The 2011 Global Congress on Legal, Safety, and Security Solutions in Travel Conference

The National Law Review is pleased to announce The 2011 Global Congress on Legal, Safety, and Security Solutions in Travel will take place on August 25 – 28, 2011 at the George R. Brown Convention Center, Houston, Texas.

HospitalityLawyer.com, in coordination with the Greater Houston Convention & Visitors Bureau, is hosting the Global Congress on Legal, Safety, and Security Solutions in Travel to facilitate the delivery of safe, secure and uninterrupted travel via an all-encompassing public-private dialogue dedicated to the sharing of best practices for issues faced by the global travel, tourism, and hospitality industries.

What is the Global Congress?

The Global Congress is a unique opportunity for all aspects of the travel equation to share their legal, safety, and security experiences and best practices. It is all-encompassing public-private dialogue to enhance the global travel industry’s ability to avoid interruptions and to provide a safe secure and seamless travel experience.

What Topics Will the Global Congress Address?

General Sessions will address topics, issues and solutions that impact all components of travel, such as:

  • Common Issues and Solutions for Travel Safety and Security: The Industry Perspective
  • The Debate: Screening vs. Personal Privacy
  • Contagious Outbreaks: Appropriate Responses in all Sectors of Public Accommodation
  • The US Travel Association’s Blue Ribbon Panel on Aviation Security: Findings and Recommendations
  • What Have We Learned from Recent Travel Disruptions?
  • Profiling: Is it Effective and What are the Privacy Implications?
  • Human Trafficking: Is the Travel Industry Enabling It?
  • Best Practices in Global Data Privacy Issues
  • The Media’s Role in Creating and Sustaining a Travel Crisis

The second day features a full day of sessions in each travel component:

  • Transportation, including Airlines, Cruise, Ground, and Terminal
  • Lodging
  • Venues & Events
  • Public Support of Travel, including Embassies, Health, Entry/Exit, Airports, Terminals, and Seaports
  • Leisure Travel & Tourism
  • Corporate & Government Travel
  • Global Legal Issues.

Who Should Attend?

Travel Buyers Travel Suppliers Public Travel Supporters
  • Risk, Safety, Security, Health and Environmental Officers
  • In-house Counsel
  • Travel Managers
  • Human Resource Executives
  • Procurement/CFO
  • Meeting Planners
  • Risk, Safety, Security, Health and Environmental Officers
  • In-house Counsel
  • C-level Executives
  • Wholesalers, Distributors, and Manufacturers of Safety and Security Solutions
  • Procurement
  • Attorneys & Consultants focusing on Travel & Hospitality
  • Risk, Safety, Security, Health and Environmental Officers for Air, Sea and Public Transportation Systems & Terminals
  • Domestic Security and Other Law Enforcement Officials
  • Government Attorneys
  • Immigration and Customs Officials
  • Health Policy Directors
  • Travel and Tourism Ministers and Administrators
  • Consulate and Foreign Trade Officials
  • Researchers and Thought Leaders in the Hospitality, Travel, and Tourism Arenas
  • Embassy Personnel

Justifying Your Attendance

The Global Congress on Legal, Safety, and Security Solutions in Travel is the only conference in the world dedicated to legal, safety, and security best practices in the global travel, tourism, and hospitality industries. We have identified the value proposition for attending the Global Congress in custom pieces below. Please select the link that corresponds to your area of interest:

For your convenience, we have also put together a helpful customizable letter (.doc) to help justify your investment to attend the conference.

The first Global Congress, presented in coordination with the Greater Houston Convention & Visitors Bureau, will be held August 25-28, 2011, in Houston, Texas. Houston, situated centrally in the United States, is an international gateway city with 92 consulates and the headquarters for major travel-related businesses and associations. It is also the home of the renowned Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management at the University of Houston, whose namesake strongly championed the philosophy that global travel could bring about world peace.

Arthur J. Gallagher and iJet are Foundation Sponsors of the Global Congress.

LMA Virginias Chapter – Continuing Marketing Education Conference 10-14-11

The National Law Review is pleased to announce The Continuing Marketing Education program presented by the Legal Marketing Association Virginias Chapter will take place October 14, 2011 University of Richmond’s Jepson Alumni Center, 101 College Road
Richmond, VA 23229.

Client Service needs, new trends in business development, marketing communications, and how to set yourself apart from the pack are all topics included in The Continuing Marketing Education program presented by the Legal Marketing Association Virginias Chapter. This is the first local, full-day program developed for legal marketing professionals. attorneys, students and other industry professionals to be presented in the Richmond area.

We have created a unique program designed to provide a comprehensive look into today’s legal marketing issues as well as provide an outlook into what to expect in the future. Our goal is to have in-depth discussions on key topics as the next phase in continuing members’ education. Sessions will focus on a hands-on approach showing attendees “how to get it done” and leaving them with ideas to take back with them to jump-start their next initiative.

LMA Continuing Marketing Education Conference

Client Service needs, new trends in business development, marketing communications, and how to set yourself apart from the pack are all topics included in The Continuing Marketing Education program presented by the Legal Marketing Association Virginias Chapter. This is the first local, full-day program developed for legal marketing professionals. attorneys, students and other industry professionals to be presented in the Richmond area.

