co., 144 F.4th 780 (5thCir. 2025). The plaintiffs in this case asserted breach of contract claims against the defendant insurance companies, alleging that it issued inaccurate provider lists and thereby caused the plaintiffs to pay artificially inflated premiums for access to providers who were not available. The district court denied class certification finding that the plaintiffs lacked standing. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit held that, at the class certification state, a plaintiff need only demonstrate his or her own standing, and the district court erred in its determination of the plaintiff’s standing, which it reached through a merits-based evaluation of the plaintiff’s expert.

The Seventh Circuit addressed the question in Arandell Corp. v. Xcel Energy Inc., 149 F.4th 883 (7th Cir. 2025). In that case, the plaintiffs brought a putative state-wide class action alleging that defendants engaged in a price-fixing conspiracy to manipulate natural gas prices. The Seventh Circuit noted that, to the extent defendants suggested that, before class certification, the plaintiffs must show all class members suffered some injury, “that is not correct.” It reiterated its prior holding that that “a class should not be certified if it is apparent that a great many persons who have suffered no injury at the hands of the defendant,” it clarified that “[t]here is no precise measure for ‘a great many.’  Such determinations are a matter of degree and will turn on the facts as they appear from case to case.”

In contrast, the Fourth Circuit took a different approach in Freeman v. Progressive Direct Insurance Co., 149 F.4th 461 (4th Cir. 2025). After an automobile collision, the plaintiff’s insurer provided her a payment based on the “actual cash value” of her car that it determined using a “projected sold adjustment.” Although the plaintiff accepted the payment, and did not contest the valuation, she filed suit for breach of contract. Although the district court certified a class, the Fourth Circuit reversed. The Fourth Circuit explained that, to succeed on her claim, the plaintiff needed to show that her insurer paid her less than the actual cash value of her vehicle and, likewise, that her insurer paid members of the class less than the actual cash value of their vehicles, regardless of whether the “projected sold adjustment” was used in determining that value. Yet, the class was defined to include anyone who was paid “compensation for the total loss of a covered vehicle, where . . . the actual cash value was decreased based upon Projected Sold Adjustments.” Thus, the class was defined to include insureds who accepted the insurer’s offer of payment, insureds who negotiated a higher payment, and insureds who invoked the appraisal process in the policy, simply because in each circumstance the insurer made its calculation using the Projected Sold Adjustment. “Yet, none of those could claim injury because each agreed to resolution of the loss. . . This characteristic of the certified class alone justifies reversal of the class certification order.”  

Similarly, courts have continued to disagree regarding the scope of a court’s personal jurisdiction over the defendant in the class action context. In short, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Bristol Myers Squibb v. Superior Court, 137 S. Ct. 1773 (2017), in 2017 and ruled that a court must have a basis for exercising personal jurisdiction over a defendant for each claim it adjudicates. In that case, which involved a mass tort action, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that the existence of similar claims asserted by plaintiffs who purchased a drug in California did not provide a court with personal jurisdiction over the defendant for purposes of adjudicating claims asserted by plaintiffs who purchased the same drug outside of California.

Again, despite this clear ruling, courts have continued to grapple with the application of these concepts in the class certification context and, in particular, they disagree over whether, to certify a class that includes nationwide class members, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the court can exercise personal jurisdiction over the defendant for purposes of resolving each of their claims or, stated differently, must demonstrate that each claim arises from or relates to a foreign defendant’s contacts with the forum state.

On July 1, 2025, the Ninth Circuit became the latest to address this issue. In Harrington, et al. v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, 142 F.4th 678 (9th Cir. 2025), the Ninth Circuit ruled that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Bristol-Meyers applies to collective actions brought under the FLSA. The Ninth Circuit held that, when a plaintiff relies on specific personal jurisdiction as the basis for personal jurisdiction over the defendant in an FLSA collective action, district courts must assess whether they can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over the defendant on a claim-by-claim basis. This means that the claim of every opt-in plaintiff must arise out of or relate to the defendant’s activities in the forum state, and opt-in plaintiffs with no connection to the forum cannot rely on the connections of the named plaintiffs to establish personal jurisdiction.

In sum, courts continue to disagree as to their power in the class action context and the extent to which a procedural rule like Rule 23 can alter otherwise fundamental concepts of subject matter and personal jurisdiction for putative class members. Given the implications of such rules, we can anticipate that such questions will continue to influence forum selection for plaintiffs and continue to fuel uncertainty for defendants through 2026.

VIDEO – DMCAR Trend #7: The Trump Administration’s Policies Had A Profound Impact On Government Enforcement Litigation

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: Government enforcement litigation is similar in many respects to class action litigation. In lawsuits brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), as well as the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), the government asserts various claims on behalf of or as a representative of numerous allegedly impacted individuals. These cases typically present numerous claimants, as well as significant monetary exposure.

