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Volume 109, Issue 3

Note

Collective Disagreement: The Uneasy Interaction of the FLSA and FRCP 4(k) After Bristol-Myers Squibb

Ronahn Clarke

J.D. Candidate, Cornell Law School, 2024; B.A., Philosophy and Classical Civilization, Colby College, 2021. 

 

22 Apr 2024

Across the country, due to a circuit split over the meaning of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“Rule”) 4(k), federal courts are enforcing the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) inconsistently.

This Note argues that, under the current state of the law, Rule 4(k) must be read to apply to out-of-state opt-in employee-plaintiffs’ claims and FLSA collective actions likely cannot be categorically exempt from Bristol-Myers. To that end, Part I introduces the FLSA’s collective action mechanism, with an emphasis on congressional intent to reach broadly. Part II sets forth the present landscape of the circuit split: the Third, Sixth, and Eighth Circuits have found Bristol-Myers applicable to collective actions, and the First has concluded otherwise. Part III presents this Note’s conclusion: while the Third, Sixth, and Eighth Circuits have the better of this circuit split, it is imperative that a change in the law be made. This Note ultimately endorses amending the FLSA to provide for nationwide service of process.

To read this Note, please click here: Collective Disagreement: The Uneasy Interaction of the FLSA and FRCP 4(k) After Bristol-Myers Squibb.