A federal court in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana has ruled that seven consolidated suits over landfill pollution were properly removed to federal court. Waste Connections, Inc. moved to remove the cases filed by over 600 plaintiffs under the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”) Mass Action Provision to federal court after the plaintiffs consented to consolidation of the seven individual lawsuits. The removal provision is meant to ensure plaintiffs don’t file smaller, separate suits just to avoid federal jurisdiction. Each of the seven suits were filed by the same plaintiff’s counsel against the same defendants, and the defendant sought consolidation which was consented to by the plaintiffs. Upon consolidation, the defendants filed for removal claiming that the plaintiffs’ claims involved common questions of law or fact. Plaintiffs argued that the suit isn’t a mass action because their suits were “joined upon motion by a defendant,” and thus fell within an exception to the CAFA jurisdiction. The court, however, concluded that their consent to consolidation waived the exception.
Recent News & Legal Updates
- EPA Exploring Chemical Fee Options For Businesses Impacted By COVID-19
- Pollution Exclusion Should Not Preclude Coverage For Virus-related Claims
- California Court Of Appeal Provides Clarity On What Triggers Supplemental Analysis Under California Environmental Quality Act
- EPA Limits State And Tribal Authority Under Section 401 Of The Clean Water Act 10 June 2020
- EPA May Again Update Enforcement And Cleanup Policies In Light Of New COVID-19 Executive Order
- US EPA’s COVID-19 Interim Guidance On Site Field Work Decisions