Securities Class Actions Escalate

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By John Emmerig, Partner and head of Jones Day's class action practice for Australia, and Associate Professor Michael Legg, UNSW Law.

SYDNEY: 14 April 2014 - The last six months has seen yet another increase in the level of securities class actions.  It is a pattern that has been looming and comes as no surprise for many in the profession.  However, viewed in a global context, it raises food for thought and begs the question - do we want Australia to become as litigious as the United States.  Is the system working as it should?

Here’s some data that puts things in context. 

First, in the last 6 months there have been 11 new class actions threatened or filed.   The targets of these actions are ASX listed corporations, namely Treasury Wine Estates Limited, Leighton Holdings Limited, WorleyParsons Limited, QBE Insurance Group Limited, Forge Group Limited, OZ Minerals Limited, Macmahon Holdings Ltd, Billabong International Limited and Iluka Resources Limited.  In the case of Treasury Wine Estates and Leighton there have been multiple class actions commenced.  Nine ASX listed corporations have been subject to allegations that they contravened their continuous disclosure obligations and engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct. 

Second, it’s important to note that this level of activity does not include an array of other class actions that plaintiff firms and funders have confirmed will be filed this year outside of the securities area, such as the Queensland Floods class action.  Nor does the figure take into account the large number of threatened, but not yet filed, class actions involving financial institutions that may now emerge after the plaintiffs in the ANZ Bank fees class action were successful in having one of the fees characterised as a penalty.  

Third, pro-rated by reference to the Australian population (say 24 million), there need only be 12 filings a year to match the level of federal securities class action filing in the USA, the traditional home of class action litigation.   According to Stanford University and Cornerstone Research’s 2013 Year in Review, plaintiffs filed 166 new US federal class action securities cases in 2013. This is for a population of just over 310 million.  The 166 filings is 13 percent below the historical average of 191 filings observed annually between 1997 and 2012.  The indications are that Australia looks very much like outstripping that ratio in the short term.   The concept that the ratio of securities class action litigation in Australia would be higher than the US is indeed a sobering one.   Is it really suggested that corporate governance standards and legal compliance suddenly deteriorated to warrant this position?  

Fourth, the US class action system is driven by a number of factors that are not present in our legal system.   This makes the position all the more remarkable.  For example, in Australia, lawyers cannot charge contingency fees – a key financial driver for the bringing of claims.  Although we do have litigation funding which is much more active in class actions here than in the US.  In Australia, we do not have jury verdicts for class action claims and the attendant large and uncertain awards they can produce.  We do not have the American rule on costs that each party bears their own costs regardless of the outcome of the litigation.  Rather, in Australia, plaintiffs are at risk of paying the defendant’s costs if they lose.  Although litigation funders usually indemnify plaintiffs against this risk.  We do not require any fault or state of mind such as fraud or negligence for a securities class action, compared to the US where scienter, equating to an intent to defraud or recklessness, is necessary for a claim.  But the US also has a certification step, including requiring that common issues predominate in class actions seeking damages, that must be overcome before a class action can proceed that is not present in respect of Australian class actions. 

The Productivity Commission’s draft report on Access to Justice Arrangements recommends the introduction of contingency fees and makes no distinction between class actions and other forms of litigation.  Further, the recommendation does not provide any detail on safeguards to protect consumers and seeks further information on whether a cap should be placed on the percentage lawyers may charge.  The current growth in shareholder class actions suggests that allowing contingency fees would be like throwing fuel on a fire as Australia moved closer to the American model of litigation.  Lawyers would be able to directly take a percentage of any recovery and depending on the percentage charged could obtain a much higher fee than can currently be billed.  The class action with its ability to aggregate claims becomes even more attractive as lawyers are able to take a cut from each claim.

Class action proponents have previously pointed to the low level of class action activity in Australia to argue that we did not have to fear the litigation culture or ‘hyperlexis’ that is associated with the United States.  Those soothing tones may now need to be re-evaluated.  Perhaps Americans are about to lose their mantle as the “most litigious people in the world”.