I hope everyone is navigating the pandemic healthy and (relatively) sane. I know I have not posted in a while, but I want to share with everyone a lecture I gave at Ohio Northern University School of Law discussing the causation element in mass tort cases. I focus specifically on the Roundup MDL in the Northern District of California. I really appreciate the sophisticated audience this blog attracts. Accordingly, I would love to hear your comments on the lecture, which can be found here. Below is the abstract:

This essay, a version of which was given as the inaugural Goldman Endowed Lecture at Ohio Northern University School of Law, discusses the treatment of causation in class actions, multidistrict litigation, and similar collective litigation. Causation is a ubiquitous element of civil claims, and typically it is treated as an individual element of a claim because it is dependent on the circumstances of each individual claimant. Even if the conduct at issue in litigation is “common,” or the same, for a group of claimants, whether that conduct caused harm to a specific claimant will depend on the unique circumstances of that claimant. For that reason, courts have often refused to certify class actions, or have otherwise been reluctant to utilize collective procedures, where issues of causation predominate the proceedings. It is thought that in such cases plaintiffs are entitled to a more tailored, individualized hearing to accurately assess causation consistent with due process. This essay questions this common-sense notion that the issue of causation is an “individual” issue and argues that causation is actually much more “common” when one examines the causation element and its proof in greater depth. The essay concludes by suggesting ways in which the “commonality” of causation can be addressed in litigation to better fulfill the deterrence and compensation objectives of the litigation.

Photo of Sergio Campos Sergio Campos

Sergio J. Campos is Professor of Law at Boston College Law School and currently serves as the Faculty Director of LLM and Global Programs. His research and teaching interests include civil procedure, federal courts, and comparative law, with a special focus on complex…

Sergio J. Campos is Professor of Law at Boston College Law School and currently serves as the Faculty Director of LLM and Global Programs. His research and teaching interests include civil procedure, federal courts, and comparative law, with a special focus on complex litigation. Before joining BC Law, he served on the faculty of the University of Miami School of Law, where he was director of the SJD Program and a co-director of the Seminario en Latinoamérica de Teoría Constitucional y Política (SELA), a consortium of law schools in the U.S., Latin America, the Caribbean, and Spain focused on hemispheric legal scholarship. He clerked for the Honorable Juan R. Torruella of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and the Honorable Patti B. Saris of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. He received his A.B. from Harvard College and his JD from Yale Law School.