A lawsuit against building products maker James Hardie Industries has lost its bid to let potential plaintiffs join after a Dec. 31 cut-off date, as the law firm involved awaits a ruling on whether it can proceed as a class action.
In the High Court in Wellington last week, Justice Susan Thomas declined law firm Parker & Associates' application to prevent members in the action being ruled out of time if the class suit isn't granted when it's heard next year. Parker & Associates lost its bid for members in the class suit to be allowed to file individual claims if the representative action isn't approved.
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"The position of the consenting persons depends upon the outcome of the application and the reasons for that outcome," the judgment said. "To make the orders, I would have to be satisfied that the statements of claim contain the particulars of each potential class member's claim, or at least, each consenting person's claim. I do not have the information necessary to reach that conclusion."
The plaintiffs - Tracey Cridge, Mark Unwin, Scott Woodhead, and Katrina Fowler - will appeal the ruling, and lawyer Dan Parker is urging people to sign up to the class suit to allow their individual claims to be filed before the courts close on Dec. 23.