The video below featuring DMCAR editor Jerry Maatman explains this trend in detail:

While plaintiffs in private party class actions must meet the requirement of Rule 23 to secure class certification, the law does not require the government to clear such hurdle. For example, systemic “pattern or practice” lawsuits brought by the EEOC follow a framework established by the U.S. Supreme Court in International Brotherhood Of Teamsters v. United States, 431 U.S. 324 (1977), rather than Rule 23. Nonetheless, EEOC systemic lawsuits present similar issues and similar risk for corporate defendants.

While the EEOC and DOL historically have been among the most aggressive litigants in terms of their pursuit of claims, the Trump Administration has had a profound impact on these agencies and their enforcement agendas. President Trump ran for election on a platform that runs counter to many of the “emerging issues” on the EEOC’s priority list, foreshadowing a realignment of litigation priorities.

The Trump Administration has kept its promise of less government oversight and regulation and has shifted the priorities of these agencies to more closely match the administration’s objectives.

  1. Litigation And Settlement Trends

In fiscal year (FY) 2025, which ran from October 1, 2024, to September 30, 2025, the EEOC’s litigation enforcement activity stalled significantly as compared to previous years.

By the numbers, the EEOC filed a total of 94 lawsuits, far fewer than it filed at the height of filings in FY 2018, when it filed 217 lawsuits.

The decline in enforcement activity shows that, for President Trump’s second term in office, companies should expect the EEOC to be less aggressive as compared to past regimes in terms of the volume of enforcement lawsuits filed.

Each year, the EEOC’s fiscal year ends on September 30, and the agency engages in a sprint to the finish as it files a substantial number of lawsuits during the month of September. In FY 2025, the EEOC filed 94 lawsuits. Of these, it filed 35 – or 37% of the annual total – during September, the last month of its fiscal year. The overall number represents a decrease from prior years, but the filings followed a somewhat similar pattern. In FY 2024, the EEOC filed 110 lawsuits. It filed 67 of these actions, or more than 60%, during the month of September. By comparison, in FY 2023, the EEOC filed 144 lawsuits, with a similarly heavy September tranche of 35.We track the EEOC’s filing efforts across the entire fiscal year from its beginning in October through the anticipated filing spree in September.

Unlike other fiscal years, during 2025, the EEOC’s filing patterns were consistent in the first half of FY 2025, peaking with 14 lawsuits in January. Filings again slowed until the summer, when the EEOC filed another 14 lawsuits in June 2025. Thereafter, lawsuit filings dipped until the “eleventh hour” in September.  The following shows filing activity by month:

  1. Lawsuit Filings By EEOC District Office

In addition to tracking the total number of filings, the litigation filing patterns of the EEOCs 15 district offices are telling. Some districts tend to be more aggressive than others, and some focus on different case filing priorities. The following chart shows the number of lawsuit filings by each of the EEOC district offices in FY 2025.

In FY 2025, Philadelphia and Chicago led the pack in filing the most lawsuits, with 11 each, followed by Indianapolis with eight filings, then Atlanta, Birmingham, Houston, and Phoenix with seven filings, and Charlotte, New York, and Miami each with six filings.

St. Louis had five filings, Los Angeles and San Francisco had four filings, and Dallas had three filings. Memphis had the lowest amount with only two filings.

As in FY 2024, Philadelphia proved itself as a leader in EEOC enforcement filings. Chicago remained steady with 11 filings, the same as FY 2024. St. Louis (two filings in FY 2024) and Phoenix (four filings in FY 2024) showed increases in filing numbers as compared to FY 2024.

Other offices comparatively lagged in enforcement activity. Atlanta (11 filings in FY 2024), Indianapolis (nine filings in FY 2024), and Houston (eight filings in FY 2024) showed slight decreases in enforcement activities. Across the board, filings generally became more even for district offices compared to FY 2024, but filing activity decreased.

  1. Lawsuit Filings Based On Type Of Claim

The types of claims the EEOC filed in FY 2025 provides a window into its shifting strategic priorities.

When considered on a percentage basis, the distribution of cases filed by statute skewed significantly in favor of Title VII cases when comparing FY 2025 to prior years.

The EEOC again based most of its claims on alleged violations of Title VII, but these claims comprised 50% of its filings in FY 2025, compared to 58% of its filings in FY 2024. Those numbers represent a significant decrease from FY 2023 and FY 2022, when Title VII claims represented 68% of the EEOC’s filings in FY 2023 and 69% of its filings in FY 2022.

