Announcing The Launch Of The Duane Morris Discrimination Class Action Review – 2025!

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

Duane Morris Takeaways: Legal compliance to prevent discrimination is a corporate imperative. Companies and business executives operate in the court of public opinion and workplace inequality continues to grab headlines and remains forefront in the public eye. In this environment, employers can expect discrimination class actions to reach even greater heights in 2024. To that end, the class action team at Duane Morris is pleased to present the second edition of the Discrimination Class Action Review – 2025. This publication analyzes the key discrimination-related rulings and developments in 2024 and the significant legal decisions and trends impacting discrimination class action litigation for 2025. We hope that companies and employers will benefit from this resource in their compliance with these evolving laws and standards.

Class action litigation in the discrimination space remains an area of key focus of skilled class action litigators in the plaintiffs’ bar. Class actions challenging employment policies and practices has a robust history since passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. For decades, federal courts routinely granted class certification in nationwide employment discrimination class actions, which often spiked settlements that entailed huge pay-outs and across-the-board changes to HR systems. In turn, significant changes in the workplaces of Corporate America resulted from class action precedents, massive settlements, and injunctive relief orders. This changed in large part over a decade ago when the U.S. Supreme Court decided Wal-Mart Inc. v. Dukes, et al., 564 U.S. 338 (2011). That decision reversed a class certification order in a pay and promotions lawsuit involving 1.5 million class members who asserted claims of sex discrimination in pay and promotions. In handing down this ruling, the Supreme Court tightened the legal requirements for securing class certifications. It simultaneously forced the plaintiffs’ bar to adjust their strategies on how to prosecute class actions, while also fueling new defense strategies for opposing class certification motions. Suddenly gone were the days when nationwide class actions challenging hiring, compensation, and promotion policies of large corporations inevitably ended with across the board certification orders and big settlement checks.

But the pendulum appears to be swinging back, as courts are becoming increasingly inclined to find for plaintiffs in class certification rulings, and thereby raising the potential for large monetary remedies. This is especially true in the discrimination context, as society continues to grapple with widespread inequality in the wake of large scale social justice campaigns like Black Lives Matter and the #MeToo movement. Businesses are being confronted with increasingly employee-friendly legislative changes and a more aggressive plaintiffs’ bar.

Click here to bookmark or download a copy of the Discrimination Class Action Review – 2025 e-book. Look forward to an episode on the Review coming soon on the Class Action Weekly Wire!

It’s Here! The Duane Morris Privacy Class Action Review – 2025

By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., Jennifer A. Riley, Alex W. Karasik, Gregory Tsonis, Justin Donoho, and Tyler Zmick

Duane Morris Takeaways: The last year saw a virtual explosion in privacy class action litigation. As a result, compliance with 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 second edition of the Privacy Class Action Review – 2025. This publication analyzes the key privacy-related rulings and developments in 2024 and the significant legal decisions and trends impacting privacy class action litigation for 2025. We hope that companies and employers will benefit from this resource in their compliance with these evolving laws and standards.

Click here to bookmark or download a copy of the Privacy Class Action Review – 2025 e-book. Look forward to an episode on the Review coming soon on the Class Action Weekly Wire!

The Class Action Weekly Wire – Episode 88: Key Trends In Data Breach Class Actions

Duane Morris Takeaway: This week’s episode of the Class Action Weekly Wire features Duane Morris partners Jerry Maatman and Jennifer Riley, special counsel Justin Donoho, and associate Ryan Garippo with their discussion of the key trends analyzed in the 2025 edition of the Duane Morris Data Breach Class Action Review, including the contributing factors in the exponential growth of data breach class action filings, the sophistication of the plaintiffs’ bar litigation theories, and the chart-topping settlements in this area.  

Bookmark or download the Data Breach Class Action Review e-book here, which is fully searchable and accessible from any device.

Check out today’s episode and subscribe to our show from your preferred podcast platform: Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, Samsung Podcasts, Podcast Index, Tune In, Listen Notes, iHeartRadio, Deezer, and YouTube.

Episode Transcript

Jerry Maatman: Welcome all our loyal listeners and blog readers. Thank you for being here on our weekly podcast, the Class Action Weekly Wire. I’m, Jerry Maatman of Duane Morris, and joining me today are my colleagues, Jen, Justin, and Ryan. Thanks so much for being on this particular podcast.

Jennifer Riley: Thank you, Jerry. Happy to be part of the podcast today.

Justin Donoho: Thanks, Jerry. Glad to be here.

Ryan Garippo: Thanks for having me, Jerry.

Jerry: Today in the podcast we’re discussing the publication of this year’s Duane Morris Data Breach Class Action Review and desk reference designed for our clients to give them the latest, greatest information on the cutting-edge issues in the world of data breach class action. Listeners can find the e-book publication on our blog, the Duane Morris Class Action Defense blog. Jen, can you share with our listeners a bit about this desk reference and publication?

Jennifer: Absolutely, Jerry. The volume of data breach class actions exploded in 2024. Data breach has emerged as one of the fastest growing areas of class action litigation. The Review contains an overview of these filing numbers as well as settlements as well as some of the key decisions in this area. So, in sum, courts continue to reach inconsistent outcomes on issues such as standing and uninjured class members, those issues that are uniquely challenging in the data breach space. The Review has dozens of contributors, and it reflects really the collective experience and expertise of our class action defense group.

Jerry: I think it used to be, people thought whenever there was a drop in the stock following a company announcement, as sure as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west every day, there’d be a securities fraud class action lawsuit being filed. That seems to be the case now, when there’s a data breach incident, a data breach class action follows in its wake. Justin, can you shed some light on why this particular cause of action in this particular space has been growing incrementally over the last 36 months?

Justin: Absolutely. I mean, the frequency of the data breaches have been increasing, which is a huge part, and of course, with that comes heightened attention from both consumers and the plaintiffs’ bar. High profile cases, such as that multidistrict litigation arising from the Marriott International breach that affected over 133 million people, for example. There’s the MOVEIt MDL, which is another big one that got going last year. These have all put companies on notice that failure to secure personal data can lead to costly litigation. Cost lawsuits are not just about the breach itself, it’s also about the aftermath. So, consumers are now more aware of the risks and more inclined to seek legal recourse when their data is compromised.

Jerry: I think this is a great area where the notion that the law is trailing behind technology and can’t keep up with it – may well explain some of the developments in this particular space from a cybersecurity perspective. How do you think the increasing frequency of these sorts of events, and the sophistication of cyber criminals, is playing out in the class action space?

Ryan: Well, the rise in cyberattacks is definitely a huge factor. We’re seeing more sophisticated tactics from cybercriminals. Ransomware is at least one prime example – hackers demand payments in exchange for not publishing or further exploiting stolen data. The issue is that paying the ransom doesn’t necessarily guarantee the safe return or the deletion of the data, which makes these incidents devastating for companies. Additionally, I think we’ve seen as there’s been a shift to remote work and cloud-based infrastructure, that more vulnerabilities are exposed which ultimately increases the frequency of breaches. As a result, I think we’re seeing more lawsuits following these incidents and plaintiffs’ attorneys are more eager to capitalize on the growing number of affected individuals.

