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U.S. Supreme Court

Case Status

Decided

Docket Number

11-1059

Term

2012 Term

Oral Argument Date

December 03, 2012

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Questions Presented

Whether a case becomes moot, and thus beyond the judicial power of Article III, when the lone plaintiff receives an offer from the defendants to satisfy all of the plaintiff ’s claims.

Case Updates

U.S. Supreme Court dismisses FLSA lawsuit after the lone plaintiff was offered complete relief

April 16, 2013

The Supreme Court reversed and remanded the decision of the Third Circuit. The Court held that because the plaintiff had no personal interest in representing putative unnamed claimants nor any other interest, her suit under the FLSA was properly dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

U.S. Chamber files amicus brief in FLSA case

September 06, 2012

NCLC urged the U.S. Supreme to reverse a Third Circuit decision that held that putative collective actions under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) must continue even though the defendants have offered the only named plaintiff complete relief. In this case, after the petitioners offered the lone respondent complete relief, the court refused to dismiss the matter as moot until the court had a chance to rule on whether the suit could proceed as a collective action.

In its amicus brief, NCLC argued that if the Third Circuit's decision is left undisturbed, it will further exacerbate the significant burden already placed on employers who have been subjected to an exponential increase in private FLSA litigation. The Third Circuit’s decision deprives employers of a reasonable means to avoid burdensome FLSA litigation early on, based primarily on the Third Circuit’s policy judgment that further discovery and litigation might motivate others to join a suit being prosecuted by counsel who no longer represents a client with a personal stake in the case’s outcome. In the past decade alone, the number of FLSA suits filed annually has grown by almost 300 percent, affecting nearly every segment of the national economy. Employers that reasonably believe they have complied with the FLSA are often forced to settle unmeritorious collective actions rather than face the risk of catastrophic judgments.

Cert. petition granted

June 25, 2012

U.S. Chamber urges Supreme Court to review FLSA lawsuit in which the lone plaintiff was offered complete relief

March 21, 2012

Click here to view NCLC's brief.

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