Overall claims for alleged violation of the ADA made up the next most significant percentage of the EEOC’s FY 2025 filings – totaling 31.5%. This share again shows a decrease from prior years when ADA claims comprised 42% of filings in FY 2025, 34% of filings in FY 2023, and 37% of filings in FY 2021. The percentage is marginally higher than FY 2022, when ADA filings on a percentage basis comprised 29.7% of all filings.

The EEOC filed more claims for alleged violation of the ADEA in FY 2025. It filed nine ADEA cases in FY 2025, as compared to six ADEA age discrimination cases in FY 2024, but it filed 12 ADEA age discrimination cases in FY 2023 and seven in FY 2022.

As in FY 2024, this past year the EEOC pursued claims under the Pregnant Worker’s Fairness Act. It filed six cases, compared to three in FY 2024. In addition, the EEOC filed slightly more claims for alleged violation of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act in FY 2025. It filed five such cases, as compared to four in FY 2024.

Notably, the EEOC refrained from filing any claims for alleged violation of the Equal Pay Act in FY 2025 and any cases for alleged violation of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act.

The following graph shows the number of lawsuits filed according to the statute under which they were filed.

The grounds for such claims are reflect the stated priorities of the Trump Administration, including by reflecting a decreased emphasis on targeting alleged racial discrimination, and an increased emphasis on routing out disparate treatment based on gender and health-related and family-related conditions.  Claims based on alleged disability discrimination, sex discrimination, and retaliation led the way. Collectively, these three theories provided the foundation for 59.4% of FY 2025 EEOC filings.

Notably, in FY 2025, the EEOC filed only three lawsuits asserting discrimination based on race or national origin, a total of 2.3% of the lawsuit filings. In FY 2024, 8.9% of all filings included claims based on race. The following graph shows a breakdown of the allegations underlying the FY 2025 filings.

  1. Lawsuits Filings Based On Industry

In terms of filings by industry, FY 2025 aligned with prior years and reflected the EEOC’s focus on a few major industries. In FY 2025, two industries remained among the EEOC’s top targets – hospitality and healthcare.

On a percentage basis, hospitality industry employers (restaurants / hotels / entertainment) were recipients of 25% of EEOC filings, and healthcare industry employers received 21.3%. In FY 2025, manufacturing (15% of FY 2025 filings, 12.1% of FY 2024 filings) overtook retail (11.3% of FY 2025 filings; 23.1% of FY 2024 filings) as the next most targeted industry, with retain experiencing a double-digit decline. Only one other industry, transportation & logistics received a double-digit percentage share of EEOC-initiated lawsuits (with 10%). Filings against employers in staffing and construction remained flat in terms of relative percentage in FY 2025 as compared to FY 2024 (8.8% and 8.8% of filings, respectively). As in FY 2024, in FY 2025, the EEOC did not file any of its enforcement lawsuits against employers in the automotive, security, and/or technology industries.

  1. Strategic Priorities

Moving into FY 2026, the EEOC’s budget justification includes a $19.618 million decrease from FY 2025. This move is reflective of the Trump Administration’s stated priority of returning to the “agency’s true mission.” The EEOC aims to return to its founding principles and restore evenhanded enforcement of employment civil rights laws on behalf of all Americans.

Every new presidential administration brings with it an array of objectives focused on different priorities. Since President Trump’s inauguration, the Trump Administration has taken unique steps to significantly reshape the EEOC. Among its moves to overhaul the agency, President Trump dismissed two Democratic-appointed EEOC commissioners and its General Counsel and replaced them with officials viewed as more aligned with his agenda. The Administration appointed new leadership, including Chair Andrea Lucas and Acting General Counsel Andrew Rogers. On October 7, 2025, Brittany Panuccio was confirmed by the Senate as a commissioner, thereby restoring a quorum.

President Trump has issued a series of executive orders reflecting its shift in enforcement priorities, particularly against DEI initiatives. On January 20, 2025, the White House issued an executive order, “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing,” and, on January 21, 2025, the White House issued, “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity.” The latter’s stated purpose is to end “dangerous, demeaning, and immoral race- and sex-based preferences under the guise of so-called ‘diversity, equity, and inclusion’ (DEI) or ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) that can violate the civil-rights laws of this Nation.” President Trump ordered all executive departments and agencies to terminate all “discriminatory and illegal preferences” and to “combat illegal private-sector DEI preferences, mandates, policies, programs, and activities.”