Jerry: In the last two weeks, the U.S. Supreme Court has accepted a case for review on the issue of uninjured class members, and whether or not their presence is something that can be used by a defendant to stop class certification. And one of the things we’ve seen in the last few years in the data breach area is the lack of injury or no injury-in-fact, as the Supreme Court has articulated that in TransUnion v. Ramirez. Jen, what do you see in terms of what plaintiffs are doing to try and come up with theories, at least from a financial damage or injury standpoint, that companies are now facing in what I would call data breach litigation 2.0?

Jennifer: Well, Jerry, I think several factors are really contributing to the rise of the popularity of these lawsuits. First, I think the sheer volume of people affected by these breaches has ballooned. Especially with breaches impacting millions of consumers or employees. As the size of these cases increases, I think it naturally leads to higher settlement amounts which in turn are attracting more plaintiffs’ lawyers to this area. Additionally, I think the type of data being compromised is becoming more sensitive – financial and healthcare information, for example – are leading to additional claims and higher potential damages and are leading plaintiffs’ attorneys to become more creative in looking for ways to monetize, capitalize on these breaches in terms of converting them into settlement dollars.

Justin: Yes, absolutely. And some courts are also becoming more sympathetic to plaintiffs in these cases, and to the potential long-term consequences of data breaches to plaintiffs, even where immediate harm is not apparent. So, it’ll be interesting to see where that Supreme Court case plays out. And let’s not forget about the legal fees and the expert fees also contributing to some of these large settlement dollars. As these cases become more complex with issues like class certification and determining damages, and the reasonableness of the cybersecurity, the costs involved in litigating these lawsuits are skyrocketing.

Jerry: You mentioned class certification – certainly the plaintiffs’ bar their theory is file the case, certify the case, then monetize the case, and the statistical study within the desk reference talks about the rise in class certification to 40%. Still a low number, but significantly up from 16% in calendar year 2023. What do you attribute to the trend that’s showing an upward number and a more of a chance for the plaintiffs’ bar to certify their data breach class actions?

Ryan: Well, like we mentioned before, I think it’s reflective of the fact that plaintiffs’ counsel has gotten more sophisticated in this space, and courts are getting more sympathetic to the plaintiffs at issue. But that said, class certification is still a major hurdle in any class action. And it’s particularly challenging in data breach cases. The increased success rate for class certification in the data breach space is 40% in 2024, reflecting that evolving legal precedent. Courts are now more inclined to accept the argument that consumers have suffered harm, even if their data hasn’t been directly misused, and that the mere recognition of an indirect harm, such as the increased risk of identity, theft, or emotional dispute or emotional distress, is enough to allow plaintiffs to get into court and overcome this clear obstacle.

Jerry: Jen, what were some of the major data breach litigation markers in the federal courts this year, by your way of thinking?

Jennifer: Well, Jerry, great question. We discuss in the Review some of the largest ones. Certainly, one of the prime examples is the ongoing MOVEIt Customer Data Breach Litigation. That litigation that began back in 2023 continued throughout 2024, and is ongoing. In that one, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidated more than 200 class action lawsuits. Those lawsuits resulted from a Russian cybergang hacking the file transfer software MOVEIt. The Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred those proceedings after consolidating them to the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. The plaintiffs in that case, as I mentioned, alleged that this vulnerability in the Massachusetts-based company MOVEIt, a transfer file software, was exploited. That data breach is considered to be the largest hack of 2023. According to the Panel’s initial transfer order, it exposed personally identifiable information of more than 55 million people. So, as I mentioned, that proceeding is ongoing. In July 2024, the Transferee Court issued an order adopting a modified bellwether structure in which it ordered the plaintiffs to file up to six consolidated amended complaints, and it ordered the parties to meet confer on the defendants to be named in each of those. The plaintiffs are going to file their motions for class certification, according to the schedule at least, in the summer of 2025. So, lots to be done in those cases yet.

Jerry: Well, it seems to me that data breach litigation, especially in the class action arena, is a problem or a fear that keeps corporate counsel up at night, and some of the top settlements in this space in 2024 maybe fuel that fear. What were some of the key and highest class action settlements in the data breach case, despite the fact that certification hovered around 40%?

The largest data breach class action settlement in 2024 was $350 million in In Re Alphabet Inc. Securities Litigation, Case No. 18-CV-6245 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 30, 2024), in which the court granted final settlement approval in a class action alleging that a software glitch led to a data breach in which Google+ users’ personal data was exposed for three years.

Justin: Yes, Jerry. Plaintiffs did very well in securing high dollar settlements last year, with the top 10 settlements totaling $593.2 million dollars. This was a significant increase over 2023 when the top 10 totaled $515 million – so they keep going up, too.

Jerry: Well, my prognostication is the 2025 numbers are going to go up and even exceed those chart-toppers in the next 12 months. In terms of final parting thoughts for our loyal listeners, what are some of the takeaways and key points that our listeners and readers should keep in mind for data breach issues in 2025?

Ryan: Invest in strong cybersecurity measures – it’s essential to stay out of the game in this space and constantly involve your cybersecurity infrastructure against these emerging threats. But beyond that, companies should also have a well-designated incident response plan in place and make sure that it’s regularly tested. This helps ensure not only quicker recovery, but also a stronger defense in court if a breach ever occurs. This legal landscape is evolving, and data breaches are no longer niche; they’re becoming an expected part of the litigation landscape, and so, having a proactive and comprehensive approach can help mitigate the immediate and long-term costs, and help keep you out of those $500 million numbers that Jerry and Justin mentioned before.

Jerry: Well, thanks, Jen, Justin, and Ryan, for your thought leadership and your analysis of this particular area. Loyal listeners, please stop by our blog and website to download for free our e-book, Data Breach Class Action Review – 2025. Thanks so much everyone for lending your expertise today on our Class Action Weekly Wire podcast.

Ryan: Thanks, Jerry.

Justin: Thanks for having me and thank you, listeners.

Jennifer: Thanks so much, everyone. See you next week.

The Federal Arbitration Act Turns 100

By Eden E. Anderson, Rebecca S. Bjork, Jennifer A. Riley, and Gerald L. Maatman, Jr.

The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) turns 100 years old today. 

In enacting the FAA on February 12, 1925, Congress eliminated the power of the states to require that claims be resolved in court when contracting parties instead agree to resolve their claims in arbitration.  The FAA’s purpose was to reverse longstanding judicial hostility to arbitration agreements, and to place arbitration agreements on equal footing with other contracts under the law. 

As we celebrate the FAA’s 100th birthday, we highlight three key areas in which the FAA’s scope and application have come under scrutiny in recent years. 

The Scope Of The Transportation Worker Exemption Remains Unclear

The FAA does not apply to employment contracts of seamen, railroad employees, and workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.  The scope of this so-called transportation worker exemption has been a hotbed for litigation in recent years, with the U.S. Supreme Court addressing the issue in multiple decisions.  The high court’s decisions in Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon, 596 U.S. 450 (2022), Domino’s Pizza, LLC v. Carmona, et al., 143 S. Ct. 361 (2022), and Bissonnette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC, 61 U.S. 246 (2024), emphasized that the transportation worker exemption is to be narrowly construed and that, for the exemption to apply, a worker must play a direct and necessary role in the free flow of goods across borders.

