TIME STOPS FOR NO ONE: The Supreme Court Addresses Timeliness Issues in Two Separate Class CasesThe U.S. Supreme Court suddenly seems to have a little time on its hands. Or at least on its mind. In two different class action cases on its docket this week, the question at hand was timeliness.

First, in Nutraceutical Corp. v. Lambert, the Supreme Court ruled that Rule 23(f)’s 14-day time limit for

Standing in Data Breach Cases Likely Heading Back to the Supreme CourtData breach plaintiffs often have a very difficult time stating a concrete injury, and courts have wrestled with whether these plaintiffs can file suit in federal court. We have been watching this issue and writing about it frequently. The issue is whether plaintiffs have suffered an “injury in fact” that gives them Article III

They Don’t Call It the Wild West for Nothing: The Ninth Circuit Reverses Denial of Class Certification because Trial Court Kept out Inadmissible EvidenceThe Ninth Circuit’s decision not to grant en banc rehearing in Sali v. Corona Regional Medical Center should all but guarantee that the issue of expert testimony at the class certification stage is heading to the Supreme Court.

Sali involved a declaration that was created by a paralegal at one of the firms representing the