Shortly thereafter, in February 2025, the EEOC took prompt action to implement the Administration’s shift in direction. Citing the Trump Administration’s Executive Order on “gender ideology extremism,” the EEOC announced that it would withdraw seven lawsuits it had filed across the country, including: 

EEOC v. Sis-Bro Inc., No. 25-CV-968 (S.D. Ill.)
EEOC v. Harmony Hospitality LLC, No. 24-CV-357 (M.D. Ala.)
EEOC v. Brik Enterprises, Inc., et al., No. 24-CV-12817 (E.D. Mich.)
EEOC v. Reggio’s Pizza Inc., No. 24-CV-8910 (N.D. Ill.)
EEOC v. Lush Handmade Cosmetics LLC, No. 24-CV-6859 (N.D. Cal.)
EEOC v. Boxwood Hotels, LLC, No. 24-CV-902 (W.D.N.Y.)
EEOC v. Starboard Group Inc., No. 24-CV-2260 (S.D. Ill.)

On February 18, 2025, in EEOC v. LeoPalace, No. 25-CV-4 (D. Guam), the EEOC settled a lawsuit for more than $1.4 million and entered into a three-year consent decree with LeoPalace Resort, a large hotel in Guam. The EEOC alleged that LeoPalace provided employees of non-Japanese national origin with less favorable wages and benefits than their Japanese counterparts. This lawsuit is significant because it was the first seven figure settlement that the Commission procured after President Trump took office in January 2025 – and because it was accompanied by a statement from Chair Andrea Lucas announcing the Commission’s new enforcement agenda and its intent to protect all workers from national origin discrimination and “Anti-American Bias.”

In the accompanying press release, Chair Lucas announced that “Federal anti-discrimination laws ensure equal employment opportunity for jobs performed by all workers regardless of national origin. . . . This case is an important reminder that unlawful national origin discrimination includes discrimination against American workers in favor of foreign workers.” This was the Commission’s first publicized settlement since Lucas was appointed Acting Chair of the EEOC. One day after the settlement was announced, the EEOC published a second press release on its Newsroom “putting employers and other covered entities on notice” that the Commission was committed to protecting all workers from unlawful national origin discrimination, including American workers.

The Commission has stated that it is committed to carrying out President Trump’s policy agenda, consistent with his executive orders related to (1) “unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination,” (2) “defending the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights,” (3) “protecting workers from religious bias and harassment, including antisemitism,” and (4) “anti-American national origin discrimination.”

Further evidencing these stated objectives, among other things, Acting Chair Lucas has announced that one of her priorities for compliance, investigations, and litigation is to defend the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights, including women’s rights to single-sex spaces at work. She likewise removed the agency’s “pronoun app,” a feature in employees’ Microsoft 365 profiles, which allowed an employee to opt to identify pronouns, which then appeared alongside the employee’s display name across all Microsoft 365 platforms, including Outlook and Teams. This content was displayed both to internal and external parties with whom EEOC employees communicated. She also has ended the use of the “X” gender marker during the intake process for filing a charge of discrimination and directed the modification of the charge of discrimination and related forms to remove “Mx.” from the list of prefix options.

On December 19, 2025, Chair Lucas announced in an interview with Reuters that, “[i]f you have a DEI program or any employee program that involves taking an action in whole or in part motivated by race or sex or any other protected characteristic, that’s unlawful.” She confirmed that federal inquiries into corporate diversity programs are underway and warned that initiatives tied to hiring, promotion, or marketing may come under scrutiny. Lucas reiterated the White House’s position that white men have been subject to discrimination in the workplace through DEI programs and encouraged the submission of complaints.

In several respects, FY 2025 represented a hard pivot in enforcement targets. While total filings decreased, the new administration foreshadowed a new direction and targeted approach in upcoming EEOC enforcement.

VIDEO – DMCAR Trend #6: Data Privacy Filings Continued To Grow As The Playbook Became More Refined

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: Data privacy class action filings continued to expand in 2025, marking it as one of the fastest growing areas in the complex litigation space. Plaintiffs filed approximately 1,822 data privacy class actions in 2025. This represents an average of more than 150 fillings per month and more than seven filings per business day. These numbers reflect growth of more than 18% over the number of data breach class actions filed in 2024 and growth of more than 200% over the number of data breach class actions filed just three years ago in 2022.

Watch Review co-editor Jennifer Riley as she explains this trend in more detail below:

In 2025, courts also granted motions to dismiss these complaints at increasingly high rates, leading to many dismissals, many pre-ruling settlements, and few rulings on motions for class certification. Indeed, despite the significant increase in filings, courts issued few – only three – rulings on motions for class certification in 2025, suggesting that many motions are in the pipeline or that cases are increasingly resolved prior to class certification through dismissal or settlement.

  1. Filing Numbers Continued Their Upward Trajectory

The volume of data breach class actions continued to expand in 2025 as data breach solidified its spot among the fastest growing areas of class action litigation. After every major (and even not-so-major) report of a data breach, companies should expect the negative publicity to prompt one or more class action lawsuits. These suits saddle companies with the significant costs of responding to the data breach as well as the costs of dealing with the resulting high-stakes class action lawsuits, often on multiple fronts.