In the wake of these decisions, state and federal courts are now grappling with what that means and whether warehouse workers, last-mile delivery drivers, ride-hailing drivers, and fueling technicians meet the “direct and necessary role” test.  While such classes of workers bear little resemblance to the seamen and railroad employees expressly excluded from the FAA’s scope, in jurisdictions hostile to arbitration, including California courts and the Ninth Circuit, the transportation worker exemption has been found to apply.  It is therefore important for employers to include language in arbitration agreements that permits alternative enforcement of the agreement under state law if the FAA is found not to apply. 

Does EFASHA Exempt Entire Cases From Arbitration?

On March 3, 2022, President Biden signed into law the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act (EFASHA).  Under the EFASHA, an employee alleging sexual harassment or assault, whether individually or as a class representative, may pursue their claims in court rather than in arbitration, regardless of whether they agreed with their employer to arbitrate their claims.

But what happens when a plaintiff alleges such claims, but also alleges claims that permissibly can be arbitrated?  Courts too have begun answering that question.  Some courts have concluded that the EFASHA’s statutory language requires that the employee’s entire case remain in court, reasoning that the EFASHA makes a pre-dispute arbitration agreement invalid and unenforceable “with respect to a case” which means the entire case.  (9 U.S.C. § 402(a) (emphasis added).)  The court so concluded in Johnson v. Everyrealm, Inc., 657 F. Supp. 3d 535 (S.D.N.Y. 2023), in denying the employer’s motion to compel the plaintiff’s sex harassment, race discrimination, and retaliation claims to arbitration. 

The outcome, however, differed in Mera v. SA Hosp. Grp., LLC, 675 F. Supp. 3d 442 (S.D.N.Y. 2023), wherein the plaintiff alleged claims that he experienced a hostile work environment on account of his sexual orientation and that he and other employees suffered state and federal wage and hour infractions.  The court there determined that, because the wage and hour claims did not “relate to” the hostile work environment claim, the wage and hour claims could be compelled to arbitration.  Id. at 447.

If a plaintiff can allege a plausible claim that triggers the EFASHA’s application, they may be successful in keeping all their claims in court, or possibly only some of them. 

We anticipate continued litigation in this area, and an uptick in the assertion of tenuous sex-based harassment claims that might not otherwise have been plead. 

Appellate Issues Raised By Recent Case And Legislative Developments

What happens to the trial court proceedings after a decision on a motion to compel arbitration has also been a hotly litigated issue. 

In Smith v. Spizzirri, 601 U.S. 472 (2024), the U.S. Supreme Court held that, when a federal court finds that a dispute is subject to arbitration and a party has requested a stay of the court proceeding pending arbitration, the FAA compels the court to stay, and to not dismiss, the proceeding.  Consequently, if a plaintiff’s claims are compelled to arbitration and the district court proceedings stayed, there will be no judgment with an associated right to appeal.  Thus, the plaintiff’s only recourse—if they dispute the arbitration ruling—will be to seek permission to pursue an interlocutory appeal or to pursue an appeal of the forum issue long after the fact if and when they lose in arbitration. 

Another stay issue that will surely be litigated concerns a 2024 amendment to California’s Code of Civil Procedure.  In California, if a motion to compel arbitration is denied and that decision is appealed, there is now no longer an automatic stay of the court proceedings during the pendency of an appeal.  As a result, plaintiffs can seemingly proceed with their claims in court while the employer seeks a reversal of the forum issue on appeal, unless the appellant seeks and obtains a stay from the trial court.  As this law on its face disfavors arbitrate, we anticipate it will be challenged. 

For a more comprehensive summary of FAA-related litigation issues, Duane Morris’s 2025 Wage & Hour Class and Collective Action Review, available here, features an entire Chapter on this topic.   

The Class Action Weekly Wire – Episode 87: Key Trends In Wage & Hour Class And Collective Actions

Duane Morris Takeaway: This week’s episode of the Class Action Weekly Wire features Duane Morris partners Jerry Maatman, Jennifer Riley, and Greg Tsonis with their discussion of the key trends analyzed in the third edition of the Duane Morris Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review, including courts’ interpretation of the conditional certification process, a circuit-by-circuit scorecard, and best practices for employers in 2025.

Bookmark or download the Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review e-book here, which is fully searchable and accessible from any device.

Check out today’s episode and subscribe to our show from your preferred podcast platform: Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, Samsung Podcasts, Podcast Index, Tune In, Listen Notes, iHeartRadio, Deezer, and YouTube.

Episode Transcript

Jerry Maatman: Welcome back, podcast listeners, to our first session of the Class Action Weekly Wire for calendar year 2025. Thank you for being here. I’m Jerry Maatman, a partner at Duane Morris, and joining me today are my partners, Jen Riley and Greg Tsonis. Welcome back.

Jennifer Riley: Thank you, Jerry, happy to be on the first week of Weekly Wire podcast of 2025.

Greg Tsonis: Thanks, Jerry. Glad to be here.

Jerry: Today on our podcast we’re going to be discussing the most recent publication of the Duane Morris Class Action Defense group regarding the 2025 Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review. Listeners can find the e-book version of this publication on our blog, the Duane Morris Class Action Defense Blog. Jen, can you share with our listeners some of the ins and outs of this executive summary and e-book?

Jennifer: Absolutely, Jerry. In the Duane Morris Wage & Hour Class and Collective Action Review, we provide an overview of the trends, the key decisions, and the key settlements impacting the wage and hour space over the past year. The purpose of the Review is really multifaceted. First, we hope that it will demystify some of the complexities of class and collective action litigation in the wage and hour space. Second, we really hope the book will keep corporate counsel updated on the ever-evolving landscape of Rule 23 and FLSA collective actions and enable them to really make informed decisions in dealing with these complex litigation risks.

Jerry: Well, I know that wage and hour litigation is one of the hallmarks of our practice with our team collectively having over 225 years of experience in defending these sorts of cases. The review was edited by the three of us on this podcast and we have dozens of additional contributors that analyzed all of the wage and hour class and collective action certification rulings and settlements over the past 12 months. Greg, from your standpoint in terms of dealing with general counsel, what do you think are some of the benefits of this resource?

Greg: Great question, Jerry. So, wage and hour litigation has long been a focus of the plaintiffs’ class action bar. Part of our purpose in putting this together is really to assist our clients by helping them identify developing trends in the case law and offering practical approaches and dealing with these types of cases and class and collective action litigation.

Jerry: As you had mentioned – in 2024, this was a very active space for the plaintiffs’ class action bar, and I think one of the things that clients have remarked to me about is the statistical analysis contained in the Review in terms of looking at circuits’ success rates for both the plaintiff side and the defense side. I know in calendar year 2024, there were approximately 160 motions that were decided and actually plaintiffs had a high degree of success at close to 80%. Jen, what’s your take on why the plaintiffs’ bar is able to certify in essence 4 out of 5 cases?

