How do you know that the subsets of people within that class action are all saying the exact same claim?
I say again
Ginsburg, answered his question nicely and simply:
"Wal-Mart's delegation of discretion over pay and promotions is a policy uniform throughout all stores." This is the common element.... That is, the one policy and its consistent, wrongful implementation....
Scalia doesn't even dispute that they are all suing over the same policy; he can't, because they are. Scalia is saying that because they all worked at different stores with different supervisors, they don't have enough IN COMMON. You know what big business just heard, "If we have enough stores, then no class action!"
It was a 5/4 decision. I'm on Ginsburg's side. They are all trying to collectively sue over that policy. "Uniform throughout all stores" x1.6 Million. <---- They are all suing over this policy every single solitary one of them, because it's the only such policy Wal Mart has on topic and Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg said so. She has certainly seen all the evidence. She just happened to be in the minority opinion
Can we make the assumption that this specific ruling is sexist? Not really, because if the current class action has zero legal chance of success, then they're doing the women a favor by getting them to submit complaints with higher chance of success.
Yeah, no. Respectfully you're completely off the mark and shooting in the opposite direction.
Your comment of "legal chance of success" is completely out of place here BECAUSE IT SPEAKS TO THE MERITS OF THE CASE.
This ruling has less than nothing to do with if Wal-Mart discriminated or not. That is not even being litigated before the Supreme Court in any way, shape, and/or form at all. It will be in the future, but we are nowhere near that yet. This is the "pre game."The issue is and only is "can a case against Wal-Mart go forward in the specific form of a class action." Nothing else, at all, period.
This is solely and exclusively an issue over if it is proper as a matter of legal procedure for if they can bring a class action. Merits or chances of success don't enter into it. They can still sue Wal Mart individually, because the merits of the case were not addressed.
The smaller class actions of those individuals [sic] will have a much better chance of succeeding, due to being able to target specific behaviors rather than a general "they don't like women" argument.
Let me explain this to you, Wal Mart is huge. There is a reason they are all trying to band together, because otherwise it won't even take them seriously. Together they have a shot; separately they stand practically no chance and Wal Mart knows this. It's a simple matter of tactics.
Why the flying f*** else would
Wal Mart pay their main lawyer alone $955/hour to do this if it wasn't?:
This extract is from when Mr. Theodore Boutrous was the conservative side lawyer for Prop 8:
"Gibson partner
Theodore Boutrous Jr. said his firm is working the case "partially pro bono," but Boutrous declined to provide any further details. ...
top Gibson partner in New York City billed at $955 an hour last year, according to bankruptcy filings, and
associates topped out at $595 an hour."
That is the individual lawyer listed as Wal Mart's main attorney in the article Femmelf posted on the case.
IF any of you thought my suggestion of $200/hour wouldn't be reasonable attorney's fees, you must be having a heart attack right now.... You can bet this dude bills every single second of the day he can at that rate too.... He knows Wal Mart's deep pockets will pay him every single cent.
Follow the money, this ruling, which forces each woman to file her own case individually for all intents and purposes, screws them all over. Wal Mart paid a literal fortune for this, and wouldn't have done so if this wasn't the case....
The Supreme Court case is Wal-Mart Stores Inc v. Betty Dukes, No. 10-277.
Can we make the automatic assumption that this specific ruling is sexist?
I didn't. I think the case is bullshit as a matter of law and the wrong legal conclusion to reach in light of it overruling a longstanding precedent case for political reasons along party lines of the Justices deciding the case.
Don't even try to look for some kind of objective scientific certainty in a legal case where it's a 5/4 decision, because if just ONE more justice would've gone the other way, then the case would've gone completely differently.
While Ignorance of Law is almost never a legal defense....:This is why I said it is a major pain explaining things to clients. Law has a million little things in it that are incredibly difficult to see and this is one of them.
A layperson can't be blamed for misunderstanding the law. No one explains it to them and its not their fault if no one ever does. Also, for all I know, you might not even be from America, so this could be looking at a foreign country's laws that are completely inapplicable to you....