Companies that were unfortunate enough to fall victim to data breaches in 2025 faced class actions at an increasing rate. In 2025, plaintiffs filed approximately 1,822 data privacy class actions, which represents a 18% increase over 2024. In 2024, plaintiffs filed 1,488 data privacy class actions, compared with 1,320 in 2023, and 604 in 2022.

As the graphic depicts, the growth of filings in the data breach area has been extraordinary, from 109 class action filings in 2018 to 1,822 class action filings in 2025, an increase of more than 1,613% in seven years.

Several factors are likely continuing to fuel this growth in data breach class actions. First, data breaches have continued to increase at a rate that roughly tracks the shape of the curve depicted above. Second, whereas defendants have achieved success in the courthouse, recent court decisions have provided a better roadmap for plaintiffs to attempt to escape dismissal with some portion of their complaint intact. Third, and most importantly, hefty settlements have continued to fuel filings. Observing the difficulty that plaintiffs have faced attempting to certify data breach class actions, plaintiffs are increasingly incentivized to file and then monetize their data breach claims early in the litigation, prior to reaching that crucial juncture, while their investment remains low.

So long as defendants continue to play ball on the settlement front, we are likely to continue to see even low settlement payouts continue to lure plaintiffs to this space and fuel those filing numbers.

  1. Plaintiffs Continued To Face Hurdles In The Courthouse

Data breach plaintiffs continued to face hurdles in the courthouse in 2025. In 2025, federal courts issued substantive rulings on 222 motions to dismiss that they granted, granted in part, or denied. In those rulings, courts granted 150 motions to dismiss in whole or in part, and denied 72 of those motions, representing a success rate for defendants of 67.5%. Contrasting those results with 2024, in 2024, federal courts issued rulings on 265 motions to dismiss that they granted, granted in part, or denied. In those rulings, courts granted 171 motions to dismiss in whole or in part, and denied 94 of those motions, representing a success rate for defendants of 64.5%. Considering the increasing filing numbers, this suggests that defendants attacked the pleadings in a lower percentage of matters in 2025, or that a lower percentage of cases made it to the motion to dismiss stage.

In terms of the 150 favorable rulings for defendants in 2025, courts granted dismissal in 81 matters and granted dismissal in part in 69 matters. Thus, of the 150 rulings favoring defendants, 54% of those favorable rulings dismissed complaints in their entirety, often for lack of standing as discussed below. Defendants fared slightly better in 2025 than in 2024 in terms of gaining full dismissals. In 2024, courts issued 171 favorable rulings for defendants, granted dismissal in 103 matters and granted dismissal in part in 68 matters, meaning that, of the 171 rulings favoring defendants in 2024, 60% of those favorable rulings dismissed complaints in their entirety.

In terms of full dismissals, many of the decisions granting such motions addressed the issue of standing. The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 141 S.Ct. 2190 (2021), continues to fuel a fundamental threshold challenge in terms of whether a plaintiff can show that he or she suffered a concrete injury such that he or she has standing to sue. In TransUnion, the Supreme Court ruled that certain putative class members, who did not have their credit reports shared with third parties, did not suffer concrete harm and, therefore, lacked standing to sue. Since the TransUnion decision, standing has emerged as a key defense to data breach litigation because the plaintiffs often have difficulty demonstrating that they suffered concrete harm.

Courts have handed down a kaleidoscope of decisions on the issue of standing. For instance, some courts have found that mere public disclosure of private facts is sufficiently “concrete” enough for an injury to establish standing, whereas others have required allegations showing harm from misuse of the plaintiffs’ data. Decisions on motions to dismiss data breach class actions often turn on the sensitivity and level of exposure of the information involved, as well as plaintiffs’ ability to plausibly allege a credible risk of future harm, a duty to protect confidentiality of information, and many other specifics relevant to a large number various common law and statutory theories asserted by plaintiffs, who often file multiple claims, and sometimes file dozens of claims under dozens of theories in data breach class actions, in the hopes of finding one that will stick.

In Teague, et al. v. AGC America, Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 102564 (N.D. Ga. Jan. 6, 2025), for instance, the plaintiff filed a class action alleging that the defendant failed to adequately safeguard personal information, resulting in a data breach. The plaintiff claimed that the breach exposed the PII of more than 20,000 individuals, which subsequently was accessed by cybercriminals. The defendant moved to dismiss, arguing that the plaintiff failed to show actual losses or a causal connection between the breach and his alleged injuries. The court, however, held that the plaintiff had standing to sue because he demonstrated a substantial risk of future harm resulting from the data breach. The court reasoned that the plaintiff’s allegations of misuse of his PII by criminals and the immutable nature of the information were sufficient for standing.