We have created a unique program designed to provide a comprehensive look into today’s legal marketing issues as well as provide an outlook into what to expect in the future. Our goal is to have in-depth discussions on key topics as the next phase in continuing members’ education. Sessions will focus on a hands-on approach showing attendees “how to get it done” and leaving them with ideas to take back with them to jump-start their next initiative.

Embracing Technology of Tomorrow

Posted in the National Law Review an article by Kristyn J. Sornat of Much Shelist Denenberg Ament & Rubenstein P.C.  on what innovative technology will be available in the next five years or by the end of the decade. 

 

Think of what new platforms have become available for marketing in the past ten years —social media sites (including YouTube, Facebook and LinkedIn) and the smartphone/tablet with mobile applications and paid search tools, such as Google AdWords. It makes it hard to imagine what innovative technology will be available in the next five years, let alone by the end of the decade. Plenty of gimmicky technology with a significant “cool” factor will be developed by the year 2020; however, the more important trends to watch involve the transformation of legal marketing staples.

CRMs Will Be Easier to Use

Not only will CRMs be more useful, attorneys will be required to use them! By the year 2020, there will be no more excuses as to why attorneys cannot use their firm’s client relationship management (CRM) system to support business development efforts. The most common complaints I hear about our CRM are the following: “It’s too hard to use;” “The process of entering and maintaining my information is too cumbersome;” or “I don’t have time to learn it.” However, I’ve noticed that since the economic downturn (which necessitates working smarter and harder on business development) it has been a lot easier to get the late adopters on board. However, these users still struggle with the functionality of the product.

Over the past decade, software providers have made great strides in improving the user interface of CRM products, and they have gotten smarter by incorporating it into what attorneys do every day — check email. The leading CRM providers in the legal market now allow attorneys to access their products via their email client. Companies like CRM4Legal developed their product with this in mind while others, such as LexisNexis InterAction (with version 6.0), have finally integrated the majority of their main product functionality into Outlook. This integration will make future CRM versions much easier to use. Over the next decade, these companies will take this trend a step further. Not only will using the product be more intuitive for attorneys, but the amount of information automatically pulled into the system will be greater than ever before. In addition to looking up who at your firm “knows” a client, you’ll be able to see what the client was billed in the last year, what practice groups were utilized, where the growth opportunities are and which of your other non-internal contacts have a connection to the client. There may even be access to “personal” preferences for the client (like music and food), and best of all, attorneys will not have to enter this information into the database themselves. Firms have used portal technology to facilitate bringing information into one place, but CRMs will differ from portals by tapping into third-party resources, such as LinkedIn, Facebook and news sources, to deliver unprecedented, one-step access to information that can be useful in pitching a prospect or servicing a client.

The Demise of Email Marketing

In the year 2020, firms will have shifted their efforts from mass email marketing campaigns to other online distribution channels. The effectiveness of email marketing is already on the decline, and over the next decade email clients will become even stricter about the types of information they allow through their spam filters. Compounding this issue, users are now relying on tools like social media, RSS feeds, blogs, search engines and other resources, rather than email, to find the information they need. Firms will no longer have the luxury of knowing they can inform their clients of emerging legal issues just by sending a monthly newsletter or weekly alert. They will need to find new ways to get this information to clients and prospects, preferably through a myriad of distribution channels. To prepare, firms should concentrate on using search engine optimization (SEO) for their websites (especially on pages that tend to get a majority of visitors from email distributions) and encourage attorneys to use social media to proactively share their articles and experience in specific practice areas.

Also, targeted online advertising, such as on LinkedIn and paid search, can be used to promote practice groups and help supplement the lack of exposure for these groups through email alerts. For example, firms can advertise their healthcare practice group to LinkedIn users in the healthcare industry, who have General Counsel as a title and live within 50 miles of the geographic area to which that practice group targets. Another paid search tool that may be useful is Google Remarketing, which allows firms to target ads to users who’ve previously visited their websites. Through this technology, users that find healthcare articles on a firm’s website through Google would later see an ad for the firm’s healthcare practice as they visit other websites or check their Gmail accounts. Legal alerts will still be written, but firms will rely more heavily on searchable syndication services, such as Martindale.com’s Legal Library or The National Law Review’s searchable database. Firms would be wise to prepare themselves for the inevitable by scaling back now on the amount of information they send to contacts through mass email messages. They should start tracking article clicks, opens and other performance data and use it to eliminate contacts from mailing lists. For example, if a contact only opens healthcare alerts or clicks on healthcare articles, a firm should only send them email distributions having to do with healthcare. In the future, if a firm wants anyone to open their email messages, they will need to condition their recipients to expect relevant information in every distribution.

