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<blockquote data-quote="dmac1" data-source="post: 3493357" data-attributes="member: 60252"><p>You should know better.</p><p></p><p>Any attorney is going to look at how long the first case lasted and think long and hard. And there are different laws in each state, making a national class action very difficult. </p><p></p><p>I predict that California will again be the first because there are enough drivers in California to make enough money on. Plus there has to be enough drivers at any one time who can show enough damages to make it a class action. </p><p></p><p>No attorney in a small state with maybe 400 drivers total with maybe $2000 per driver of provable 'damages' is going to want to spend millions as fedex uses the courts to make it take as long as possible. The last case went from state courts to fedex demanding consolidation into a national class to the national class sending some cases back to the states, dismissing some, with fedex ALWAYS taking the maximum time at each step, then appealing each negative decision, no matter how small, turning a case that ended up as a slam dunk once it got back to the state, at least in my case.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dmac1, post: 3493357, member: 60252"] You should know better. Any attorney is going to look at how long the first case lasted and think long and hard. And there are different laws in each state, making a national class action very difficult. I predict that California will again be the first because there are enough drivers in California to make enough money on. Plus there has to be enough drivers at any one time who can show enough damages to make it a class action. No attorney in a small state with maybe 400 drivers total with maybe $2000 per driver of provable 'damages' is going to want to spend millions as fedex uses the courts to make it take as long as possible. The last case went from state courts to fedex demanding consolidation into a national class to the national class sending some cases back to the states, dismissing some, with fedex ALWAYS taking the maximum time at each step, then appealing each negative decision, no matter how small, turning a case that ended up as a slam dunk once it got back to the state, at least in my case. [/QUOTE]
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