In Dougherty, et al. v. Bojangles’ Restaurants, Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 194879 (W.D.N.C. Sept. 30, 2025), by contrast, the court dismissed a putative class action arising from a 2024 cyberattack against Bojangles. A group of former employees alleged negligence and violations of North Carolina tort and consumer protection laws, claiming emotional distress, privacy loss, and risk of identity theft. The court held that plaintiffs failed to allege a concrete injury sufficient for Article III standing. Eight of the nine plaintiffs based their claims solely on a speculative risk of future harm – such as potential sale of data on the dark web, increased spam calls, and time spent on mitigation – without a showing of any actual misuse. The lone plaintiff alleging fraudulent debit card charges failed to establish traceability, as he did not claim to have provided his card information to Bojangles.

Plaintiffs who clear the standing hurdle face another key inflection point at the class certification phase. Despite the robust filing activity, in 2025 courts issued few decisions on motions for class certification. In 2025, courts ruled on only three motions for class certification in the data breach area, and plaintiffs prevailed on one, for a success rate of 33%. Similarly, in 2024, courts ruled on only five motions for class certification in the data breach area, and plaintiffs prevailed on two, for a success rate of 40%. By comparison, in 2023, courts issued seven rulings on motions for class certification, and plaintiff prevailed on one, for a success rate of 14%. Given the volume of filings, these numbers suggest that hundreds of motions remain in the pipeline or that, observing the difficulty that plaintiffs have faced in certifying data breach such cases over the past three years, plaintiffs are electing to monetize their data breach claims prior to reaching that crucial juncture.

The court’s ruling in Theus, et al. v. Brinker International Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122165 (M.D. Fla. June 27, 2025), is illustrative. The plaintiff filed a class action against the defendant, Chili’s parent company Brinker International, Inc., alleging that hackers stole customers’ credit and debit card information and posted it for sale on a dark web marketplace called Joker’s Stash. The plaintiff filed a motion for class certification on behalf of all affected customers across the United States. The district court certified a class that included individuals who shopped at affected Chili’s locations during March and April 2018, had their data accessed by cybercriminals, and incurred expenses or time mitigating the consequences. However, Brinker appealed, and the Eleventh Circuit vacated the district court’s ruling. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit reasoned that the phrase “data accessed by cybercriminals” was too broad and could include uninjured individuals. Id. at *4. The Eleventh Circuit ordered the district court to either revise the class definition to include only those who experienced fraudulent charges or had data posted on the dark web, or to reassess the original definition while recognizing it might contain uninjured members. On remand, the plaintiff initially proposed a narrower class definition but ultimately deferred to the Eleventh Circuit’s directive, which refined the class to include only those who: (i) experienced fraudulent charges or had their data posted on the dark web due to the breach; and (ii) spent time or money mitigating those consequences. Despite this refinement, the district court denied class certification. The district court found individualized questions, such as whether someone’s data was compromised, what expenses he or she incurred, or whether his or her card was ever posted or misused, would require case-by-case analysis. The district court ruled that proving the individualized issues would require “a great deal of individualized proof,” making the case unsuitable for class certification. Id. at *11.

In sum, while filing numbers continue to climb, the number of rulings on key phases of data breach class actions is continuing to decline. Observing the difficulty that plaintiffs have faced overcoming motions to dismiss and certifying such cases over the past three years, plaintiffs are increasingly incentivized to monetize their data breach claims early in the litigation, prior to reaching either juncture. As we continue to see filings grow in this area, we could continue to see a decline in the number of rulings. So long as defendants continue to play ball on the settlement front, and payouts remain higher than the associated transaction costs, we are likely to continue to see settlements lure plaintiffs to this space.

VIDEO – DMCAR Trend #5: Exceptions Continued To Erode The Rule In The Arbitration Space

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr. and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: Arbitration agreements with class action waivers provide the foundation for one of the most potent defenses to class action litigation. While the U.S. Supreme Court has continued to promote arbitration agreements, plaintiffs have continued to attack their enforceability, and courts across the country have continued to apply exceptions in inconsistent and expansive ways.

Watch Review Editor Jerry Maatman explain this trend below:

One of the most impactful examples is the transportation worker exemption, which courts have applied expansively to local workers, such that the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to examine the exemption again, for a third time in the past five years. A defendant’s ability to enforce an arbitration agreement containing a class or collective action waiver continues to reign as one of the most impactful defenses in terms of shifting the pendulum of class action litigation.  The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the last hurdle to widespread adoption of such agreements with its decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, et al., 138 S. Ct. 1612 (2018).