Design for Mobile First

Mobile devices are everywhere, and they are fast becoming people’s primary access point to the Internet and email. In the past five years, although mobile devices have been a consideration when firms design websites and email messages, it hasn’t been a necessity to design for them first. By 2020, mobile devices (including tablets) will play the role which PCs do today. It’s important that firms start preparing for that shift now by creating a pared-down mobile version of their websites if all the pages of the site are not already mobile-friendly. Firms working on a website redesign should make sure they are giving mobile devices and PCs equal consideration. For example, if there is a search section for articles, more search buckets with dropdown choices should be created so that mobile users will have to rely less on typing in search terms. If Flash is utilized to emphasize important information on the website, there should be an alternative way to get that information across to iPhone users, who cannot view Flash animation. Although designing for mobile may inhibit creativity, it is better for mobile users to be able to see and use a highly functional website than to become frustrated by (or unable to view) a beautifully designed website. Mobile apps (currently a hot topic in legal marketing circles) will also be important, just not the way we think of them today. Many firms that have taken advantage of this new technology have focused on providing information that is already accessible on their websites and in other places. In the future, successful law firm apps will have two purposes: to aid users in things they are doing every day and to provide better service to clients. For example, Latham & Watkins has already realized this trend and released a useful app that allows people to search a glossary of legal, business and financial terms. How will apps help firms better service their clients in the future? They may allow clients to view hours billed and balances due, or search a firm’s attorney experience database based on specific criteria for a new matter. As firms develop ideas for apps, they should keep usability in mind so they don’t end up with an app that clients download out of curiosity, but then fails to entice them to come back again.

Website Overhauls

Websites will be vastly different by the end of the decade —not only will they be designed with mobile devices in mind, but they also may incorporate technology that delivers a different homepage experience to each user based on past visits. For example, tailored article and event feeds might display, based on previous visits to practice group descriptions, attorney bios or the user’s past site searches. Other website areas that will be affected will be attorney bios, practice group descriptions and resource centers. Firms should begin thinking about attorney bios more like social media profiles (maybe even connecting LinkedIn profiles with attorney pages), because the lines between websites and social media will be even more blurred. Video will be as important as text in getting marketing messages across on practice group pages, and firms will use articles and descriptions of experience to show practice group expertise rather than just “say”they have it in a lengthy practice group description. In the resource area of the website, firms will add more information that is useful to visitors. CLE webcasts may be a way to drive users to the website, much as articles do today. However, the trick to adding CLE resources will be figuring out how to give people their credit and comply with ethics rules for each state. Firms need to start preparing for what is to come in marketing technology — by 2020, tactics and processes will have evolved into a connected, mobile machine. To embrace this technology of tomorrow, firms should keep an eye on trends involving CRM systems, email marketing, mobile technology and websites, while maintaining caution from being distracted by a high “cool” factor that may not deliver real value to the firm or its clients.

This article was first published in ILTA’s June 2011 issue of Peer to Peer titled “Law2020TM: One Year In” and is reprinted here with permission. For more information about ILTA, visit their website at www.iltanet.org.

© 2011 Much Shelist Denenberg Ament & Rubenstein, P.C.

Federal Authorities Warn of Terrorism: Three Steps Toward Comprehensive Risk Management for the Hotel Industry

Recently posted at the National Law Review by Richard J. Fildes of Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, P.A. – news about a recent federal government terror alert involving hotels and resort properties: 

Quality service, prime amenities, ideal locations and excellent accommodations are the repertoire of successful hotels. In light of a recent warning issued by federal authorities to the U.S. hotel industry, that checklist may need to expand, according to the American Hotel & Lodging Educational Institute. Though Mumbai-style attacks have thankfully not come to fruition on American soil in recent years, the need for vigilance is ever-present. Based on intelligence reports gathered by the U.S. government, terror plots on the hotel industry are a looming threat;however, a panic-free plan for potentially devastating crises can easily be developed.

Attacks of terrorism and natural disasters can often share the same elements of surprise, chaos, structural destruction and health-related concerns. Just as hotels should plan for before, during, and after a storm (more details), there should be a similarly structured program for staff and guests when dealing with terrorist attacks. Combining the consideration of both events can streamline the process of training employees and increasing familiarity with risk management in the aftermath of such events. Some considerations are as follows:

 Lobbies tend to be the most dangerous part of hotels because they are typically unsecured open areas where guests congregate. If finances permit, have plain clothed security personnel in the lobby. The presence of uniformed security guards can create a perception of safety; however, non-uniformed guards can be more attuned as the eyes and ears of hotel security.

• Staff should be trained to spot potentially dangerous activities. All employees who may have contact with guests, including housekeeping, maintenance, front desk, guest services, food and beverage, transportation, and parking should be given detailed instructions on what types of activity should be reported to hotel security.

 Staff should also have equally detailed instructions on panic control and ways to manage the turmoil of natural disasters.

 Record keeping is also vital, especially with health related issues. Knowing which employees have medical ailments or potential concerns will help reduce health risks stemming from natural disasters and terrorist attacks. Though some guests may not want to disclose such information, consider asking guests whether they have any heart conditions, diabetes or other issues that would be necessary for the staff to know in case of an emergency. Such inquiries should be phrased “as non-intrusive” inquiries geared toward providing the best possible customer care and service in the rare chance that something may happen.

• Keeping both paper and electronic copies of records, including which guests are checked into the hotel at any given time, is also key to minimizing confusion and chaos when responding to an emergency.

• Develop specific evacuation plans. The standard “in-case-of-a-fire” evacuation route may not be helpful during a chemical weapon attack, bombing or hurricane.

• Have designated evacuation areas equipped (or readily able to be equipped) with vital supplies. Back up energy sources, medical supplies and non-perishable foods, and bottled waters are all necessary to keep guests safe and calm.

