Mainland China

In practice, collective actions in Mainland China are limited to representative actions in which there are at least ten individual parties on either side with similar legal interests. The parties will typically be represented by two to five of the participants on that side. Generally, only a party with a direct interest in the action itself may bring a claim.

The court’s permission is required for such an action to proceed. If not all claimants are already parties, additional potential claimants may join within a fixed time frame. In addition, unregistered claimants who subsequently bring separate claims may take advantage of the court decision in the representative action, provided that any limitation period has not expired.

In practice, representative actions are viewed unfavourably by the courts and rarely conducted.

What forms of collective actions are permitted in this jurisdiction and under what authority?

The following types of collective actions are permissible under PRC Civil Procedural Law:

Ordinary joint actions: claims initiated by multiple claimants or brought against multiple defendants can be processed jointly in one proceeding if the disputed matters are of the same kind, subject to the consent of (i) the participants and (ii) the court. Although the trials of these claims would proceed together, a separate judgment would be given in each claim. This type of collective action is not considered further here.

Representative actions: claims commenced by at least 10 claimants or brought against at least 10 defendants can be heard as one representative action if the disputed matters are of the same kind, subject to the consent of (i) the participants and (ii) the court. The procedures for a representative action follow the general procedures applicable to any civil proceedings, except that:

  • participants on at least one side are typically represented by two to five representatives who are selected from and by the participants on that side; and
  • if the number of claimants is not fixed at the time that the case is filed (which is similar to the concept of class actions under common law), the court is required to issue a public announcement before the commencement of the trial to urge potential participants to appear at, and register their rights and claims with, the court. In such actions, representatives may only be selected by, and the judgment will only extend to, the participants who have registered with the court within the prescribed announcement period. That said, if an unregistered claimant files a separate claim after completion of the representative action (but within the statute of limitations), the court decision in the representative action will also apply to that claim.

In addition, a special mechanism for representative actions in securities-related claims for damages has been introduced by the PRC Securities Law. If entrusted by 50 investors or more, the Investor Protection Institution (“IPI”) may initiate a representative action on behalf of all qualified investors who are potentially entitled to damages. The list of qualified investors will be confirmed by the relevant securities depository. In other words, unlike general representative actions in which participants need to register themselves with the court as claimants, in such a representative action, the qualified investors would automatically be registered as claimants unless they expressly refused so to be.

Who may bring them?

Under PRC law, generally only a party with a direct interest in the action itself may bring a claim for damages. Therefore, in the representative action initiated by the IPI outlined in the paragraph above, the IPI is not a claimant itself but only acts as a representative on behalf of qualified investors.

Opt in or opt out?

Ordinary joint actions: opt in. Court decisions extend only to the participants.

Representative actions with a fixed number of claimants: opt in. Court decisions extend only to the participants.

Representative actions without a fixed number of claimants: opt in. Court decisions extend to the registered claimants and any unregistered claimants who subsequently file separate claims.

Securities-related representative action initiated by the IPI: opt out. The qualified investors would automatically be registered as claimants unless they expressly opt out.

Limitations?

There are no limitations other than those applying to all civil proceedings.

Judge or jury?

Judge.

What relief may be obtained?

Any remedy usually available in civil proceedings may be sought by the claimants.

How are such actions funded?

The general rule is that the losing party pays the court fees of the successful party. Except for certain types of claims (such as actions relating to unfair competition or intellectual property rights), each party is liable for its own legal fees and other expenses and costs. Contingency fees are generally not permitted in representative actions.

Is pre-trial disclosure available?

In terms of pre-trial exchange of evidence, (i) if requested by any participant, the court may arrange a session for the participants to exchange evidence prior to commencement of trial, and (ii) for complex cases or cases which involve a large amount of evidence, the court is required to arrange such a session.

Likely future scope and development?

It is unlikely that the courts’ attitude towards representative actions will change in the near future.