In response, more companies of all types and sizes updated their onboarding systems, terms of use, and other types of agreements to require that employees and consumers resolve any disputes in arbitration on an individual basis.

  1. Defendants Continued To Enforce Arbitration Agreements At High Rates

To date, companies have enjoyed a high rate of success enforcing those agreements and using them to thwart class actions out of the gate. In 2025, defendants continued to win most of the motions to compel arbitration they filed. Across substantive areas of class action litigation, courts issued rulings on approximately 189 motions to compel arbitration, and defendants prevailed on 122 of those rulings, for a success rate of approximately 65%.

Their success rate in 2025 was not wholly out of line with their success rates over the past two years. In 2024, courts issued rulings on 167 motions to compel arbitration, and defendants prevailed in 91 of those rulings, a success rate of approximately 54%. In 2023, courts issued rulings on 187 motions to compel arbitration, and defendants prevailed on 123 motions, which translated into a success rate of 66%.

  1. The Transportation Worker Exemption Continued To Fuel Inconsistent Results

Given the potency of the arbitration defense, the plaintiffs’ class action bar has continued to press potential exceptions to its coverage. One of the most litigated is the transportation worker exemption to the FAA. Over the past year, plaintiffs made significant strides in terms of expanding that exemption as courts issued a mixed bag of rulings. Many lower federal courts continued to apply the transportation worker exemption in a broad manner to workers who handled goods that moved in interstate commerce, irrespective of whether the workers played a direct and necessary role in transporting the goods across borders, leading to divergent outcomes for last-mile delivery drivers, warehouse workers, and local distributors.

Section 1 of the FAA exempts from arbitration “contracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.” The third category for workers “engaged in commerce” commonly is called the “transportation worker” exemption. Although the U.S. Supreme Court has instructed lower courts to interpret the exemption “narrowly,” its parameters have proved a slippery slope for lower courts.

In Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon, et al., 142 S.Ct. 1783 (2022), the U.S. Supreme Court considered application of the transportation worker exemption to an airport ramp supervisor. Considering the language of the exemption, the U.S. Supreme Court reasoned that the exemption turns on the actual work that the “class of workers” to which the plaintiff belongs “typically carr[ies] out.” Id. at 1792. The parties did not contest that the plaintiff, a ramp supervisor, frequently loaded and unloaded cargo. The U.S. Supreme Court held that, to be “engaged in foreign or interstate commerce,” the class of workers must “at least play a direct and necessary role in the free flow of goods across borders” or, put another way, must “be actively engaged in transportation of those goods across borders via the channels of foreign or interstate commerce.” It concluded that cargo loaders exhibited this central feature, reasoning that “there could be no doubt that [interstate] transportation [is] still in progress” when they do the work of loading or unloading cargo. Id. at 1793-94.

This ruling set off a barrage of disparate decisions as courts struggled to find a workable line. As a result, in April 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court took up Bissonnette, et al. v. LePage Bakeries Park Street, LLC, 601 U.S. 246 (2024). As in Saxon, the U.S. Supreme Court emphasized that the test for application of the transportation worker exemption focuses on the work performed and not the employer’s industry. Addressing the employer’s argument that its test would fold virtually all workers who load or unload goods, such as pet shop employees and grocery store clerks, into the exemption, the U.S. Supreme Court stated that the exemption has “never” been interpreted to apply in “such limitless terms.” Id. at 256. It held that, for the exemption to apply, the worker “must at least play a direct and necessary role in the free flow of goods across borders.” Id.

The Bissonnette decision, however, appears to have had a smaller impact on the lower courts, which continued to issue opinions before and after Bissonette that broadly construe the transportation worker exemption. In 2025, rulings by lower courts diverged substantially, particularly with respect to workers who move goods, which have crossed or ultimately will cross state borders, within a facility or local area.

The court in Wolford, et al. v. United Coal Co. LLC, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15681 (W.D. Va. Jan. 28, 2025), for example, rejected plaintiffs’ attempts to apply the exception to mine workers like electricians and machine operators who did not directly transport coal across state lines. The plaintiffs argued that their work was closely related to the interstate transportation of coal via a beltline, which crossed state lines into Virginia, because they interacted with the beltline. The court found that the plaintiffs’ work did not qualify them as transportation workers under the FAA. Although coal crossed state lines, the court opined that the plaintiffs were primarily involved in tasks performed within the mine in Kentucky and their work was too far removed from the interstate transportation of coal to be considered transportation work.