• Make the evacuation routes easy to follow, and ensure that the staff knows exactly where guests should be located during the different emergencies.

Being vigilant, heightening security efforts, and ensuring staff preparedness will help reduce the stress, commotion and devastating aftermath of natural disasters and terrorist related incidents.

* Tara L. Tedrow is co-author of this article. She is a rising third year law student and has not been admitted to the Florida Bar.

To read the press release issued by the American Hotel & Lodging Association, please click on the following : AHLEI PR_TerrorWarningReinforcesNeedVigilanceTraining.pdf

© Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, PA, 2011. All rights reserved.

Supreme Court Grants Cert. In Caraco

Posted yesterday at the National Law Review by Warren Woessner of Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. deatils about the U.S. Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in Caraco Pharm. Labs., Ltd., v. Novo Nordisk:   

Today (June 27, 2010), the Supreme Court granted cert. in yet another patent appeal, Caraco Pharm. Labs., Ltd., v. Novo Nordisk, (Supreme Ct. 10-844). Earlier this month, I did an extensive post on the decision below, in which the Fed. Cir. denied Caraco’s counterclaim seeking to strike the broad “use code” that Novo had put on its drug, Prandin (U-968). Even though Caraco would market the generic for a narrower use, the broad use code effectively prevented Caraco from “carving out” the still-patented use(s) from its labeling, thus effectively keeping it off the market.

I took a chance by posting on this one because the Solicitor General’s office recommended review and there was a strong dissent below. However, when the appeal started getting some attention in the press – though the issues were often mischaracterized – it began to look more likely that cert. would be granted. I am not so sure that the Fed. Cir.’s recent streak of affirmances will be left intact.

© 2011 Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. All Rights Reserved.

Patent Reform Bill Passed by the United States House of Representatives

Posted yesterday at the National Law Review by Richard L. Kaiser and Brian J.N. Marstall of Michael Best & Friedrich LLP a good recap of the most recent action in Congress on patent reform legislation:  

The House of Representatives passed its version of the America Invents Act (H.R. 1249) by a 304-117 vote on June 23, 2011. This follows the Senate passing its version back in March. The House and the Senate must now rectify the differences between the bills, and then each chamber must pass the reconciled version before being sent to the White House for signature. There may still be disagreements during the reconciliation process.  Even if reconciled and enacted, there could also be additional challenges to the legislation forthcoming, as some opponents have questioned the constitutionality of a key provision changing the U.S. patent system to a first-inventor-to-file system. Nonetheless, patent reform is now closer to becoming a reality than it has ever been in the last six years. A few of the key provisions are highlighted below.

First-to-File

Perhaps the biggest change that will take place is the switch to a first-inventor-to-file patent system. As the language of the Senate and House versions stands now, the change to a first-to-file system will go into effect 18 months after the effective date of the final legislation. Under the new first-to-file system, there will be an increased urgency to get patent applications filed as early as possible because any third-party prior art available before the patent application filing date can be used to reject the application.

Post Grant Review

Another major change will be the creation of a new post-grant review system that will expand the ability to challenge the validity of granted patents. The legislation provides several options to challenge patents, each option having various timeframes and limitations as to the grounds for challenge. The details of the new system will be developed by the Patent Office.

Patent Office Funding

While a change in how the Patent Office is funded may sound like an accounting matter, its impact could be very significant.  Increased fee setting authority and an end to Congress’ ability to divert Patent Office fees for other uses should increase the speed with which the Patent Office can examine patent applications. The Senate version of the legislation gives the Patent Office fee setting authority that need not be approved by Congress and ends fee diversion. The House bill does not go quite as far in granting the Patent Office autonomy, but it establishes a separate Patent Office account into which Patent Office fees will be placed. Congressional appropriators would have the authority to release those funds only to the Patent Office. This is one of the differences that will need to be reconciled for the final legislation.

False Marking

Both the Senate and House versions limit false marking claims. Only the United States or a competitor who can prove a competitive injury will be able to bring a false marking lawsuit under 35 U.S.C. Section 292. This change will apply to any case pending on or after the date of enactment of the legislation.

© MICHAEL BEST & FRIEDRICH LLP

 

Supreme Court Limits Bankruptcy Court Jurisdiction – Stern v. Marshall

Posted recently at the National Law Review by Prof. G. Ray Warner of Greenberg Traurig, LLP – the latest installment of the Anna Nicole Smith / J. Howard Marshall estate issue and how it impacts the jurisdiction of bankruptcy courts:   

 

In a decision that may create serious problems for bankruptcy case administration, the Supreme Court this morning invalidated part of the Bankruptcy Court jurisdictional scheme. Stern v. Marshall, No. 10-179, 564 U.S. ___ (June 23, 2011). Specifically, the Court held that the Bankruptcy Courts cannot issue final judgments on garden variety state law claims that are asserted as counterclaims by the debtor or trustee against creditors who have filed proofs of claim in the bankruptcy case.

Thus, while the Bankruptcy Court could issue a final order resolving the creditor’s claim against the estate, it could issue only a proposed ruling with respect to the counterclaim. Final judgment on the counterclaim could only be issued by the District Judge after de novo review of any matters to which a party objects. See 28 U.S.C. § 157(c).

