2023 was the year that collective proceedings really got off the ground in Scotland.


We have previously written about this “class action” style process, introduced in 2020 in the thick of Covid. It takes elements from different jurisdictions, with the principle features being:

  • it is an opt-in procedure only (although the underlying legislation foreshadows opt-out in the future);
  • it requires commonality between claims, but the test is fairly flexible (same, similar or related issues of fact and law);
  • it runs in the name of a “Representative Party” (RP) who can be an affected claimant but alternatively a third party;
  • permission to proceed as a formal group has to be given by the court at the outset;
  • claimants outside of Scotland can in principle be involved, if there is a basis for jurisdiction.

The first group to run under the procedure was in 2020 against VW Group in relation to diesel emissions claims. A second high profile group that proceeded against Celtic Football Club relating to historic abuse claims involving its youth division settled last year. The pace has picked up since then.

The biggest and most active action has been the 1,000+ strong claim against James Finlay, a subsidiary of the Swire Group that owns and operates tea plantations in Kenya. The claim is brought by Kenyan tea pickers alleging musculo-skeletal injuries. The proceedings have been mired in a jurisdiction battle since 2022, with an appeal court decision in November in favour of the company. Permission is now being sought by the claimants to appeal to the UK Supreme Court.

The London courts have become used to dealing with such ‘out of jurisdiction’ claims in recent years, for instance, in relation to environmental contamination/pollution outside the UK against global corporates with a UK presence. Does the Finlay case show the Scottish courts are unwilling to act as a forum shop?  It is really too early to say. The Finlay decision turned on the wording of applicable Kenyan legislation; the Scottish court was clearly sympathetic, and our appeal court left the door open for the claimants to return to Scotland if needed in due course. A ‘yes vote’ is foreseeable on different facts (and may yet be the outcome depending on any appeal to the UK Supreme Court).

The Scottish court has been dealing with a series of applications to bring diesel emissions claims against a number of car manufacturers. Permission was granted in the second half of 2023 for group claims against BMW, Opel (part of Stellantis) and Mercedes to proceed. Others are waiting in the wings.

What does all this tell us?

  • We can predict a continuing upward trend in the numbers of ‘class actions’ in Scotland. Other group claims are being advertised.
  • The court also seems keen to use the new procedure.  Permission has been granted in every application made so far. The bar to achieve commonality does not appear to be set very high, nor the evidence required to demonstrate this.
  • Similarly, the bar is not being set high for the court to approve the proposed Representative Party.  A list of considerations is applied, but so far in a benign manner. Funding of the RP has been a considerable focus, and we are likely to see significant debate continue around this, but it has not yet led to onerous disclosure or rigorous interrogation. The identity of the RP has also been a subject of debate, and in the majority of cases a class/group member has been selected as a figurehead (the law firm acting for the claimants was rejected in one case; a retired advocate was accepted for two groups).
  • Other than at the very initial stages, the procedure is largely at the discretion of the presiding judge, applying whatever case management tools they consider appropriate. This is not in substance different to what was available historically. This continues to provide flexibility of approach, albeit potential difficulty in predicting the likely process and timelines.
  • The Scottish court is not keen to defer to England even where similar issues are being or have been litigated in England.  Albeit not a formal group under the new procedure, one recent example is in the metal on metal hip litigation.  No claims are being pursued in England following the decision in Gee v DePuy in 2018and a separate UK Supreme Court decision in 2022.  Despite this, the Scottish court is entertaining ‘another bite at the cherry’.

What sectors are most at risk of a group claim?

  • Pharmaceutical and medical devices
  • Automotive
  • Consumer goods
  • Energy
  • Tech (the current Post Office/Horizon inquiry signposts some issues)
  • Any company storing large amounts of personal data (see the exponential growth in cyber attacks globally).

In short, we can assume that for the foreseeable future, this ‘new toy’ in Scotland will get lots of use. Let’s hope it’s the same for all those other gifts left from Santa.