Of the 157 total motions for conditional certification filed in federal courts in 2024, the plaintiffs won conditional certification 125 times, or at a success rate of 80%, while 32 motions were denied.

Jennifer: Great question, Jerry. So, the threshold for conditional certification tends to be very low. In many cases, plaintiffs are submitting declarations – sometimes only one or two declarations, sometimes with payroll or time records – and courts are routinely accepting this minimal showing. It’s really not about proving the case, at this stage just about showing there’s a plausible basis for contending that the same allegations apply across a defined group. So, given that the plaintiffs’ bar knows this process so well, it’s really no surprise that they are continuing to have a high rate of success here.

Greg: Exactly, and plaintiffs are often able to leverage the conditional certification process and the subsequent notice that issues to bring in more employees to build their case. The fact that it’s relatively easy to get certified gives them a significant advantage right from the start.

Jerry: At least in all circuits except two, both the Fifth and Ninth Circuits, there’s a standard two-part test. A first stage called the lenient stage of conditional certification, and then a second stage called decertification. What occurred in 2024 in terms of how decertification motions came down, especially with respect to the changes or flux in the case law based on what’s coming out of the Fifth and Sixth Circuits?

Greg: That’s right, Jerry. So, after conditional certification, there’s a decertification phase where the court looks closer at the actual claims, the actual evidence that the plaintiffs have been able to marshal, and determine whether those employees are actually similarly situated. Now, historically, federal courts were almost universally following a two-stage process, but as of 2021, the Fifth Circuit threw a wrench in that with its decision in Swales v. KLLM Transport Services. There, the Fifth Circuit essentially abandoned the two-stage process and instituted a more rigorous approach where they required plaintiffs to present stronger evidence upfront. The Sixth Circuit followed suit in a case in 2023, but took a different approach by imposing even stricter standards.

Jerry: It’s very interesting to me that a piece of New Deal legislation passed in 1938, even close to 100 years later, has three different standards – a virtual patchwork quilt of case law depending on where an employer is sued, and what particular circuit’s law is applicable to the certification motion. What’s that like, Jen, in terms of what employers face in trying to defend themselves in these sorts of cases?

Jennifer: Absolutely, Jerry. In a word, it’s creating inconsistency. And that inconsistency could be problematic because it makes predicting outcomes more difficult. And with these now 3 distinct standards, there is a growing chance that the Supreme Court eventually will step in to provide some clarity here.

Jerry: I think it also has something to do with case architecture and venue selection. In 2023, we saw two dozen rulings in the Sixth Circuit. Yet last year, only a dozen, basically a 50% drop in the number of cases filed and then went to certification there. What do you think are the long-term implications in terms of FLSA litigation and venue selection?

Given the Sixth Circuit’s abandonment of the traditional two-step certification process, we expected a material decrease in FLSA cases filed in that in 2024. Indeed, there were only 12 rulings on certification and decertification motions in 2024 in the Sixth Circuit, down from 22 total rulings in 2023. In 2024, the Second Circuit issued the most certification rulings (27 granted; 6 denied), followed by the Fourth Circuit (20 granted; 1 denied); and the Ninth Circuit (13 granted; 7 denied).

Jennifer: Well, Jerry, it’s hard to say for sure. On the one hand, the stricter certification process could deter some plaintiffs from filing in the Sixth Circuit. That certainly seems to have been the case over the past year. On the other hand, employers could face a tougher time getting cases decertified after they’ve been conditionally certified which could lead to larger settlements, or more cases being litigated in other jurisdictions. So, we may see a shift in how and where the cases are filed going forward.

Jerry: Well, certainly anyone who is awake and watching TV on January 20th saw that change is inevitable, and change is now upon us, at least at the governmental sector. Greg, what do you think 2025 bodes for employers in terms of the types of things that the private plaintiffs’ bar will do, especially in the context of FLSA class and collective action litigation?

Greg: The overall trend is clear, Jerry. Employers should be aware that wage and hour litigation isn’t going away anytime soon. Given the plaintiffs’ bar’s ongoing success in these types of cases, and the ease with which they’re able to secure conditional certification, employers really need to be proactive. That means making sure that their pay practices are fully compliant, making sure that they’re reviewing employee classifications, and being ready to respond quickly to potential lawsuits. If they don’t, they might face costly litigation even in those jurisdictions where the plaintiffs’ bar is seeing more pushback.

Jennifer: And to add to that, employers also should be mindful of jurisdictions that are considered plaintiff-friendly, such as the Second Circuit, Fourth Circuit, Ninth Circuit. These are areas where a lot of FLSA litigation is concentrated and they tend to have even higher success rates for the plaintiffs.

Jerry: Success is all about filing the lawsuit, certifying it, and monetizing it. The Review spends a lot of pages delving into key settlements in the wage and hour space – what were the results in 2024 and what does it tell us for 2025?

Greg: Well, Jerry, plaintiffs did very well in securing high-dollar settlements in 2024 in this space, although not quite as well as they did in 2023. In 2024, the top 10 wage and hour settlements totaled just shy of $615 million. That was a decrease from 2023, when the top 10 wage and hour settlements totaled $742.5 million, but relatively in line with recent years.

The top 10 wage & hour class and collective action settlements totaled $614.55 million in 2024, down from $742.5 million in 2023, and up from $574.55 million in 2022.

Jerry: Well, my prognostications are the numbers in 2025 are going to go through the roof, and I think we’re apt to see even higher numbers than we’ve seen ever before. But obviously the jury’s still out on that. Well, thank you, Jen, and thank you, Greg, for your thought leadership and analysis in this area, and thank you to our loyal blog readers for tuning in to our first podcast of 2025. Please order your free copy of the Duane Morris Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review e-book right off of our blog.

Greg: Thank you for having me, Jerry, and thank you, listeners.

Jennifer: Thanks so much, everyone.

Just Released! The Duane Morris Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review – 2025

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

Duane Morris Takeaways: Complex wage & hour litigation has long been a focus of the plaintiffs’ class action bar. The relatively low standard by which plaintiffs can achieve conditional certification under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), often paired with state law wage & hour class claims, offers a potent combination by which plaintiffs can pursue myriad employment claims. To that end, the class action team at Duane Morris is pleased to present the second edition of the Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review – 2025. This new publication analyzes the key wage & hour-related rulings and developments in 2024 and the significant legal decisions and trends impacting wage & hour class and collective action litigation for 2025. We hope that companies and employers will benefit from this resource and that it will assist them with their compliance with these evolving laws and standards.

Click here to download a copy of the Wage & Hour Class And Collective Action Review – 2025 eBook.

Stay tuned for more wage & hour class and collective action analysis coming soon on our weekly podcast, the Class Action Weekly Wire.

