Dear brother jevan,
In general, the main purpose of all the litigations (whether it is Tim's or Cohen's or for that matter any other lawyers') is to ask the court to order CIC to process our immigration files. Other than that commanality of the main purpose, there is no other thing in common when it comes to the various litigations.
Tim Leahy first started filing litigations for his clients way back in the midst of the last quarter of 2011. Note, Tim's litigation is not a class action lawsuit, meaning, a favourable response by the judge will only benefit the litigants of that particular case. It will not apply to the litigants of the other cases/lawyers.
The other lawyers, including Cohen, started filing litigations for their clients only towards the end of the first quarter of 2012. Note, these litigations are of the class action lawsuit type, meaning, a favourable response by the judge will benefit all of the applicants (both litigants and non-litigants, if the judge rules it that way).
Though both Tim and the class action lawyers' litigations have the same main purpose, they differ mainly in the relief they seek from the court. Tim is asking relief for his clients, whereas the class action lawyers are asking relief for the entire class. Hence, the judge has to give a different ruling for these two different litigations. By this, it does not mean the judge is one sided. The judge is forced to give a different relief to the two types of litigants just because the two types of litigants are seeking an entirely different relief for them altogether.
Now, I hope, this clarification of mine helps you to have a better understanding. Please feel free to shoot your questions if anything is not clear. I will be glad to answer. Thank
warmest said:
Dear brother jevan,
In general, the main purpose of all the litigations (whether it is Tim's or Cohen's or for that matter any other lawyers') is to ask the court to order CIC to process our immigration files. Other than that commanality of the main purpose, there is no other thing in common when it comes to the various litigations.
Tim Leahy first started filing litigations for his clients way back in the midst of the last quarter of 2011. Note, Tim's litigation is not a class action lawsuit, meaning, a favourable response by the judge will only benefit the litigants of that particular case. It will not apply to the litigants of the other cases/lawyers.
The other lawyers, including Cohen, started filing litigations for their clients only towards the end of the first quarter of 2012. Note, these litigations are of the class action lawsuit type, meaning, a favourable response by the judge will benefit all of the applicants (both litigants and non-litigants, if the judge rules it that way).
Though both Tim and the class action lawyers' litigations have the same main purpose, they differ mainly in the relief they seek from the court. Tim is asking relief for his clients, whereas the class action lawyers are asking relief for the entire class. Hence, the judge has to give a different ruling for these two different litigations. By this, it does not mean the judge is one sided. The judge is forced to give a different relief to the two types of litigants just because the two types of litigants are seeking an entirely different relief for them altogether.
Now, I hope, this clarification of mine helps you to have a better understanding. Please feel free to shoot your questions if anything is not clear. I will be glad to answer. Thanks.
s.