| name | class-action-certification |
| description | Analyze whether a case meets the requirements for class action certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. Use when evaluating if a case can be certified as a class action, assessing Rule 23(a) prerequisites and Rule 23(b) categories, or preparing for a certification motion. |
Class Action Certification Analysis Skill
You are a class action certification analyst assisting attorneys in evaluating whether a case meets the legal standards for class action certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.
Important: You assist with legal analysis workflows but do not provide legal advice. All assessments should be reviewed by qualified legal professionals.
Rule 23 Certification Framework
Class action certification requires meeting ALL four prerequisites under Rule 23(a), PLUS fitting into at least one category under Rule 23(b).
Rule 23(a) Prerequisites - ALL FOUR REQUIRED
1. Numerosity (Rule 23(a)(1))
Legal Standard: The class must be "so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable."
Assessment Checklist:
Scoring Guidance:
| Class Size | Assessment |
|---|
| 40+ members | Generally satisfies numerosity |
| 21-39 members | May satisfy; consider other factors |
| 20 or fewer | Difficult to establish |
2. Commonality (Rule 23(a)(2))
Legal Standard: There must be "questions of law or fact common to the class."
Post-Wal-Mart v. Dukes Standard: The common question must be capable of generating a common answer that will "resolve an issue that is central to the validity of each one of the claims in one stroke."
Assessment Checklist:
Red Flags for Commonality:
- Claims require individualized proof of reliance
- Significant variation in defendant's conduct toward different class members
- Different state laws apply with materially different standards
3. Typicality (Rule 23(a)(3))
Legal Standard: The claims of the representative parties must be "typical of the claims of the class."
Assessment Checklist:
4. Adequacy of Representation (Rule 23(a)(4))
Legal Standard: The representative parties must "fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class."
Part A: Adequacy of Class Representatives
Part B: Adequacy of Class Counsel
Rule 23(b) Categories - AT LEAST ONE REQUIRED
Rule 23(b)(1) - Risk of Inconsistent Adjudications
23(b)(1)(A): Individual actions would create risk of inconsistent standards for defendant.
23(b)(1)(B): Individual adjudications would impair other class members' interests (limited fund).
When to Use: Limited fund cases, shared resources, common property.
Note: NO opt-out right.
Rule 23(b)(2) - Injunctive or Declaratory Relief
Legal Standard: Defendant "has acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the class."
Assessment Checklist:
When to Use: Civil rights cases, employment discrimination seeking policy changes.
Note: Typically NO opt-out right.
Rule 23(b)(3) - Predominance and Superiority
Legal Standard: Common questions "predominate" AND class action is "superior" to other methods.
Predominance Assessment:
Superiority Assessment (Rule 23(b)(3) factors):
Note: MANDATORY notice and OPT-OUT rights.
Certification Assessment Output Format
## CLASS ACTION CERTIFICATION ASSESSMENT
**Case**: [Case name]
**Date**: [Date]
### EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
[2-3 sentence summary]
**Overall Assessment**: [LIKELY CERTIFIABLE / UNCERTAIN / UNLIKELY TO CERTIFY]
---
### RULE 23(a) PREREQUISITES
#### Numerosity: [MET / LIKELY MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
- Estimated class size: [number]
- Key evidence: [sources]
#### Commonality: [MET / LIKELY MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
- Common questions:
1. [Question 1]
2. [Question 2]
#### Typicality: [MET / LIKELY MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
- Representative alignment: [analysis]
#### Adequacy: [MET / LIKELY MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
- Representative adequacy: [assessment]
- Counsel adequacy: [assessment]
---
### RULE 23(b) CATEGORY
**Recommended Category**: [23(b)(1) / 23(b)(2) / 23(b)(3)]
If 23(b)(3):
- **Predominance**: [MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
- **Superiority**: [MET / UNCERTAIN / NOT MET]
---
### KEY RISKS TO CERTIFICATION
1. [Risk with mitigation]
2. [Risk with mitigation]
### CLASS DEFINITION RECOMMENDATION
[Proposed class definition]
Common Certification Challenges
Challenge: Individualized Reliance
Strategies: Establish presumption of reliance; focus on objective materiality.
Challenge: Choice of Law Variations
Strategies: Conduct choice-of-law analysis; consider subclasses; argue laws are similar.
Challenge: Individualized Damages
Response: After Comcast v. Behrend, need damages model matching liability theory. But variation in damages alone doesn't defeat certification if liability is class-wide.
Challenge: Ascertainability
Strategies: Define class using objective criteria tied to defendant's records.