Supreme Court Issues Important Ruling on Standing in Class Action and Data Breach Cases
Plaintiffs frequently bring class action claims for alleged statutory violations for which Congress has provided private rights of action and statutory damages. In many of these instances, plaintiffs do not allege any specific, tangible harm (such as monetary loss), but claim that the violation of these so-called “statutory rights” by itself constitutes injury-in-fact sufficient to satisfy standing requirements. This week, the Supreme Court held in Spokeo v. Robins that plaintiffs must allege concrete harm, apart from a mere statutory violation, in order to satisfy standing requirements.