In a five-to-four opinion by Chief Justice Roberts, the Court affirmed the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision that had reversed an $88 million judgment in favor of Vickie Lynn Marshall (a/k/a Anna Nicole Smith) against E. Pierce Marshall for tortious interference with Vickie’s expectancy of a gift from her late husband J. Howard Marshall, Pierce’s father and one of the richest people in Texas.

The Court’s decision was based on constitutional principles defining the limits of Article III of the U.S. Constitution. Thus, it is likely to have implications that reach far beyond the narrow issue resolved in the instant case. The majority relies on the “public rights” doctrine to define the class of judicial matters that can be resolved by non-Article III tribunals like the Bankruptcy Courts. However, it adopts a narrower view of what constitutes “public rights” than was generally understood prior to this decision.

In addition, although earlier cases could be read to adopt a flexible pragmatic approach to Article III that focused only on significant threats to the Judiciary, Chief Justice Roberts takes a very firm approach, stating, “We cannot compromise the integrity of the system of separated powers and the role of the Judiciary in that system, even with respect to challenges that may seem innocuous at first blush.” Of particular interest, this case focuses on the nature of the Bankruptcy Judge as a non-Article III judge (i.e., no life tenure and no salary protection) and rejects the view that the Bankruptcy Courts are merely “adjuncts” of the Article III District Courts. Note that the “adjunct” construct was one of the foundations of the 1984 Act’s post-Northern Pipeline jurisdictional fix that created the core/non-core distinction. See Northern Pipeline Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50 (1982).

The narrow holding is that Bankruptcy Judges, as non-Article III judges, lack constitutional authority to hear and “determine” counterclaims to proofs of claim if the counterclaim involves issues that are not essential to the allowance or disallowance of the claim. Here, although the counterclaim was a compulsory counterclaim, it was a garden variety state law tort claim and did not constitute a defense to the proof of claim. Contrast this with the preference claim involved in Langenkamp v. Culp, 498 U.S. 42 (1990). The receipt of such an unreturned preference is a bar to the allowance of the claim. See 11 U.S.C. 502(d). The opinion also distinguishes Langenkamp (and the earlier pre-Code case of Katchen v. Landy, 382 U.S. 323 (1966)) on the ground that the preference counterclaims in those cases were created by federal bankruptcy law. It is unclear whether that reference establishes a second condition to Bankruptcy Court resolution of counterclaims — i.e., that the counterclaim be based on bankruptcy law in addition to its resolution being essential to claim allowance.

The Court begins its opinion by interpreting the “core” jurisdictional grant of 28 U.S.C. 157(b)(1). The Court finds the provision ambiguous, but rejects the view of the Ninth Circuit that the Bankruptcy Court’s jurisdiction to determine matters involves a two-step process of deciding both whether the matter is “core” and whether it “arises under” the Bankruptcy Code or “arises in” the bankruptcy case. The Court states that such a view incorrectly assumes there are “core” matters that are merely “related to” the bankruptcy case (and which cannot be “determined” by the Bankruptcy Court). The Court states that core proceedings are those that arise in a bankruptcy case or arise under bankruptcy law and that noncore is synonymous with “related.” Thus, since counterclaims to proofs of claim are listed as core in the statute, the Bankruptcy Court has statutory authority to enter final judgment. (Note that the opinion does not explain how a tort claim that arose before the bankruptcy and that was based on non-bankruptcy state law could be a claim “arising in” the bankruptcy case or “arising under” bankruptcy law. Possibly the fact that procedurally it arises as a counterclaim is sufficient to convert a “related” claim into an “arising in” or “arising under” claim. Cf. Langenkamp.)

The Court also rejects the argument that the personal injury tort provision of 28 U.S.C. 157(b)(5) deprives the Bankruptcy Court of jurisdiction to resolve the counterclaim. The Court holds that section 157(b)(5) is not jurisdictional and thus the objection was waived.

Although the statute authorized the Bankruptcy Court to determine the counterclaim, the Court holds that grant violates Article III. The Court rejects the view that the Article III problem was resolved by placing the Bankruptcy Judges in the judicial branch as an “adjunct” to the District Court. The Court focuses on the liberty aspect of Article III and its requirement of judges who are protected by life tenure and salary guarantees. After outlining the extensive jurisdiction of Bankruptcy Judges over matters at law and in equity and their power to issue enforceable orders, the Court states “a court exercising such broad powers is no mere adjunct of anyone.”

The Court then uses the “public rights” doctrine as the test for which matters can be delegated to a non-Article III tribunal. Although Granfinanciera v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33 (1989), suggested a balancing test that considered both how closely a matter was related to a federal scheme and the degree of District Court supervision (a test that arguably supports the Bankruptcy Court’s entry of a judgment on a compulsory counterclaim), the Court settles on a new test for public rights limited to “cases in which resolution of the claim at issue derives from a federal regulatory scheme, or in which resolution of the claim by an expert government agency is deemed essential to a limited regulatory objective within the agency’s authority.” The state common law tort counterclaim asserted here does not meet that test. Instead, adjudication of this claim “involves the most prototypical exercise of judicial power.”