DMCAR Trend #9 – California Remains Ground Zero For Representative Litigation Under The PAGA

By Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: The California Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) inspired more representative lawsuits than any other statute in America over the past year. According to the California Department of Industrial Relations, plaintiffs filed more than 9,464 PAGA notices in 2024, a nearly 22% increase over 2023, and a whopping 85,936% increase over the 11 PAGA notices filed in 2006. The so-called PAGA reform legislation passed in 2024 by California lawmakers seemingly did little to nothing to curb interest in these cases, which continue to present one of the most viable workarounds to workplace arbitration agreements.

Watch the video below to see Jennifer Riley explain this trend in detail:

The PAGA created a scheme to “deputize” private citizens to sue their employers for penalties associated with violations of the California Labor Code on behalf of other “aggrieved employees,” as well as the State. A PAGA plaintiff may pursue claims on a representative basis, i.e., on behalf of other allegedly aggrieved employees, but need not satisfy the class action requirements of Rule 23. In other words, the PAGA provides the plaintiffs’ class action bar a mechanism to harness the risk and leverage of a representative proceeding without the threat of removal to federal court under the CAFA and without the burden of meeting the requirements for class certification.

If successful in prosecuting such a case, aggrieved employees receive 25% of any civil penalties and pass the other 75% to the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA). The plaintiffs’ attorneys who pursue the action may collect their attorneys’ fees and costs.

  1. The Explosion Of PAGA Notices Continues

According to data maintained by the California Department of Industrial Relations, the number of PAGA notices filed with the LWDA has increased exponentially over the past two decades. The number grew from 11 notices in 2006, to 1,606 in 2013, and then experienced three sizable jumps – to 4,530 in 2014, to 5,732 in 2018, and to 7,464 in 2023, each coinciding with a significant shift in the legal landscape, as discussed below. In 2024, notices exceeded 9,464 for the first time, an all-time high.

From 2013 to 2014, employers saw the largest single year increase, from 1,605 notices in 2013 to 4,532 notices in 2014, an increase of 182%. The most significant drop in the past two decades occurred in 2022, when notices fell from 6,502 in 2021 to 5,817 in 2022, before their resurgence in 2023 and continued growth in 2024. The following chart illustrates this trend.

These numbers closely tie to the shifting landscape of workplace arbitration, as discussed below, in that each of the major shifts coincides with the timing of a significant expansion or pull back in the law governing the enforcement of arbitration agreements.

PAGA Reform seemingly has had little to no impact on the growth on PAGA filings. On June 18, 2024, Governor Newsom announced that labor and business groups had inked a deal to alter the PAGA in return for removing the referendum to repeal the PAGA from the November 2024 ballot. The California Legislature quickly moved to approve two bills (AB 2288 and Senate Bill 92). The alterations include reforms to the penalty structure, new defenses for employers, changes to the PAGA’s standing requirements, and a new “cure” process for both small and large employers, among other changes. These reforms affect all PAGA notices filed on or after June 19, 2024, with some exceptions.

  1. The PAGA As A Work-Around To Arbitration

The growing adoption of arbitration programs has led the plaintiffs’ class action bar to identify work-arounds, and the PAGA has emerged as one of the most popular.

The California Supreme Court cemented the PAGA as the frontrunner for employment-related claims with its decision in Iskanian, et al. v. CLS Transportation Los Angeles, 59 Cal.4th 348 (Cal. 2014). The California Supreme Court held that representative action waivers in arbitration agreements are “contrary to public policy and unenforceable as a matter of state law.” Id. at 384. In so holding, Iskanian established the PAGA as a mechanism by which a plaintiff could pursue a representative action unhindered by arbitration agreements or commitments to arbitrate on an individual basis. The decision undoubtedly fueled the filing of PAGA notices in 2014, which catapulted from 1,606 in 2013 to 4,530 in 2014.

The PAGA-workaround movement suffered its first significant set-back in 2022 with the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Viking River Cruises, Inc. v. Moriana, et al., 142 S.Ct. 1906 (2022). In Viking River, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, to the extent Iskanian precludes division of PAGA actions into individual and non-individual claims, and thereby “prohibit[s] parties from contracting around this joinder device,” the FAA preempts such rule. Id. The Supreme Court opined that the PAGA provides no mechanism to enable a court to adjudicate non-individual claims once an individual claim has been committed to a separate proceeding. As a result, the U.S. Supreme Court opined that Moriana lacked statutory standing to continue to maintain her non-individual claims in court, and, after compelling arbitration of the plaintiff’s individual PAGA claims, the lower court should have dismissed the PAGA representative claims. Id.

The set-back was short lived as, in 2023, the California Supreme Court minimized the impact of the Viking River decision. In Adolph v. Uber Technologies, Inc., 14 Cal. 5th 1104 (Cal. 2023), the California Supreme Court took up the issue of whether, under California law, a PAGA plaintiff whose individual PAGA claims are compelled to arbitration retains standing to bring representative PAGA claims. The California Supreme Court answered the question in the affirmative. It disagreed with the U.S. Supreme Court’s interpretation of California law and held that, once a PAGA plaintiff’s individual claims are compelled to arbitration, the plaintiff retains standing to maintain non-individual PAGA claims in court so long as he is an “aggrieved employee.” Id. at 1105. By deciding that an individual who signs an arbitration agreement can return to court after arbitration to pursue representative proceedings under the PAGA, the California Supreme Court relegated arbitration agreements to a mere hurdle rather than a bar to PAGA representative actions.

Although Viking River and Adolph are a mere one and two years old, respectively, the plaintiffs’ bar is continuing to attempt to find ways to eliminate the arbitration hurdle all together and to allow plaintiffs to proceed with their representative actions in court. One emerging trend is for plaintiffs to file complaints seeking to pursue only representative components, explicitly excluding their individual PAGA claims. These claims informally have become known as “headless” PAGA claims.

While this line of reasoning seemingly goes against the ruling in Adolph and other cases, which have held that a PAGA claim necessarily consists of both and individual and representative portion, the California Court of Appeal supported it in April 2024 with its decision in Balderas, et al. v. Fresh Start Harvesting, 101 Cal.App.5th 533 (2024). In that opinion, the California Court of Appeal denied a motion to compel arbitration, holding that a plaintiff could maintain a representative PAGA action, even without an individual PAGA claim, so long as the plaintiff alleges that he or she suffered a Labor Code violation.

We expect parties to heavily litigate this line of reasoning in 2025, with multiple appeals already filed as to rulings that follow the Balderas “headless” PAGA standard.

Given the technical requirements of California wage & hour law, coupled with the potentially crushing statutory penalties available to successful plaintiffs, employers should anticipate continued growth of PAGA lawsuits in 2025.

DMCAR Trend #7 – Data Breaches Gives Rise To An Unprecedented Number Of Class Action Filings

By Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: Data breach litigation remained expansive in 2024 as plaintiffs filed more data breach class actions than in any other year and double the number filed in 2022. As the number of data breaches has accelerated, such events have provided the fuel for a surge of class actions. Despite the significant increase in filings, courts issued few (only four) class certification decisions in 2024, suggesting that many motions are in the pipeline or that, observing the difficulty that plaintiffs have faced in certifying such cases over the past two years, plaintiffs are electing to monetize their data breach claims prior to reaching that crucial juncture. So long as defendants continue to play ball on the settlement front, we are likely to see settlement payouts continue to lure plaintiffs to this space and fuel those filing numbers.

