Rose Law Group Chair of Class Action Department Katie Honecker talks to ‘The Wall Street Journal’ about important class action case

Class Action

Case in California would base attorneys’ compensation on hours, not a percentage

by Sara Randazzo | The Wall Street Jounrnal

Class Action
The Supreme Court of California, in San Francisco, could decide on the issue in coming months. Photo: Getty Images

A case before California’s highest court could fundamentally change the way class action attorneys are paid—and cut lawyers’ fees in the process.

Typically, attorneys who represent plaintiffs in class actions—like employees accusing a company of discrimination, or customers claiming a product misled them—are paid a percentage of any money recovered for their clients. The payouts, which nationally average about 25% of the collected funds, can be substantial.

But a Berkeley, Calif., lawyer who has waged a decadeslong crusade to reduce class-action fees is pushing to pay lawyers based only on the hours they put into a case.

Paying lawyers a percentage of the ultimate recovery is seen by some as an incentive to work harder for clients, in some ways akin to compensating corporate executives with shares of stock. When a class action fails, “the firms just have to eat all that money,” says Kathryn Honecker, an Arizona plaintiffs’ lawyer who co-chairs a class-action committee for the American Bar Association.

Continued:

Share this!

Additional Articles

News Categories

Get Our Twice Weekly Newsletter!

* indicates required

Rose Law Group pc values “outrageous client service.” We pride ourselves on hyper-responsiveness to our clients’ needs and an extraordinary record of success in achieving our clients’ goals. We know we get results and our list of outstanding clients speaks to the quality of our work.

Council seeks members for Florence data center committee

By Pinal Post Florence Town Council voted unanimously on June 29 to advertise for five members of a proposed Data Center Facility Ad Hoc Advisory Committee. The Florence data center committee will review environmental, infrastructure, public service, socioeconomic, land use, and

Read More »

Maricopa candidate forum highlights

By Ryan Tafoya | InMaricopa Growth, transportation and economic development dominated the discussion Thursday as six candidates for Maricopa City Council took questions during InMaricopa‘s candidate forum at the Maricopa Library and Cultural Center.  Nearly 80 residents attended the forum, while the livestream

Read More »