Interpreted in the most restrictive fashion, this ruling might create serious problems for case administration. In proof of claim matters, the Bankruptcy Court would be limited to proposed findings on most counterclaims, with the District Court entering the final order after de novo review. Query whether the majority’s limited view of “public rights” would prevent the Bankruptcy Judge from entering final judgment in other disputes that involve the non-bankruptcy rights of non-debtor parties. Bankruptcy Courts regularly resolve inter-creditor disputes and resolve disputes regarding the non-bankruptcy rights of parties to the bankruptcy case in contexts other than claim allowance. Whether the Bankruptcy Court’s exercise of this power is constitutional may turn on how broadly the courts interpret the “cases in which resolution of the claim at issue derives from a federal regulatory scheme” prong of the “public rights” test.

©2011 Greenberg Traurig, LLP. All rights reserved.

 

Supreme Court Grants Cert. In Mayo v. Prometheus

Posted this week at the National Law Review by Warren Woessner of Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. – an overview of the implications for biotech IP law involving the Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Labs case:  

June 20th, in what may be an ominous turn for biotech IP law, the Supreme Court granted cert. for the second time in Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Labs., Inc, Supreme Court No. 10-1150. Post-Bilski, the Supreme Court granted cert., vacated and remanded the Fed.  Cir.’s decision, rendered December 17, 2010, (related posts are archived under “patentable subject matter”) that reaffirmed that claims involving methods of medical treatment coupled with determining the levels of metabolites of the administered drugs were directed to patentable subject matter, and were not directed to abstract ideas or phenomena of nature. 628 F.3d 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2010).

Is it pay-back time? In the decision below, the Fed. Cir. pointedly in fn. 2, declined to give weight to the “Metabolite Labs. dissent,” 548 U.S. 124) in which Justices Breyer, Souter and Stevens would have found claims to an assay for cobalamin deficiency patent-ineligible as involving “natural correlations and data-gathering steps.” The Prometheus claims are not without vulnerable points. The Fed. Cir. agreed that the steps recited comparing the determined level of the metabolite to a benchmark level and concluding that a need exists to increase or decrease the amount of the drug administered were mental steps and not per se patentable. The Fed. Cir. also held that the first steps of the claims – the administering and determining steps – were not merely data gathering steps, but were central to the claimed method of optimizing therapeutic efficacy of the treatment.

While two of the three Justices who wrote the Metabolite dissent have retired, the Court clearly feels that there are issues here that need resolution. However, it is difficult to see how “methods of medical treatment” could remain patentable subject matter if these claims are held not to be. While processes are s. 101 patentable subject matter, John L. White’s Chemical Patent Practice (1993) felt it necessary to include a section “Process of Treating Humans.” Paragraph three begins:

“Claims to the treatment of humans medicinally are now allowed. Ex parte Timmis (POBA 1959) 123 USPQ 581 (treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia). The fact the claimed process for modifying a function of the human body (combating the clotting of blood) involves a mental determination of the amount administered is not a bar to patentability where that portion is an incidental feature of the process. Ex parte Campbell et al., (POBA 1952) 99 USPA 51.”

These decisions are from the nineteen fifties not the eighteen fifties! In Prometheus, the Fed. Cir. explicitly noted that claims to methods of medical treatment are patentable subject matter. Are modern medicine and IP law about to part ways?

© 2011 Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. All Rights Reserved.

U.S. Supreme Court Rejects Gender Discrimination Class Action Against Wal-Mart

Posted earlier this week at the National Law Review by the Labor and Employment Group of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP a good overview of the implications of the Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes case. 

On June 20, 2011, the United States Supreme Court released its widely-anticipated decision in Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, et al., 564 U.S. ___ (2011) (“Wal-Mart“). In Wal-Mart, the Supreme Court reversed the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and held that the proposed nationwide gender discrimination class action against the retail giant could not proceed. In a decision that will come as welcome news to large employers and other frequent targets of class action lawsuits, the Supreme Court (1) arguably increased the burden that plaintiffs must satisfy to demonstrate “common questions of law or fact” in support of class certification, making class certification more difficult, especially in “disparate impact” discrimination cases; (2) held that individual claims for monetary relief cannot be certified as a class action pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(2), which generally permits class certification in cases involving claims for injunctive and/or declaratory relief; and (3) held that Wal-Mart was entitled to individualized determinations of each proposed class member’s eligibility for backpay, rejecting the Ninth Circuit’s attempt to replace that process with a statistical formula.

The named plaintiffs in Wal-Mart were three current and former female Wal-Mart employees. They sued Wal-Mart under Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, alleging that Wal-Mart’s policy of giving local managers discretion over pay and promotion decisions negatively impacted women as a group, and that Wal-Mart’s refusal to cabin its managers’ authority amounted to disparate treatment on the basis of gender. The plaintiffs sought to certify a nationwide class of 1.5 million female employees. The plaintiffs sought injunctive and declaratory relief, punitive damages, and backpay.

The trial court and Ninth Circuit had agreed that the proposed class could be certified, reasoning that there were common questions of law or fact underFederal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a), and that class certification pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2) – which permits certification in cases where “the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the class, so that final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole” – was appropriate because the plaintiffs’ claims for backpay did not “predominate.” The Ninth Circuit had further held that the case could be manageably tried without depriving Wal-Mart of its due process rights by having the trial court select a random sample of claims, determine the validity of those claims and the average award of backpay in the valid claims, and then apply the percentage of valid claims and average backpay award across the entire class in order to determine the overall class recovery.

