
Ravi Nayer
Partner, London
The question of how to resolve mass torts is one that occupies the minds of all modern commercial litigators. Whether those mass torts involve personal injury or the mis-selling of financial products, resolution is a subject that crosses many legal specialisms, intersecting virtually every business sector, and appears in both the UK and US legal landscapes.
This resolution can take place at any stage in proceedings: before claims have been issued, during the conduct of proceedings, or after a finding of liability by a court, tribunal or regulator. They are as much part of the life cycle of a systemic financial services dispute as they are a more traditional mass tort (whether personal injury or data protection). Effective settlement of collective actions offers attractions for both claimants and defendants. Claimants are able to access compensation, potentially without the delay or expense of proceedings, by reference to a clear procedure and set of principles. Defendants are able to forestall reputational and regulatory risk, and save the time and cost of full-blown litigation.
In the US, which has more advanced and established processes for resolving mass torts, procedural rules require parties to obtain court approval of a class actions settlement before a dispute is resolved via settlement. The court’s role in approving the settlement is not to design the settlement, to enforce policy or to punish the tortfeasor, but rather to assess whether the settlement is “fair, reasonable, and adequate”.
English lawyers, in contrast, have three main developing procedures by which to effect settlement of mass torts.
Our other insights in this edition offer further detail and our views on the development of collective redress in the CAT and by the FCA, and below we consider in more detail the opportunities for collective settlement in the High Court.
In 1996, Lord Woolf set out the main reasons for implementing a High Court procedure that facilitates collective redress for mass claims. He highlighted that the difficulties in case managing group claims, the polarised position of claimants and defendants, and the different interests of group members, all give rise to difficulties in establishing generic issues applicable to a whole group, in maintaining overall progress of a case, and in achieving settlement for the whole group. He concluded that there was a “strong case for court approval of all multi-party settlements”, even where the case is “before the court solely for settlement purposes”. In this sense, his approach mirrored that which exists in the US.
Despite Lord Woolf’s 1996 assessment and recommendations, English law procedure in the High Court on the implementation of mass settlements has not developed any further, albeit procedures for managing and determining collective actions by way of Group Litigation Orders and under “representative actions” were included in the CPR. There is no requirement that a multi-party settlement needs to be approved by the court. Parties can therefore choose whether to involve the court in the design and implementation of a redress scheme, or effect their own ad-hoc redress scheme. The court’s assistance in approving designing the scheme offers the benefit of oversight from an independent body whose aim is, put very simply, to do what is fair for the parties. The process of court approval can iron out issues of independence, legal principles of assessment, burden of proof, quantum, and provide for an appeal process, all of which will contribute to the smooth running of a compensation scheme.
By contrast, a number of ad-hoc redress schemes have suffered from perennial issues with design, facilitation and implementation, which cause inefficiencies, unfairness and in some cases negate the very purpose of the scheme. For example:
Conversely, recent examples of court-assisted compensation schemes, such as the Jimmy Savile Scheme, have not faced the same level of criticism. Whilst ad-hoc private redress schemes may be the appropriate method of settlement in some cases, in other cases, for example where liability has been established, the best outcome for all the parties could be a mass settlement through a court-approved compensation scheme.
Claimants in High Court class actions are increasingly innovative, continuously testing and pushing the legal boundaries in finding new ways to bring group claims. Focus has been very much on how to launch class actions. However, there has been little discussion on the means by which to end these claims, and there is equal opportunity for innovation and creativity in pushing the boundaries on methods of collective settlement. The lack of High Court procedure governing collective settlement of claims offers a natural opening for parties to collective actions to be at the forefront of legal innovation, in terms of the law itself, procedure, and the use of technology. Parties can assist the court by offering innovative suggestions, which the court can then approve, creating workable precedents for future redress schemes. This is as important for hedge funds, backing litigation, as it is for institutions who are defendants to mass torts.
Our team at BCLP has unrivalled experience across designing and implementing redress schemes, with Partner Ravi Nayer submitting written evidence to the Home Affairs Committee in December 2020 on the Windrush Compensation Scheme.