Watch the video below to learn more about this trend from Review co-editor Jennifer Riley:

  1. Filing Numbers Continue Their Upward Trajectory

The volume of data breach class actions continued to proliferate in 2024. Data breach has emerged as one of the fastest growing areas of class action litigation. After every major (and not-so-major) report of a data breach, companies now can expect the resulting negative publicity to prompt one or more class action lawsuits, saddling companies with the significant costs of responding to the data breach as well as the significant costs of dealing with high-stakes class action lawsuits, often on multiple fronts.

Companies that are unfortunate enough to fall victim to data breaches in 2024 faced class actions at an increasing rate. In 2024, we tallied 1,488 class action filings in the data breach area, 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 108 class action filings in 2018 to 1,488 class action filings in 2024, an increase of more than 1,265% over six years.

Several factors likely contributed to this continued surge in data breach class actions in 2024. First, data breaches have continued to increase at a rate that roughly tracks the shape of the curve depicted above. Second, whereas data breach actions pursued a decade ago faced little prospect of success, recent court decisions have provided a roadmap for plaintiffs to attempt to show standing and successfully plead duty, causation, and damages, thereby providing additional momentum for the plaintiffs’ class action bar. Third, settlement numbers have fueled filings, as plaintiffs are succeeding in monetarizing claims early before facing the investment or risk of class certification, making data breach claims a continued area of popularity for the plaintiffs’ bar.

2.           Plaintiffs Continue To Face Hurdles In The Courthouse

The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, et al., 141 S.Ct. 2190 (2021), presents a fundamental threshold challenge for many data breach class action plaintiffs in terms of whether the plaintiff can show that he or she suffered a concrete injury such that he or she has standing to assert a claim. 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, however, have continued to disagree over the application of TransUnion in the data breach context and have handed down a kaleidoscope of decisions. For instance, in cases where plaintiffs fail to assert plausible allegations of present injury that are fairly traceable to the data breach and rely instead on an asserted risk of future harm, some courts have found that mere public disclosure of private facts is sufficiently “concrete” to establish standing, whereas others have required allegations showing that the risk of future harm is substantial.

In Logan, et al. v. Marker Group, Inc., 2024 WL 3489208 (S.D. Tex. July 18, 2024), for example, plaintiffs alleged that the defendant failed to properly secure their protected health information and personally identifiable information (PII), thus leaving them to “face a lifetime of heightened risk of identity theft and fraud” as a result of the data breach. Id. at *6. The court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss on the basis of lack of standing, finding that “the mere risk of future harm, standing alone, cannot qualify as a concrete harm.” Id. (citing TransUnion).

In Jones, et al. v. Sturm, Ruger & Co.,2024 WL 1307148 (D. Conn. Mar. 27, 2024), by contrast, plaintiff alleged that a breach compromised customers’ PII and payment card data (PCD). The court denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing. The court concluded that, under TransUnion, the plaintiff’s alleged injury was sufficiently “concrete” for standing purposes because “exposure of Plaintiffs’ PII to unauthorized third parties ‘bears some relationship’ to the ‘well-established common-law analog: public disclosure of private facts.’” Id. at *3 (quoting Bohnak v. Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., 79 F.4th 276, 285 (2d Cir. 2023)).

Plaintiffs who clear the standing hurdle face another key inflection point at the class certification phase. Despite the significant increase in filings, however, courts issued only five rulings on motions for class certification in 2024. This suggests that hundreds of motions are in the pipeline or that, observing the difficulty that plaintiffs have faced in certifying data breach such cases over the past two years, plaintiffs are electing to monetize their data breach claims prior to reaching that crucial juncture.

In Baker, et al. v. Parkmobile, LLC, 21-CV-2182, ECF No. 243 at 23 (N.D. Ga. Apr. 8, 2024), for example, a plaintiff’s expert conceded in detail at his deposition that, to resolve plaintiff’s claims, the court would need to undertake highly individualized inquiries as to whether the plaintiff was subject to a credential stuffing attack and whether such attack caused any injury. The parties reached a settlement while the motion for class certification was fully briefed and a decision was pending.

The certification rate, however, improved somewhat for plaintiffs in 2024. Courts issued five rulings on motions for class certification, and plaintiffs prevailed on two, a success rate of 40%. By comparison, in 2023, courts issued seven rulings on motions for class certification, and plaintiff prevailed in one, for a success rate of 14%.

Despite the increase in success rate, the recipe for successfully certifying a data breach class remains a work in progress, as unsuccessful plaintiffs encountered both new and old issues in 2024. For instance, in In Re Blackbaud, Inc. Customer Data Breach Litigation, 2024 WL 2155221 (D.S.C. May 14, 2024), the court denied class certification because plaintiffs failed to identify any administratively feasible way for the court to ascertain the identities of about 1.5 billion putative class members whose data was stored in 90,000 backup files.

In Vest Monroe, LLC, et al. v. Doe, No. S-23-G-1224, 2024 Ga. LEXIS 187 (Ga. Sept. 4, 2024), the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the denial of class certification because variation in the materials allegedly disclosed prevented plaintiff from showing commonality or typicality. The plaintiff’s claim arose from the conduct of an ex-employee who disclosed digital copies of documents and recordings. In finding a lack of commonality, the trial court noted the differences in the type of documents allegedly disclosed with respect to members of the proposed class, as some contained diagnosis and treatment information, while others did not. Id. at *4. Relatedly, some members of the proposed class had clinical information revealed, while plaintiff did not. The Georgia Supreme Court determined that the trial court did not err in its determination.

Although plaintiffs continue to search for a road map to reliably certify data breach class actions, defendants are continuing to fund settlements, allowing plaintiffs to monetize their claims without clearing the certification hurdle. Such circumstances are apt to continue to draw plaintiffs’ class action lawyers to the data breach space and to continue to generate filings.

Post-Removal Amendment To Hybrid State/Federal Law Complaint Dropping Federal Law Claims Requires Remand To State Court, Says SCOTUS

By Rebecca S. Bjork, Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., and Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway:  In a unanimous decision issued on January 15, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in Royal Canin U. S. A. v. Wullschleger, No. 23-677 (U.S. Jan. 15, 2025), that when a plaintiff files a civil suit under both state and federal law and subsequently amends the complaint to drop the federal law claims, the case must be remanded to state court due to lack of subject matter jurisdiction in the district court.  This decision lends clarity to employers who have been navigating a circuit split on the question of whether federal district court subject matter jurisdiction is determined at the time of removal to federal court, or whether subsequent amendments abandoning federal claims destroys such jurisdiction.  This issue arises over and over again in class action litigation.

Introduction

In a decision that will provoke readers’ memories (fondly or otherwise) of first year civil procedure class in law school, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a plaintiff’s deceptive marketing lawsuit originally stating both state and federal causes of action, that later dropped the federal claim in an amended complaint, must be remanded to state court.  In a 9-0 decision, Justice Kagan explained that once the state law claims are stripped away, no federal subject matter jurisdiction exists and remand is required.  Deciding a split amongst the circuit courts, the Supreme Court sided with the Eighth Circuit – and against the First, Third, Fourth, Sixth and Eleventh Circuits – in deciding that when a case is removed to federal court, an amended complaint dropping the federal claims destroys the district court’s jurisdiction. 