Similarly, the court in Rubio-Leon, et al. v. Fresh Harvest, Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 181816 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 16, 2025), ruled that the plaintiffs, a group of seasonal farm workers who hauled and trucked agricultural products, failed to show they qualified for the exemption. The plaintiffs demonstrated that they moved products from fields to a cooling facility at the farm’s processing plant but did not produce evidence as to what then happened with the products. The plaintiffs pointed to statements on the defendant farms’ websites indicating the farms’ products were distributed nationally, but the court found such statements insufficient to show how, when, and where the products moved through the supply chain or how the plaintiffs played a meaningful role in that movement. The court therefore concluded that the FAA applied and compelled individual arbitration.

By contrast, numerous courts reached opposite conclusions. For example, the court in Mitchell, et al. v. Lineage Logistics Services, LLC, 2025 US Dist. LEXIS 35792 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 27, 2025), applied the transportation worker exemption to plaintiff, a warehouse worker, who organized boxes of goods and therefore denied the employer’s motion to compel arbitration. Although the court found the plaintiff to be part of a class of workers that organizes boxes in preparation for storage or shipment, it concluded that such work was tied to the movement of goods in interstate commerce and thus applied the exemption. The court explained that “preparing boxes for egress from the facility or organizing them for storage before they are ready to be shipped is necessary to the subsequent transit of those goods out of the facility. In other words, those goods cannot be transported without the workers like Plaintiff.” Id. at *15.

In Joyner, et al. v. Frontier Airlines, Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 101068 (D. Colo. May 19, 2025), the court applied the exemption to three customer service agents who worked for an airline. Two of the plaintiffs worked at ticket counters and the third plaintiff worked at the boarding gates. The defendant argued that the plaintiffs were not supposed to touch customer baggage but were instead required to supervise passengers as they tagged and loaded their own bags onto conveyer belts. The plaintiffs argued that they often weighed bags, tagged bags, and loaded them onto conveyer belts or, if the conveyer belts malfunctioned, loaded baggage on to carts. As such, the court found that the plaintiffs belonged to a class of workers who lift, weigh, inspect, and tag baggage and move it to conveyer belts or carts during a route to a destination on a plane. The court concluded that the plaintiffs played a direct and necessary role in ensuring that passengers’ baggage moves through the airport for loading on to planes and that this sufficed to establish the plaintiffs’ status as transportation workers.

Finally, in Silva, et al. v. Schmidt Baking Distribution, LLC, No. 24-2103-CV (2nd Cir. Dec. 22, 2025), the Second Circuit applied the exemption to commercial truck drivers who created their own corporations and executed arbitration agreements in their capacities as presidents of their own companies.  The drivers filed a putative class action alleged violation of wage & hour laws and, after the district court granted the defendant’s motion to compel arbitration, the appellate court reversed.  The appellate court noted that, before and after they formed their own corporations, their daily responsibilities involved driving commercial trucks to the defendant’s warehouse to pick up baked goods, delivering the product to retail outlets within their assigned territories, unloading the goods, and stocking the goods on retail shelves.  The Second Circuit held that truck-driving work directly impacts the free flow of goods and, therefore, concluded that the drivers qualified as transportation workers without any examination of whether their routes or the goods crossed borders.  It also credited the workers’ allegations that they were faced with a Hobson’s choice of adopting a corporate form or losing their jobs and, therefore, declined to allow such form to circumvent the transportation worker exemption. 

These and other decisions reflect continued inconsistent application of the transportation worker exemption. In 2025, this led the U.S. Supreme Court to grant a writ of certiorari in Flower Foods, Inc. v. Brock, No. 24-945, 2025 U.S. LEXIS 3947 (U.S. Oct. 20, 2025). That case involves a plaintiff who worked as a local distributor of baked goods. He placed orders for products, most of which were produced by Flowers bakeries outside the state, picked up the products at a local warehouse, loaded them onto his own vehicle, and delivered them to his customers within the same state. The district court denied Flowers’ motion to compel arbitration based on the transportation worker exemption, and the Tenth Circuit affirmed that decision. The U.S. Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari and is set to answer the question of whether workers who locally deliver goods, which traveled in interstate commerce, are transportation workers for purposes of the FAA exemption.

Thus, the Supreme Court is set to add some clarity to the scope of the transportation worker exemption in 2026, and its ruling could have a profound impact on class actions. Because nearly all products travel across state lines, the ruling effectively could exempt most workers from the FAA, weakening the force of arbitration agreements, or it could significantly curtail the broad reading the lower courts have given Saxon. Either way, given the enduring impact of the arbitration defense in class action litigation, the plaintiffs’ class action bar is apt to continue to attempt to develop creative work arounds to arbitration agreements and to continue to push the boundaries of the transportation worker exemption.

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The opinions expressed on this blog are those of the author and are not to be construed as legal advice.

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