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63 Vand. L. Rev. 725 (2010)
Facilitating Wage Theft: How Courts Use Procedural Rules to Undermine Substantive Rights of Low-Wage Workers

handle is hein.journals/vanlr63 and id is 733 raw text is: Facilitating Wage Theft: How Courts
Use Procedural Rules to Undermine
Substantive Rights of Low-Wage
Workers
Nantiya Ruan                          63 Vand. L. Rev. 727 (2010)
In race and sex discrimination class actions, if a defendant
employer makes a Rule 68 offer of judgment to the named plaintiffs,
courts routinely refuse to dismiss the class claims. In stark contrast,
in collective actions for failure to pay lawful wages, if a defendant
employer makes a Rule 68 offer of judgment, courts will often
dismiss the entire collective action as having been mooted by the
named plaintiffs' recovery. The outcome of such a dichotomy is that
low-wage workers are increasingly unable to challenge unlawful
wage violations successfully because the aggregation mechanism is
too easily defeated. Without an ability to group wage and hour
claims in an aggregate action, multitudes of wage violations will go
unheard because individual wage claims do not attract the attention
of plaintiffs' attorneys.
This failure to protect an underprivileged group of low-wage
workers-workers the laws explicitly try to protect-is striking, and
it effectively subverts the statutory protections in place since the
1930s to combat wage theft by employers. By most accounts, the civil
rights movement of the 1960s was successful in addressing
discriminatory practices through not only substantive statutory
rights, but also through procedural mechanisms by which those
rights could be vindicated easily and appropriately via access to the
courts.
In contrast, the right of low-wage workers to receive what
they lawfully earn has a longstanding statutory remedy but an
antiquated procedural mechanism. That procedural mechanism
diminishes their ability to fully vindicate their rights. Furthermore,
it is also now being cited as the structural difference that allows
another procedural rule, Rule 68, to deny standing in federal court
at the outset.
This Article examines this rising phenomenon by first
outlining the pressing societal need for collective litigation to ensure

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