This is obviously of interest for employers facing federal statutory class-wide claims involving issues such as wage and hour and discrimination, that also implicate overlapping state statutes.

The Ruling In Royal Canin U. S. A. v. Wullschleger

The U.S. Supreme Court issued its unanimous decision in Royal Canin U. S. A. v. Wullschleger,  No. 23-677 (U.S. Jan. 15, 2025). In this case, the plaintiff purchased the defendant’s dog food that requires a prescription to obtain, believing that it contains medicine that off-the shelf dog food does not.  Id. at 4.  After learning that it does not, she filed suit in Missouri state court alleging violations of the state’s statute against deceptive marketing practices.  Her complaint also included a claim under the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. 301 (“FDCA”), that also forbids deceptive marketing practices.   

Royal Canin, seeking perhaps to avoid being thrown to the dogs in a state court jury pool, decided to file a notice of removal of the plaintiff’s lawsuit to federal district court based on federal question jurisdiction (the plaintiff’s FDCA count).  Id. at 4-5.  In response, the plaintiff amended her complaint, dropping the FDCA claim, and only seeking relief under Missouri state law.  Id. at 5.  She then moved to remand to state court where she originally filed her complaint, but the district court denied her motion.  Id.  She ultimately appealed the dismissal of her amended complaint on the merits to the Eighth Circuit, and it reversed the district court’s decision to maintain jurisdiction of the matter and remanded it to state court.  Id.   Royal Canin sought certiorari to resolve the circuit split, and the Supreme Court obliged and affirmed the Eight Circuit’s ruling. 

Basis Of The Supreme Court’s Opinion

In a very systematic and straightforward opinion of the Court, Justice Kagan explained why the limitations on federal court jurisdiction established by statute (e.g., 28 U.S.C. 1331 – cases “arising under” federal law) mandate SCOTUS’ unanimous conclusion.  Long-established precedent holds that federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Also, Congress has determined the scope of “supplemental jurisdiction,” where federal courts interpret and apply state law but only so long as they have concurrent federal jurisdiction to do so in the litigation.  28 U.S.C. 1367.  And, the Supreme Court emphasized another statute that mandates that if at any time it appears that the federal court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case “must” be remanded to state court.  28 U.S.C. 1447(c).  Id. at 3-4.   

Applying these principles, the Supreme Court rejected Royal Canin’s argument that such limitations do not apply once a case has been removed to federal court and so-called “removal jurisdiction” exists.  The Supreme Court explained, “Royal Canin argues that our precedent makes an exception for when an amendment [to a complaint] follows a lawsuit’s removal, but that is to read two bits of gratuitous language for a good deal more than they are worth.”  Id. at 6.  The Supreme Court continued that “Nothing in § 1367’s text  . . . distinguishes between cases removed to federal court and cases originally filed there.”  Id. at 8.  And, unfortunately for Royal Canin, the Supreme Court has already held that in such a circumstance relating to original jurisdiction, the amended complaint is what determines jurisdiction, not the one at the time of removal.  Id.  As a result, the Supreme Court concluded that when the plaintiff “reconfigured her case to make it only about state law” her suit “became one for a state court.”  Id. at 20.

Implications For Employers

As employers know, many class and collective action lawsuits are filed by plaintiffs that allege both state law and federal law claims.  The classic example is a hybrid class and collective action under the Fair Labor Standards Act and a similar but often more onerous state statute governing how employees are paid.  In our experience, many plaintiffs add their state law claims in order to extend the relevant statute of limitations period, for example, or sweep in certain state law substantive claims that are not available under a governing federal law. 

Royal Canin U. S. A. v. Wullschleger will simplify litigation strategy decisions for employers with nationwide workforces.  However, it remains to be seen how the plaintiffs’ bar will respond in terms of crafting both original and amended complaint strategies in the employment law space.  We will be following developments closely and will provide our analysis and insights here.

Trend #2 – Class Certification Numbers Normalize Across Substantive Areas

By: Jennifer A. Riley

Duane Morris Takeaway: Although courts issued fewer decisions on motions for class certification in 2024 as compared to 2023, the plaintiffs’ class action bar obtained certification at a more consistent rate across all substantive areas, suggesting that plaintiffs are being more selective in their investments and the cases they pursue through class certification.

Watch Duane Morris partner Jennifer Riley discuss the consistent certification rates in 2024 and what it means for 2025 in the video below:

In 2024, courts issued rulings on 432 motions for class certification, a decrease from 2023, when courts issued rulings on 451 motions for class certification. Of those, courts granted motions for class certification at a lower rate. Courts granted 272 of those motions, for a certification rate of approximately 63%. In 2023, by contrast, courts granted 324 motions for class certification, for a certification rate of approximately 72%.

Although the certification rate overall was lower, plaintiffs obtained certification at a more consistent rate across substantive areas, from a low of 33% in the RICO area, to a high of approximately 86% in the WARN areas. By contrast, in 2023, the numbers varied more substantially across substantive areas, from a low of 14% in the data breach area, to a high of 97% for securities fraud.

Plaintiffs Continued To Certify Cases At High Rates

    In 2024, plaintiffs succeeded in certifying class actions at a high rate. Across all major types of class actions, courts issued rulings on 432 motions to grant or to deny class certification in 2024. Of these, plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining or maintaining certification in 272 rulings, an overall success rate of approximately 63%.

    The numbers show that, when compared to 2023, plaintiffs filed fewer motions for class certification in 2024, and succeeded in certifying fewer classes in 2024.

    By comparison, in 2023, courts issued rulings on 451 motions to grant or deny class certification, and plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining or maintaining certification in 324 rulings, with an overall success rate of 72%. In 2022, courts issued rulings on 335 motions to grant or to deny class certification, and plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining or maintaining certification in 247 rulings, an overall success rate of nearly 74%.

    In 2024, the number of motions that courts considered varied significantly by subject matter area, and the number of rulings varied across substantive areas. The below chart summarizes these results in each of the key areas of class action litigation (sorted by plaintiffs’ success rate).

    The plaintiffs’ bar obtained the highest rates of success in WARN Act, wage & hour, securities fraud, and antitrust class actions. In cases alleging claims for violation of the WARN Act, plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining orders certifying classes in six of seven rulings issued during 2024, a success rate of 85.7%. In wage & hour class and collective actions, plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining first-stage certification orders in 124 of 156 rulings issued during 2024, a success rate of 79.5%. In cases alleging antitrust violations, plaintiffs succeeded in obtaining orders certifying classes in 15 of 21 rulings issued during 2024, a success rate of 71.4%.

