How can a class action law suit be filed in court against someone without any class who lacks a desire to achieve it?
Filing a class action lawsuit requires practicing lawyer who has passed the bar exam, aka an attorney; you cannot file one pro se (on your own). To proceed, your case must be legally certified by a court, meaning a large group of people suffered identical harm from a common defendant.
Steps to evaluate and initiate a class action include:
- Consult a Class Action Attorney: You must hire a lawyer who specializes in class action litigation. They will review the facts to determine if your case qualifies.
- Verify Class Requirements: Your situation must meet specific legal criteria, including:
- Numbers: There must be many harmed individuals for individual lawsuits to be practical.
- Communal: All class members must share common questions of law or facts.
- Adequacy: The named plaintiffs must represent the class fairly without conflicts of interest.
- File the Complaint & Certify: Attorney files a class-action complaint and petition the court to certify the class.
- Notify the Class: If certified, class members must be notified so they can choose whether to participate or opt out.
To explore options, consult legal directories or the bar association websites, such as the American Bar Association Lawyer Referral Directory, to find a qualified class action attorney in the area.
New York law gives condo owners immense leverage against predatory sponsors. Instead of going it alone, a small group of owners can band together, protect their financial interests, and even secure legal representation without massive upfront out-of-pocket costs.
- Action: You can file a formal complaint directly with the OAG Real Estate Finance Bureau.
- Impact: If the OAG finds the sponsor is violating the building's offering plan, misusing reserve funds, or engaging in fraud, they can freeze the sponsor's ability to sell remaining units in the building or anywhere else in New York State. This gives the sponsor an immediate financial incentive to settle with you.
- Form an Ad Hoc Committee: Do not fight the sponsor individually. Gather your fellow impacted condo owners to pool your financial resources. Splitting a legal retainer among 5, 10, or 20 owners makes retaining a top-tier real estate litigator highly affordable.
- Seek Creative Fee Structures: Many boutique NYC real estate litigation firms understand that sponsors often hold all the cash. They are frequently willing to explore creative fee structures, including hybrid contingency fees (a lower upfront hourly rate combined with a percentage of the money recovered from the sponsor).
- Look for Fee-Shifting Clauses: Have a lawyer look closely at your condo's Offering Plan and Bylaws. Many of these documents contain "fee-shifting" provisions. If the bylaws state that the prevailing party in a legal dispute is entitled to legal fees, a judge can order the sponsor to pay 100 percent of the attorney's fees if you win.
- Bergstein Flynn Knowlton & Pollina PLLC: Specializes strictly in helping NYC condo owners fight predatory sponsors, reclaim financial control of their building boards, and pursue sponsors for ignored structural or financial issues.
- Braverman Greenspun: A highly prominent firm in the NYC metro area that regularly represents owners and boards in multi-million dollar litigation involving sponsor defects and financial mismanagement.
- Law Office of Steven A. Campanaro: Focuses heavily on the transition phase from sponsor control to owner control, specifically litigating failures to comply with offering plans and financial fraud.
Why is the sponsor still in control of the condo board, or do the owners wish to take over?
Has anyone formalized complaints to the sponsor, not verbally, but in writing?