The Supreme Court reversed. A five-justice majority concluded that there were not common questions of law or fact across the proposed class, and hence Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a)(2) was not satisfied. Clarifying earlier decisions, the majority made clear that in conducting this analysis, it was permitted to consider issues that were enmeshed with the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims. The majority then explained that merely reciting common questions is not enough to satisfy Rule 23(a). Rather, the class proceeding needs to be capable of generating “common answers” which are “apt to drive the resolution of the litigation.” The four-justice dissent criticized this holding as superimposing onto Rule 23(a) the requirement in Rule 23(b)(3) that “common issues predominate” over individualized issues. The dissent believed that the “commonality” requirement in Rule 23(a) could be established merely by identifying a single issue in dispute that applied commonly to the proposed class. Because the trial court had only considered certification under Rule 23(b)(2), the dissent would have remanded the case for the trial court to determine if a class could be certified under Rule 23(b)(3).

The majority held that the plaintiffs had not identified any common question that satisfied Rule 23(a), because they sought “to sue about literally millions of employment decisions at once.” The majority further explained that “[w]ithout some glue holding the alleged reasons for all those decisions together, it will be impossible to say that examination of all the class members’ claims for relief will produce a common answer to the crucial question why was I disfavored.”

Addressing the plaintiffs’ attempt to provide the required “glue”, the majority held that anecdotal affidavits from 120 class members were insufficient, because they represented only 1 out of every 12,500 class members, and only involved 235 out of Wal-Mart’s 3,400 stores nationwide. The majority also held that the plaintiffs’ statistical analysis of Wal-Mart’s workforce (which interpreted data on a regional and national level) was insufficient because it did not lead to a rational inference of discrimination at the store or district level (for example, a regional pay disparity could be explained by a very small subset of stores). Finally, the majority held that the “social framework” analysis presented by the plaintiffs’ expert was insufficient, because although the expert testified Wal-Mart had a “strong corporate culture” that made it “vulnerable” to gender discrimination, he could not determine how regularly gender stereotypes played a meaningful role in Wal-Mart’s employment decisions, e.g., he could not calculate whether 0.5 percent or 95 percent of the decisions resulted from discriminatory thinking. Importantly, the majority strongly suggested that the rigorous test for admission of expert testimony (the Daubert test) should be applied to use of expert testimony on motions for class certification.

The Court’s other holdings were unanimous. For one, the Court agreed that class certification of the backpay claim under Rule 23(b)(2) was improper because the request for backpay was “individualized” and not “incidental” to the requests for injunctive and declaratory relief. The Court declined to reach the broader question of whether a Rule 23(b)(2) class could ever recover monetary relief, nor did it specify what types of claims for monetary relief were and were not considered “individualized.” The Court made clear, however, that when plaintiffs seek to pursue class certification of individualized monetary claims (such as backpay), they cannot use Rule 23(b)(2), but must instead use Rule 23(b)(3), which requires showing that common questions predominate over individual questions, and includes procedural safeguards for class members, such as notice and an opportunity to opt-out.

Lastly, the unanimous Court agreed that Wal-Mart should be entitled to individualized determinations of each employee’s eligibility for backpay. In particular, Wal-Mart has the right to show that it took the adverse employment actions in question for reasons other than unlawful discrimination. The Court rejected the Ninth Circuit’s attempt to truncate this process by using what the Court called “Trial by Formula,” wherein a sample group would be used to determine how many claims were valid, and their average worth, for purposing of extrapolating those results onto the broader class. The Court disapproved of this “novel project” because it deprived Wal-Mart of its due process right to assert individualized defenses to each class member’s claim.

Looking forward, the Wal-Mart decision will strengthen the arguments of employers and other companies facing large class action lawsuits. In particular, the decision reaffirms that trial courts must closely scrutinize the evidence when deciding whether to certify a class action, especially in “disparate impact” discrimination cases. Statistical evidence that is based on too small a sample size, or is not well-tailored to the proposed class action, should be insufficient to support class certification. Likewise, expert testimony that is over-generalized and incapable of providing answers to the key inquiries in the case (here, whether a particular employment decision was motivated by gender discrimination) should also be insufficient to support class certification. Finally, the Court’s holding that defendants have the right to present individualized defenses as to each class member, and that this right cannot be short-circuited through statistical sampling, will provide defendants with a greater ability to defeat class certification where such individualized determinations would otherwise prove unmanageable.

Copyright © 2011, Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP.

U.S. Supreme Court: Federal Court Could Not Enjoin State Court from Addressing Class Certification Issue

Posted yesterday at the National Law Review by Scott T. Schutte of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP a great overview of  the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling  in Smith v. Bayer Corp.   

In a decision with implications for companies facing class action litigation, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that a federal district court, having rejected certification of a proposed class action, could not take the additional step of enjoining a state court from addressing a motion to certify the same class under state law. In an opinion authored by Justice Kagan, the Court inSmith v. Bayer Corp.No. 09-1205, 564 U.S. ____ (June 16, 2011), held that principles of stare decisis and comity should have governed whether the federal court’s ruling had a controlling or persuasive effect in the later case, and the state court should have had an opportunity to determine the precedential effect (if any) of the federal court ruling.

