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2020

Bankruptcy Law

University of Georgia School of Law

Finality

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Claim Preclusion And The Problem Of Fictional Consent, Lindsey Simon Jan 2020

Claim Preclusion And The Problem Of Fictional Consent, Lindsey Simon

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The doctrine of claim preclusion promotes fairness and finality by preventing parties from raising claims that already were (or could have been) raised in a prior proceeding. This strict consequence can be imposed only when the litigant received minimal due process protections in the initial proceeding, including notice and direct or indirect participation.

Modern litigation has caused a new problem. In some cases, a party may be precluded from ever raising a claim on the grounds of “fictional consent” to a prior court’s decisionmaking authority. Litigation devices have expanded the potential reach of judgments through aggregation and broad jurisdictional grants, …