    Although the certification rate overall was lower, as discussed above, moving down to 63% in 2024 from 72% in 2023, plaintiffs obtained certification at a more consistent rate across substantive areas. In 2024, plaintiffs succeeded in certifying cases alleging WARN Act violations at a rate of 85.7%, their highest rate of success among substantive areas. Plaintiffs succeeded in certifying cases alleging RICO violations at a rate of 33.3%, their lowest rate of success across substantive areas. Compared to 2023, these numbers reflect less variance across substantive areas.

    In 2023, plaintiffs succeeded in certifying cases alleging securities fraud at a rate of 97.2%, their highest rate of success among substantive areas. Plaintiffs succeeded in certifying cases alleging data breach claims at a rate of 14.3%, their lowest rate of success across substantive areas.

    The year over year compression suggests that plaintiffs were more selective during 2024 relative to the cases in which they sought class certification, particularly at the low end.

    In 2024, for example, the number of rulings on motions for class certification in the data breach area dropped to four, a decrease of 42.9%, but plaintiffs fared better on those four, going two for four, for a success rate of 50.0%.

    Courts Issues More Rulings In FLSA Collective Actions Than In Any Other Area Of Law

      In 2024, courts issued more certification rulings in FLSA collective actions than in any other type of case. Many courts historically have applied a more lenient standard to such motions, allowing plaintiffs to increase the size of their cases with comparatively low investment, contributing to the number of filings in this area.

      Overall, courts issued 171 rulings. Of these, 156 addressed motions for conditional certification of collective actions under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), and 18 addressed second-stage motions for decertification of collective actions. Of the 167 rulings that courts issued on motions for conditional certification, 125 rulings favored plaintiffs, for a success rate of nearly 75%.

      Plaintiffs’ success rate at the conditional certification stage outpaced their performance from 2023. In 2023, courts issued 183 rulings. Of these, 165 addressed motions for conditional certification of collective actions under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), and 18 addressed second-stage motions for decertification of collective actions. Of the 167 rulings that courts issued on motions for conditional certification, 125 rulings favored plaintiffs, for a success rate of nearly 75%.

      The results plaintiffs achieved in 2024 are more similar to the results they obtained in 2022, during which courts issued rulings on 236 motions. Of these, 219 addressed motions for conditional certification of collective actions, and 18 addressed motions for decertification of collective actions. Of the 219 rulings that courts issued on motions for conditional certification, 180 rulings favored plaintiffs, for a success rate of 82%.

      Although success rates stayed high, and climbed closer to the rate observed in 2022, the overall number of rulings declined. This phenomenon likely reflects the impact of the so-called Swales-Clark movement. Until 2021, courts almost universally applied a two-step process to certification of FLSA collective actions. At the first stage, courts required a plaintiff only to make a “modest factual showing” that he or she was similarly-situated to others, and plaintiffs often met such burden at the outset of litigation by submitting declarations from a limited number of potential collective action members.

      At the second stage, courts conducted a more thorough examination of the evidence to determine whether in fact the plaintiff was similarly-situated to others and the court manageably could try the case on a collective basis.

      Over the past few years, however, courts have started taking a fresh look at the two-step process and whether it comports with the FLSA. Federal appellate courts in two circuits – the Fifth Circuit and Sixth Circuit – along with various district courts answered that question in the negative.

      In 2021, the Fifth Circuit in Swales, et al. v. KLLM Transport Services, LLC, 985 F.3d 430, 436 (5th Cir. 2021), rejected the two-step approach to evaluating collective action certification, holding instead that district courts should “rigorously scrutinize the realm of ‘similarly-situated’ workers … at the outset of the case.”

      In 2023, the Sixth Circuit in Clark v. A&L Homecare & Training Center, LLC, 68 F.4th 1003 (6th Cir. 2023), likewise jettisoned the two-step approach but expressly declined to adopt the standard approved by the Fifth Circuit. Instead, the Sixth Circuit introduced a new standard that requires the plaintiff to demonstrate a “strong likelihood” that other employees are “similarly-situated” to the plaintiff.

      Although different, both Swales and Clark require plaintiffs to make a more substantial showing than the first-step approach requires, thereby requiring more factual development and, as a result, more investment on the part of the plaintiffs’ bar. As a result, we have seen fewer motions filed in these two circuits over the past two years, as plaintiffs progress further into discovery before filing their motions for conditional certification and as plaintiffs shift their efforts away from pursuing collective actions in the Fifth and Sixth Circuits.

      Indeed, once a hotbed of filings, the number of rulings in the Fifth and Sixth Circuits were muted in 2024. In the Fifth Circuit, courts issued rulings on six motions for conditional certification, and plaintiffs prevailed on five, for a success rate of 83%, and, in the Sixth Circuit, courts issued rulings on ten motions for conditional certification, and plaintiffs prevailed on eight, for a success rate of 80%. While the results are solid for plaintiff’s side lawyers, the investment of time and effort to secure certification and thereafter monetize their cases shows a far longer track than in other federal circuits

      These numbers illustrate the impact of Clark. Whereas courts in the Sixth Circuit issued rulings on ten motions for conditional certification this year, in 2023, as Clark began to take hold, courts in the Sixth Circuit issued 22 decisions on motions for conditional certification.

      In 2022, the last full year before Clark, courts in the Sixth Circuits issued 36 decisions on motions for conditional certification. These numbers show a decrease of 14 rulings in each of the past two years. These numbers may continue to decline as plaintiffs shift their case filings to other circuits that have retained the lenient two-step approach or to other areas.

      The distribution of conditional certification rulings over the past years shows that a disproportionate number emanated from traditionally pro-plaintiff jurisdictions, including the judicial districts within the Second Circuit (33 decisions) and Ninth Circuit (21 decisions), which include New York and California, respectively. The following map illustrates these variations:

      At the decertification stage, courts generally have conducted a closer examination of the evidence and, as a result, defendants historically have enjoyed an equal if not higher rate of success on these second-stage motions as compared to plaintiffs. The results in 2024, however, were less favorable for defendants. Courts issued 15 rulings on motions for decertification. Of these, five rulings favored defendants, for a success rate of only 33.3%, and 10 rulings favored plaintiffs, for a success rate of 66.6%.

      By comparison, in 2023, courts issued 18 rulings on motions for decertification of collective actions. Of these, eight favored defendants, for a success rate of 44.4%, and ten rulings favored plaintiffs, for a success rate of 55.6%. Such a rate aligns with the success rate defendants enjoyed in 2022. In 2022, courts similarly issued 18 rulings on motions for decertification of collective actions. Of these, defendants prevailed in nine, for a success rate of 50%, and plaintiffs prevailed in nine, for a success rate of 50%.

      The variation in numbers across federal circuits no doubt flows from the different standards and approaches that different courts take in evaluating motions for conditional certification and decertification and, in turn, the likelihood of plaintiffs’ success on such motions. If more courts join the Fifth and Sixth Circuits in abandoning the traditional two-step certification process, and thereby increase the time and expense of gaining a conditional certification order, it may lead to a reshuffling of the deck in terms of the types of cases plaintiffs pursue and where plaintiffs choose to file them.

      © 2009-2025 Duane Morris LLP. Duane Morris is a registered service mark of Duane Morris LLP.

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

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