Facts of Bayer

In Bayer, a plaintiff sued in West Virginia state court alleging that Bayer’s pharmaceutical drug Baycol was defective. After removal to federal court, the plaintiff moved to certify the action as a class action on behalf of all West Virginia purchasers of Baycol. The federal court rejected class certification because proof of injury from Baycol would have required plaintiff-specific inquiries and therefore individual issues of fact predominated over common issues. It then dismissed the plaintiff’s claims on independent grounds.

A different plaintiff, who had been a putative class member in the first action and was represented by the same class counsel in the federal action, moved to certify the same class in West Virginia state court. Bayer sought an injunction from the federal court in the first case, arguing that the court’s rejection of the class bid should bar the plaintiff’s relitigation of the same class certification question in state court. The district court granted the injunction, and the Circuit Court affirmed.

The Supreme Court’s Decision

The issues before the Court were (i) the district court’s power to enjoin the later state-court class action to avoid relitigation of the previously decided classcertification determination; and (ii) whether the federal court’s injunction complied with the Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283, which permits a federal court to enjoin a state court action when necessary to “protect or effectuate its judgment.” The Court granted certiorari to resolve a circuit split concerning the application of the Anti-Injunction Act’s relitigation exception.

The Supreme Court overturned the injunction. It determined that enjoining the state court proceedings under the circumstances of the case was improperly “resorting to heavy artillery.” The Court noted that “[d]eciding whether and how prior litigation has preclusive effect is usually the bailiwick of the second court.” It observed that a federal court may under the relitigation exception to the Anti-Injunction Act enjoin a state court from relitigating an already decided issue-including whether to certify a case as a class action-when two conditions are met: “First, the issue the federal court decided must be the same as the one presented in the state tribunal. And second, [the party in the later case] must have been a party to the federal suit, or else must fall within one of a few discrete exceptions to the general rule against binding nonparties.” Notably, the Court commented that, in conducting this analysis, “every benefit of the doubt goes to the state court” being allowed to determined what effect the federal court’s prior ruling should be given.

The Court held that neither condition was met in Bayer. The issue of class certification under West Virginia’s Rule 23 (the language of which mirrored Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23) was not “the same as” the issue decided by the federal court because the West Virginia Supreme Court had expressly disapproved of the approach to the “predominance” analysis adopted by federal courts interpreting the federal class action rule. In addition, the Court also held that unnamed persons in a proposed class action do not become parties to the case if the court declines to certify a class. By contrast, the Court affirmed the established rule that “a judgment in a properly entertained class action is binding on class members in any subsequent litigation.”

According to the Court, Bayer’s “strongest argument” centered on a policy concern that, after a class action is disapproved, plaintiff after plaintiff may relitigate the class certification issue in state courts if not enjoined by the original court. The Court suggested that these concerns were ameliorated by the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, through which Congress gave defendants a right to remove to federal court any sizable class action involving minimal diversity of citizenship. The Court noted the availability of consolidating certain federal class actions to avoid inconsistent results and offered that the Class Action Fairness Act’s expanded federal jurisdiction should result in greater uniformity among class action decisions and in turn reduce serial relitigation of class action issues.

Implications of Bayer

Bayer exposes defendants to the potential for repetitive class action litigation by plaintiffs in state courts. Bayer does not alter existing standards for class certification, however, and its holding is a limited one: a defendant who has defeated class certification may not invoke the “heavy artillery” of an injunction against future state-court bids for class certification in a case raising the same legal theories unless that future bid is advanced by the same named plaintiff(s) (or a person who falls within one of the few discrete exceptions to the general rule against binding nonparties) and the defendant can establish that state standards for class certification are similar to Federal Rule 23. In this regard, the Court held that “[m]inor variations in the application of what is in essence the same legal standard do not defeat preclusion,” but if the state courts would apply a “significantly different analysis” than the federal court, an injunction will not be upheld. The Anti-Injunction Act analysis from Bayer applies directly only where the enjoining court is a federal court and the second court is a state court.

The Bayer opinion also highlights avenues for companies facing serial class actions to mitigate risk. The Court all but acknowledged that “class actions raise special problems of relitigation.” These relitigation problems in the class action context and beyond will remain after Bayer. But a number of strategic steps can be taken to reduce the burdens, expenses, and risks associated with multiple lawsuits. For example, the enactment of the Class Action Fairness Act provides expanded federal jurisdiction over many class actions and therefore permits enhanced removal opportunities for state court class actions. If subsequent class actions are filed and removed, the Court noted that multidistrict litigation proceedings may be available for coordination of pretrial proceedings to avoid repetitive litigation. Even if transfer and consolidation cannot be effectuated, the Court observed that “we would expect federal courts to apply principles of comity to each other’s class certification decisions when addressing a common dispute.”

Finally, the Court’s treatment of absent class members as nonparties to the class certification question in the first action may have significance to other issues in class actions, including often hotly disputed issues relating to communications with putative class members by the defendant before class certification.

Copyright © 2011 by Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. All Rights Reserved.