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Tues., Sept. 2

Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

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Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

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Page 1: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Tues., Sept. 2

Page 2: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

three themes

Page 3: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Balance:

1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy)and3) efficiency

Page 4: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

structure of American legal system

Page 5: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

statutory interpretation

Page 6: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

drafting a complaint

Page 7: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

what purposes does a complaint serve?

Page 8: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Three things that can be wrong with (the factual allegations in) a complaint:1) legal sufficiency of factual allegations 2) level of specificity in factual allegations 3) evidentiary support for factual allegations

Page 9: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Sierocinski v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.

3d Cir. 1939

Page 10: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Did Sierocinski’s complaint state a claim?

Page 11: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Did Sierocinski’s complaint satisfy R 8(a)(2)?

Page 12: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

- Rule 8. General Rules of Pleading

(a) Claim for Relief. A pleading that states a claim for relief must contain:...(2) a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief...

Page 13: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Do subsequent events show that the 3d Circuit’s decision was

wrong?

Even after discovery no evidentiary support for negligence

was found.

Page 14: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Did Raymond White violate R. 11?

Page 15: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly

(U.S. 2007)

Page 16: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

What decision by the trial court was appealed?

Page 17: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Did the plaintiffs state a claim?

what was the element that was left out?

Page 18: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Paragraph 51“In the absence of any meaningful competition between the [baby bells] in one another’s markets, and in light of the parallel course of conduct that each engaged in to prevent competition from [locals] within their respective local telephone and/or high speed internet services markets and the other facts and market circumstances alleged above, Plaintiffs allege upon information and belief that Defendants have entered into a contract, combination or conspiracy to prevent entry in their respective local telephone and/or high speed internet service markets and have agreed not to compete with one another and otherwise allocated customers and markets to one another.”

Page 19: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Stevens: But the plaintiffs allege in three places in their complaint, ¶¶ 4, 51, 64, App. 11, 27, 30, that the [baby bells] did in fact agree both to prevent competitors from entering into their local markets and to forgo competition with each other. And as the Court recognizes, at the motion to dismiss stage, a judge assumes “that all the allegations in the complaint are true (even if doubtful in fact).”

Page 20: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

The majority circumvents this obvious obstacle to dismissal by pretending that it does not exist. The Court admits that “in form a few stray statements in the complaint speak directly of agreement,” but disregards those allegations by saying that “on fair reading these are merely legal conclusions resting on the prior allegations” of parallel conduct. Ante, at 1970. The Court's dichotomy between factual allegations and “legal conclusions” is the stuff of a bygone era, supra, at 1976 - 1977.

Page 21: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Is the problem that the plaintiffs alleged that the parallel behavior

was the agreement?

Page 22: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

What would be the analogue in Sierocinski of alleging that the

parallel behavior was the agreement?

Page 23: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

What 8(a)(2) violated then?

Were the defendants not put on notice about the nature of the

alleged agreement?

Page 24: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

How can an agreement in restraint of trade arise?

Must there always be a “handshake”?

Page 25: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Assuming the plaintiffs are alleging an implicit agreement, are the

defendants put on notice?

Page 26: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

So what is the problem with the complaint then?

Page 27: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Imagine that there was a trialand all that the Ps offered for

evidence of an agreement was parallel behavior?

What result?

Page 28: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Is there enough evidence at the pleading stage to justify the burden of discovery on the

defendant?

Page 29: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

If R. 11 is doing its job, do we need Twombly?

Page 30: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Souter:Asking for plausible grounds to infer an agreement does not impose a probability requirement at the pleading stage; it simply calls for enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of illegal agreement.

Page 31: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Assume that the complaint had alleged a handshake agreement among the CEOs of the baby bells at a particular meeting and named the date. No evidence is offered at all. Is Twombly satisfied?

Page 32: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

If the problem driving Twombly is the cost of discovery, is there any

way to limit this cost?

Page 33: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Did Sierocinski’s complaint satisfy Twombly?

Page 34: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Has R 8(a)(2) effectively been amended?

Page 35: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

28 U.S.C. § 2072. - Rules of procedure and evidence; power to prescribe

(a) The Supreme Court shall have the power to prescribe general rules of practice and procedure and rules of

evidence for cases in the United States district courts (including proceedings

before magistrate judges thereof) and courts of appeals. . . .

Page 36: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Even if the Twombly decision effectively amended R 8(a)(2), is it permissible, given the S Ct is the

author of the FRCP?

Page 37: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

28 U.S.C. § 2074(a)The Supreme Court shall transmit to the Congress not later

than May 1 of the year in which a rule prescribed under section 2072 is to become effective a copy of the proposed rule. Such rule shall take effect no earlier than December 1 of the year in which such rule is so transmitted unless otherwise provided by

law. The Supreme Court may fix the extent such rule shall apply to proceedings then pending, except that the Supreme Court shall not require the application of such rule to further

proceedings then pending to the extent that, in the opinion of the court in which such proceedings are pending, the

application of such rule in such proceedings would not be feasible or would work injustice, in which event the former rule

applies.

Page 38: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Six months after the dismissal in Twombly, the plaintiffs’ lawyers find in the trash outside various baby bells’ offices memos indicating that the baby bells were intentionally coordinating their behavior in just the manner that the Twombly complaint suggested.They file a new complaint in federal court with this evidence described.What result?

Page 39: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Aschcroft v. Iqbal(U.S. 2009)

Page 40: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

What are the alleged facts that the plaintiff claims entitle him to

relief?

Page 41: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Does Iqbal state a claim?

Page 42: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

- P sues D for negligence in federal court- In his answer, D adds a counterclaim asking for the damages that D sustained due to P’s negligence in the same accident- Do the standards in Twiqbal apply to the allegations of P’s negligence in the counterclaim?

Page 43: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

- P sues D for negligence in federal court- In his answer, D introduces the defense of contributory negligence- Do the standards in Twiqbal apply to the allegations of P’s negligence in the affirmative defense?

Page 44: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

pleading special matters(fraud)

Page 45: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Rule 9. Pleading Special Matters ... (b) Fraud or Mistake; Conditions of Mind. In alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake. Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of a person’s mind may be alleged generally.

Page 46: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Does R 9(b) apply to affirmative defenses?

Page 47: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

fraud- statement (omission if duty to speak)- of material fact- that is false (or misleading)- with knowledge of falsity

often intent that plaintiff rely

- reasonable reliance on statement by plaintiff- causation of damages

Page 48: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Why the heightened pleading standards for fraud?

Page 49: Tues., Sept. 2. three themes Balance: 1) upholding the substantive rule of law 2) other interests (e.g. party autonomy and privacy) and 3) efficiency

Why the exception in 9(b) for scienter?